Hello.
Mr. Chair and members of the committee, thank you for inviting me to appear before the committee.
I will make my remarks in English, but you may ask questions in either official language.
I first want to define the problem space, which is the under-utilization of money laundering, proceeds of crime, and terrorism financing statutes. I also point out in my fairly detailed and lengthy submission that this is a long and well-known problem. I cite from testimony given by the RCMP before the justice committee in 2012, which had already identified many of the issues that are now recurring here in the conversation. I think one of the questions we need to ask ourselves is, why do we keep beating around the same bush, and so little is being done?
I think in terms of the problem space, first there is a lack of political will and a lack of law enforcement will around these particular issues. Unless we change the will behind this, we can change all the legislation we want, but we're not going to get anywhere.
Second, there is also a problem of capacity. These investigations are highly complex, time-consuming, and resource- intensive, so law enforcement by and large, I would say, shies away from these investigations. I can provide ample data to this effect from both federal and provincial agencies. Prosecutors shy away from them because they're complex and take a long time, so if you get evaluated on how many cases you can prosecute, let alone how many of them you can prosecute successfully, these are not the kinds of cases you're going to take on.
Third, there is a problem of domain awareness. FINTRAC sees a bit of the domain; the banks see a bit of that domain. The banks abroad, to which money might be transferred, might see some of that domain; and much of the domain nobody actually sees if you think about the massively growing problem of trade-based money laundering, for instance, and if you think about some of the charges that have been laid against banks in Australia. All of this points to major coordination and collective action problems here.
There are two last points that I want to raise about the problem space here. One of them has already been mentioned, the problem of concealing ownership of assets obtained by criminal proceeds. The corollary of that is to prevent the dissipation of forfeitable assets that cannot be physically seized. I'll get back to both of these points, but the essence here is that we have two corollary problems.
Really, I think the problem around forfeiture is a particular issue because ultimately it's important not just to punish people and the defendant and to remediate markets, but also to make sure that these markets actually work. As I point out, if it continues in Canada it will only reinforce the way legal businesses get embedded in the Canadian market that engages in these illicit purposes.
I then go in fairly significant detail to some of the legislative measures that can be taken. I point out in detail some elements in the Canadian legislation that are quite good, in particular with regard to predicate offences, and that there are elements that are particularly weak and confusing. For instance, section 462.31 requires the intent to conceal or to convert, which is deliberately waived, for instance, in U.S. legislation.
I also point to Florida statutes because we talk a lot about beneficial ownership, in particular, the problem around bearer shares. But there are code provisions around that for law enforcement that then force companies to be able to identify these owners. I point in particular to Florida provisions here, and I think all these provisions could be readily adopted in Canada.
I'd also like to point out one of the ironies in all this. With regard to the issue of corporate laws that anonymize ownership of assets and the issue of bearer shares that can cross borders largely illegally and undetected, Canada has pressured countries such as the Bahamas and Panama to abolish their bearer regimes, but it has refused to do so itself, so I think we need to get our ducks in line here.
There are 12 specific recommendations. I won't go through them in detail. I will just flag them.
First, we need to change some of the structures around the RCMP that the organization has overstretched. It doesn't have the capacity to engage in this. It needs separate employer status so that it can engage seasoned experts—accountants, lawyers, and whatnot.
I suggest that we need to restructure Criminal Intelligence Service Canada and take it out of the purview of the RCMP. We should create it as a separate, stand-alone organization similar to the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission. We should embed a special unit of that with the Criminal Intelligence Service Ontario and give it separate employer status. We should basically create what we already have in regard to terrorism, the integrated national security enforcement teams. We should create the same thing on the market enforcement side through this particular structure.
The integrated market enforcement team of the RCMP in Toronto, I believe, has been in existence for eight years. I need to check my data on this, but I believe it has never laid a single charge in those years. This is not to criticize the RCMP. There are a number of issues around IMET, but needless to say the current structure is not working and therefore I have very specific proposals here on what we need to do.
With regard to the domain awareness issue and the collective action problem between banks and financial intelligence that I raised before, one option is to shift the burden, as the U.K. has done, to convince us this is an innocent transfer and we'll allow it. I think that maybe the charter provision as interpreted under Oakes would make this very difficult to do, but we could change the crime to an illicit money transfer, which then means we can seize the money by default as the U.K. has done. Then you can engage in litigation to get the money back that we spend on these proposals.
We should drop to zero the reporting requirement of $10,000. This $10,000 threshold was always arbitrary. It creates significant costs for banks, because now they have to filter transactions, as opposed to pumping all the transactions to FINTRAC. The current regime is untenable because banks are basically the cops that have to provide the evidence. We think compliance will always be weak under this system. Banks have great trouble providing the suspicious transaction reports precisely because they only have a limited picture.
We need to create—and this is really key—separate legislation for money laundering and terrorist financing. I understand after 9/11, it was easy to draft the terrorism financing piece onto money laundering. This has been the global trend not just in Canada, but around the world. This combination of legislation is not working. Think about having a transportation act for maritime and air transportation and saying that since they're both transportation, we'll put them all into one act. They're both transportation, but they're really different things.
By and large, money laundering takes illicit funds and tries to make them legal. Terrorist financing takes legal funds and uses them for illicit purposes. This government has to be prudent to introduce separate legislation. I think it has recognized this in other domains.
We need to make sure that only account holders at banks can make deposits, and cash deposits over a certain amount—I would suggest $10,000—have to be done in person to their account.
I suggest we take $100 bills, and possibly also $50 bills, out of circulation. After all, when was the last time any member of the committee used a $100 bill? This largely fosters money laundering and an illicit cash economy. We need to follow best practices set by AUSTRAC, which require legislative changes. AUSTRAC embeds bank analysts within their financial intelligence organization, and AUSTRAC embeds its analysts within bank organizations to improve co-operation and domain awareness. We can see this is yielding a genuine payoff.
They also need to make sure that the agreement from December 2017 is implemented for the federal, provincial, and territorial corporate statutes so they are changed to beneficial ownership and bearer shares, and bearer share warrants and options are replaced by registered instruments. We've already mentioned the national registry of beneficial ownership; both Germany and the United Kingdom are in the process of doing so.
We need to expand FINTRAC's mandate so it can also engage in investigations. I think this would be a great improvement for everybody. It's not a whole lot of use if you have a financial intelligence agency that can only do the analysis and then passes it off to law enforcement, and then ultimately nothing ever happens.
Finally, as the United States Internal Revenue Service and Treasury do, I suggest that we should publicize the successful prosecution of transnational financial crimes. I say “transnational” because even the government has at times confused this in the statements it has made. It has claimed a number of prosecutions for transnational illicit financial dealings when the crimes that were prosecuted were crimes committed in Canada, domestic offences under the Criminal Code. These cases had transnational dimensions, but nobody was prosecuted for these transnational issues.
If we don't get at this in a globalized society where borders are increasingly fluid, Canada is going to become an even greater haven. The problem is that this is now so entrenched in the legal economy that the longer we wait, the more difficult it is going to be to root out the underlying complex issues.
I've made a very detailed submission, and I'm happy to speak to any of the issues and recommendations that are raised in that submission as to what needs to be done to improve the Canadian regime.