Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Man Found With US$100,000 In Cash In Toronto Loses Money To Government As Crime Proceeds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jan, 2016 12:21 PM
    TORONTO — A man caught with more than US$100,000 cash in his backback as he attempted to leave Canada for Panama City lost his bid on Monday to have the seized money returned.
     
    In a unanimous decision, the Ontario Court of Appeal said Alexander Bourgeois had failed to show a lower court justice had made errors in finding the money came from criminal activity, even though he was never convicted of any crime.
     
    Bourgeois was about to fly out of Toronto when an airport security employee operating an x-ray machine at Toronto's international airport in 2011 detected something suspicious in his backpack, court documents show.
     
    A search turned up US$100,000 in tightly wound bundles stuffed into 22 socks, and he was arrested. Police then found another two cash bundles worth US$4,877 in his pockets, along with a small amount of cocaine in his wallet.
     
    Although criminal charges against Bourgeois — a dual Canadian and American citizen — were dropped, Ontario's attorney general asked for forfeiture of the money under legislation known as the Civil Remedies Act.
     
    Bourgeois, a member of the Aamjiwnaang First Nation, tried to argue the money was legitimately his. He said it came from a combination of earnings from tips when he worked at a casino north of Toronto, gambling winnings, and insurance money arising from the death of his mother in a crash.
     
    Superior Court Justice Sandra Chapnik, in a decision in September 2014, rejected those notions.
     
    "Mr. Bourgeois has offered inconsistent explanations for the monies, ranging from carrying the money for an unknown man to simply being in the habit of bundling his own money in 'circles'," Chapnik said in her ruling.
     
    Bourgeois appealed, argued Chapnik was wrong to find the funds were proceeds of crime, and that he was not a legitimate owner.
     
    In rejecting his submissions, the Appeal Court found no lower court error.
     
    "The application judge found that, on a balance of probabilities, Mr. Bourgeois was acting as a cash courier — either for drug trafficking or other profit-motivated unlawful activity," the Appeal Court said.
     
    "She relied on, and accepted, a 'veritable laundry-list of evidence' and those findings are entitled to deference."
     
    Bourgeois also gave no reasonable explanation for his behaviour or the amount of money in his possession, the Appeal Court said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Snowmobiler Dies In B.C. Mountains Amid Sweeping Warning From Avalanche Canada

    Snowmobiler Dies In B.C. Mountains Amid Sweeping Warning From Avalanche Canada
    RCMP in Prince George say a group of five snowmobilers was riding in the remote Torpy Mountain range, northeast of the city, when one of the riders was swept away in an avalanche and killed.

    Snowmobiler Dies In B.C. Mountains Amid Sweeping Warning From Avalanche Canada

    Bullets Fly When Man Killed During Confrontation With Calgary Police In Huntington Hills Area

    Bullets Fly When Man Killed During Confrontation With Calgary Police In Huntington Hills Area
    The man was killed by police after a standoff that lasted more than an hour, but no one else was hurt.

    Bullets Fly When Man Killed During Confrontation With Calgary Police In Huntington Hills Area

    A Look At La Loche, The Community Where Four Were Killed In A Mass Shooting

    A Look At La Loche, The Community Where Four Were Killed In A Mass Shooting
    The community of about 3,000 is in the headlines for the most tragic of events — a mass shooting at a school and home that has left four dead and seven injured. 

    A Look At La Loche, The Community Where Four Were Killed In A Mass Shooting

    Layoff Notices Suspended For Newsroom Workers: Union President

    Layoff Notices Suspended For Newsroom Workers: Union President
    Ingrid Bulmer, president of the Halifax Typographical Union, says a lawyer for the Halifax Chronicle Herald sent them a text message saying layoff notices that were delivered Saturday morning have been suspended.

    Layoff Notices Suspended For Newsroom Workers: Union President

    The Science And The Sensuality: Halifax Prof Evolving Into A Beer Whisperer

    The Science And The Sensuality: Halifax Prof Evolving Into A Beer Whisperer
    HALIFAX — Andrew MacIntosh understands beer in ways few others can comprehend — on the microscopic level, in its broader historical sweep, and in its sensual appeal.

    The Science And The Sensuality: Halifax Prof Evolving Into A Beer Whisperer

    'You Sort Of Wish The Car Could Talk:' Vehicles Abandoned At Edmonton Airport

    'You Sort Of Wish The Car Could Talk:' Vehicles Abandoned At Edmonton Airport
    Parking staff at the Edmonton International Airport regularly patrol its vast lots and keep a list of vehicles that have been sitting in the same spot for too long.

    'You Sort Of Wish The Car Could Talk:' Vehicles Abandoned At Edmonton Airport