I can handle that one.
My colleague, Mr. Currie, stated four examples of the types of mass marketing fraud the bureau handles.
The first category covers scams targeted at generally small or medium-sized business, whether they're in or outside of Canada. If the perpetrators are in Canada but target people outside of Canada, the act applies to that, as well as to situations when the victims are in Canada.
Of those scams targeting businesses, a typical one is the directory scam. This is committed either by telemarketing or by fax. There's always an Internet aspect to these scams as well. Generally what they try to do is they use what we refer to as the assumed sales technique, where they call someone at a business—actually it could be an organization, a charity, a church, a government agency, anybody that runs an office, really—and they try to leave the impression with them that they've already bought this directory every year and they're just calling to renew their listing and update their information. They sometimes try to use names similar to the Yellow Pages group, or companies such as that. People don't realize that they're committing to a payment, whether it's over the phone, or sometimes they send facsimiles to companies saying to update their information, sign the form, and send it back. Buried in fine print, they're committing themselves to $1,500 a year to be listed in the directory.
There is a product, per se, usually a directory listing on the Internet, but it's not accessible. For instance, for any commercial purpose to be listed in a directory, if I have a towing company, I would want my consumers to maybe google towing companies in Ottawa, and my company name would come up. It probably does come up in the Yellow Pages directory or Canada411, but not on these scam ones, so they're of no commercial value to businesses.
How do we investigate those? We receive complaints. We have our own complaint centre, through the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, and through our partnerships. Then we evaluate those complaints. We have enforcement priorities, and at a certain point we decide to investigate. When we get to that stage, we have several investigative tools in our toolbox, including search warrants, sections under our act where we can apply for people to provide information, written returns, or records, or provide information under oath. We have to apply to courts for these powers and show that there are reasonable grounds that these offences have occurred. That's what really gets us started on our investigation, when we use those powers and we analyze that information. Eventually, we complete our investigation and refer it to the federal prosecution services with recommendations to charge, and it's their decision whether the individuals or companies should be prosecuted.