Thank you very much. That is a very good question.
When I researched that question in preparing my report, I saw no examples, but everywhere in Europe, people have been wondering whether the registry can really be trusted.
To go one step further, currently the federal government registry for corporations is completely passive. People send the information, you create a new corporation, and the information simply gets transferred into the registry. There are no verifications right now, not even ID checks, not even to show a driver's licence to confirm that the person even exists. Of course, it was never created for anti-money-laundering purposes. However, this could be changed with a registrar who is able to do those kinds of verifications.
Obviously the more verifications they do beyond ID checks, the more expensive, cumbersome, and complicated the process is. A risk-based process might also work, which means that the person is someone with compliance skills, someone who understands how corporations are formed, and so on, and who is able to flag suspicious things, maybe send reports to FINTRAC, maybe contact the corporation for more information and ask for more documents. This is what we have in mind, someone who is able to really uphold the rigour of the registry.