Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Proposal To Pay Corporate Whistleblowers Up To $1.5 Million Inadequate: Experts

The Canadian Press, 09 Jun, 2015 11:46 AM
    TORONTO — A proposal by Ontario's securities watchdog to pay corporate whistleblowers up to $1.5 million is too stingy to spur senior executives with knowledge of accounting fraud, insider trading and market manipulation to come forward, a number of experts say.
     
    "I don't think we should be calling on potential whistleblowers to be heroes," class action lawyer Dimitri Lascaris said during a roundtable held in Toronto on Tuesday to discuss the Ontario Securities Commission's proposed whistleblower program.
     
    If implemented, the program would be the first of its kind for Canadian securities regulators.
     
    The provincial securities watchdog has modelled the program after the one at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which has received more than 10,000 tips since it was introduced in 2011 and has resulted in some large payouts.
     
    The Ontario Securities Commission would offer smaller rewards than its U.S. counterpart. The securities regulator is proposing to pay whistleblowers up to 15 per cent of the sanctions or settlement payments in a successful case involving $1 million of sanctions or more. Payments would be capped at $1.5 million.
     
    That's compared to the 10 to 30 per cent payout the U.S. securities regulator offers whistleblowers.
     
    Lascaris, a lawyer with Siskinds LLP, says the reward amount proposed by the Ontario Securities Commission is "highly inadequate" to compensate corporate tipsters for the risks they would bear.
     
    "Whistleblowers are frequently the targets of retaliation," Lascaris said, noting that tipsters could lose their lucrative jobs and become blacklisted from working in their industries.
     
    A payment of $1.5 million is not enough to provide long-term financial security for senior executives and their families, Lascaris said.
     
    A number of other experts at the roundtable event also took issue with the compensation amount, noting that whistleblowers could stand to gain far more by going along with fraudulent practices.
     
    "Senior (executives) have a lot to lose," said Jordan Thomas, a lawyer with Labaton Sucharow, who recommended that the securities regulator set a minimum compensation amount.
     
    Marian Passmore, director of policy with the Canadian Foundation for Advancement of Investor Rights, suggested offering more than the $1.5 million maximum.
     
    The securities regulator says that while it will strive to protect the identities of whistleblowers, there are a number of exceptions under which it may need to reveal them — for example, if it's necessary in order for commission staff to make a case against an accused, or if an accused needs to know a whistleblower's identity in order to defend himself or herself fully against the allegations.
     
    But the regulator is proposing introducing anti-retaliation measures into the provincial Securities Act to protect whistleblowers from harm if their identities do become revealed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Securities Regulator Dismisses Fraud Allegations Against Jon Carnes

    B.C. Securities Regulator Dismisses Fraud Allegations Against Jon Carnes
    Jon Richard Carnes, who ran the "Alfred Little" financial blog, was accused in December 2013 of anonymously publishing a negative report about Silvercorp aimed at driving down its share price and then profiting from a short position he held.

    B.C. Securities Regulator Dismisses Fraud Allegations Against Jon Carnes

    RCMP Charged With Labour Violations In Relation To Deaths Of Moncton Officers

    RCMP Charged With Labour Violations In Relation To Deaths Of Moncton Officers
    MONCTON, N.B. — Nearly a year after three RCMP officers were murdered in Moncton by a lone gunman, the police force has been charged with four labour code violations in relation to the incident.

    RCMP Charged With Labour Violations In Relation To Deaths Of Moncton Officers

    California Cocaine Bust: Samer Karanouh, Canadian Man, Arrested After 159 Kilograms Seized

    Prosecutors say the Canadian driver, 44-year-old Samer Karanouh, has been arrested and is being held on $1 million bail in a county jail.

    California Cocaine Bust: Samer Karanouh, Canadian Man, Arrested After 159 Kilograms Seized

    Inquest Into Fatal Mill Blast Makes 33 Recommendations, Finds Deaths Accidental

    Inquest Into Fatal Mill Blast Makes 33 Recommendations, Finds Deaths Accidental
    A five-person jury made the recommendations after eight hours of deliberations on Thursday but ultimately concluded that the fatal 2012 blast at Lakeland Mills in Prince George, B.C., was accidental.

    Inquest Into Fatal Mill Blast Makes 33 Recommendations, Finds Deaths Accidental

    Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre Won't Apologize For Taxpayers' Dollars Spent On 'Vanity Videos'

    Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre Won't Apologize For Taxpayers' Dollars Spent On 'Vanity Videos'
    Poilievre is making no apologies for using taxpayer dollars to produce videos of himself promoting the universal child care benefit.

    Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre Won't Apologize For Taxpayers' Dollars Spent On 'Vanity Videos'

    Stephen Harper Touts Government's Economic Record In Campaign-Style Speech

    With a large Canadian flag as a backdrop, Harper told a packed high school gym in Truro, N.S., that the Conservatives are confident heading into this fall's election.

    Stephen Harper Touts Government's Economic Record In Campaign-Style Speech