Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Money Laundering Through B.C. Casinos Tied To Opioid Crisis: Report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jun, 2018 12:50 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's attorney general says money-laundering operations through the province's casinos are tied to the opioid crisis and the real-estate market.
     
     
    David Eby has released an independent report on money laundering and says the problem surfaced in 2011 but the former Liberal government turned a blind eye to "serious crime with serious consequences."
     
     
    He tasked former RCMP deputy commissioner Peter German to conduct a review and write a report, and German says casinos were used to launder $100 million as part of a scheme dubbed the "Vancouver model."
     
     
    German says organized crime groups, primarily from Asia, laundered money from illegal drugs by using B.C. casinos and then invested the money in Vancouver-area real estate.
     
     
    He says the amount of suspicious money entering casinos since a high point in 2015 has been greatly reduced due to police and gaming industry actions, but the prevention measures must continue to ensure the problem does not resurface.
     
     
    Eby launched an investigation after the government's gaming enforcement branch showed him surveillance video of gamblers walking into casinos with suitcases and a hockey bag full of millions of dollars in $20 bills.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Supreme Court Rules Against City Over 2008 Hockey Riot Vandalism

    Supreme Court Rules Against City Over 2008 Hockey Riot Vandalism
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled against the City of Montreal in a case involving rioters who damaged police vehicles after a 2008 Montreal Canadiens victory.

    Supreme Court Rules Against City Over 2008 Hockey Riot Vandalism

    DNA Privacy Questioned As Police Nab Suspects By Searching Family Trees

    DNA Privacy Questioned As Police Nab Suspects By Searching Family Trees
    VICTORIA — As the years stretched into decades with no arrests after his sister's body was found in Washington state, it was becoming hard for John Van Cuylenborg of Victoria, B.C., to maintain hope for any justice or answers.

    DNA Privacy Questioned As Police Nab Suspects By Searching Family Trees

    'Something Positive:' Victims Of Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Urging Ottawa To Make Sport Safer

    'Something Positive:' Victims Of Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Urging Ottawa To Make Sport Safer
    Charest was found guilty in June 2017 of 37 sex-related charges and was given a 12-year prison term.

    'Something Positive:' Victims Of Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Urging Ottawa To Make Sport Safer

    Surrey To Have First Of 10 Primary Care Centres In B.C., Using Team Of Experts

    Surrey To Have First Of 10 Primary Care Centres In B.C., Using Team Of Experts
    British Columbia's premier has announced the opening of 10 urgent primary care centres across the province over the next year, starting with the first in Surrey this fall.

    Surrey To Have First Of 10 Primary Care Centres In B.C., Using Team Of Experts

    Homicide Detectives Probe Targeted Slaying Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

    A British Columbia man police say was known to them and was associated with drug activity has been found dead in the Fraser Valley.

    Homicide Detectives Probe Targeted Slaying Of Chilliwack, B.C., Man

    UBC Must Pay Fired Author Steven Galloway $167,000 For Privacy Violation

    UBC Must Pay Fired Author Steven Galloway $167,000 For Privacy Violation
    The University of British Columbia must pay fired creative writing professor and author Steven Galloway $167,000 in damages for statements that violated his privacy rights and harmed his reputation.

    UBC Must Pay Fired Author Steven Galloway $167,000 For Privacy Violation