Thank you for the invitation to appear before this committee.
I am KPMG's Canadian managing partner for tax.
Before I commence with my remarks, I'd like to extend my sincere sympathy to Ms. Watson and all of the other victims of the Cinar fraud. We know that you've been seeking answers for a long time, and I wish we could help you. We simply do not have any connection to Cinar. We were not their auditor or their tax adviser. We did not help any of the people who carried out the fraud to take your money or hide your money.
At KPMG we ensure that our clients are able to work within the tax system, achieve their goals and pay the tax they are required to pay. That is the lawful tax planning work that we do for our clients across Canada every day, and in accordance with KPMG's policies, practices and culture, we ensure the highest standards of integrity, compliance and professionalism.
Like most professionals, as CPAs we are required to protect the confidentiality of information regarding our clients and former clients. We take that obligation seriously, but when we receive a legal order requiring us to disclose client information, we comply with it. In February 2017, for example, in accordance with the CRA requirement, we provided the CRA with all the names and all of our files related to the OCS implementations in the Isle of Man.
I would also like to address recent reporting by the CBC, which is focused on four corporations, referred to as the “sword” companies, which were established in the Isle of Man in the early 2000s. It's alleged that these companies were used to facilitate the Cinar fraud. I don't know whether that's true. I do know that any implication that KPMG had anything to do with the Cinar fraud is false. Any implication that KPMG was in any way involved with the “sword” companies is also false.
We can state this with confidence because we undertook the comprehensive and detailed due diligence of our files, records and personnel. We combed through millions of pages of documents. We reviewed our time and billing systems. We examined our client file databases, and we interviewed people. We took the added step of reviewing publicly available corporate documents from the Isle of Man. Through all of this, we found nothing that suggested that KPMG had any association with the “sword” companies.
We provided this information to the CBC, making it clear that they were mistaken, but they persisted in publishing irresponsible and misleading stories. As a result, our lawyers served a notice of libel on the CBC last week. The CBC's allegations mistakenly rely on emails, written 15 years after the fact, by a woman named Sandra Georgeson, and on similarities between the “sword” companies and KPMG client companies.
Let me address these mistakes one by one. KPMG, like other firms, commonly uses the support of corporate service providers to set up and help administer companies. There are a lot of these firms that do this work around the world. Ms. Georgeson worked for one such firm in the Isle of Man. In the early 2000s, KPMG in Canada offered a legal tax plan, known as the OCS. The OCS required the incorporation of companies in the Isle of Man, and Ms. Georgeson's firm was retained to do so. Fifteen years later she was asked by her new employer to prepare a list of these companies. Her recollection in 2015 was that the “sword” companies were examples of KPMG OCS implementations. They were not.
In its reporting, the CBC pointed to similarities in the sequential registration numbers, named directors, signatories and filing addresses between the OCS and the “sword” companies as evidence that KPMG set up these companies. The CBC is simply wrong in drawing this inference.
The similarities exist because whoever registered the “sword” companies used the same corporate service provider as KPMG, but our diligence shows that the “sword” companies do not belong to, or are in any way connected to, KPMG.
I wish we could help reunite the victims of this fraud with their money and bring the perpetrators to justice, but we can't. KPMG simply does not possess any information that could assist with the Cinar investigation.
Putting the CBC's unfounded theories about Cinar aside, the broader issue that is before the committee today is how Canada could combat aggressive tax avoidance and tax evasion.
We applaud the committee's review of this important issue. We share the committee's desire and we welcome the opportunity to contribute to the discussion today.
Thank you.