I will start.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, members of the committee. Thank you for inviting the RCMP to participate in today's proceedings. I am pleased to have this opportunity to speak about the RCMP's efforts to address financial crime in Canada.
White-collar crime is local as well as global, and it comes in many different forms. We have mass marketing and payment card frauds, identity theft, and identity fraud. There are capital markets frauds, including Ponzi schemes and insider trading, and money laundering. Whether it is local or global, white-collar crime has devastating effects on individuals and communities. When businesses and individuals are victims of fraud, we see an increase in personal and corporate bankruptcies. With the loss of investments, homes, and life savings, the social damage can be severe and can undermine the trust people have in their society.
Many financial crimes are complex and difficult to uncover. They are time-consuming and labour-intensive to investigate and to prosecute. For example, a couple of recent investigations consumed between 50,000 and 70,000 person-hours, involved the gathering of millions of documents, and incurred combined forensic accounting costs of several million dollars.
The reality is that many of these investigations are lengthy, complex, and costly. Although the external environment in which law enforcement operates continues to pose challenges, as a national organization the RCMP has the experience and expertise to carry out these long and complex investigations. It is important to highlight that enforcement of the fraud-related provisions in the Criminal Code of Canada, including enforcement related to capital market fraud, is a mandate that the RCMP shares with every police service in Canada.
Our ability to carry out this work is clearly strengthened by our partnerships with regulatory and other law enforcement agencies within Canada and internationally. Our efforts to combat white collar crime reside in the RCMP's Financial Crime Directorate's three programs: the Commercial Crime Program, the Integrated Proceeds of Crime and Money Laundering Programs and the Integrated Market Enforcement Program.
I would now like to speak about how each is working to combat financial crime.
The mission of the RCMP's commercial crime program is to detect and prevent threats to the Canadian economy and to help ensure the integrity of Canadian institutions. Commercial crime investigators deal primarily with fraud, offences against the Government of Canada, the corruption of public officials, the insolvency process, and bank note counterfeiting.
The RCMP has 26 commercial crime units strategically located across the country. These units are staffed with experienced investigators and employees who are supported by subject matter experts in different fields, such as forensic accounting and criminal law.
In terms of financial crime trends, the RCMP is seeing an increase in the volume and complexity of mass marketing frauds and identity thefts. Payment card and counterfeit payment card frauds have also increased substantially.
In recent years the Canadian Anti-Fraud Call Centre has documented an increase in the overall number of reported incidents of mass marketing fraud in almost all provinces. Mass marketing fraud also remains a significant cross-border crime issue between Canada and the United States.
To combat it, the RCMP has established several specialized teams. Project Emptor in Vancouver and Project COLT in Montreal are teams that involve U.S. and Canadian law enforcement partners, while our investigators in Toronto take part in the Toronto strategic partnership, which is made up of various law enforcement agencies in the greater Toronto area.
In addition, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers' 2009 global economic crime survey that was released last week, 56% of Canadian companies say they have been a victim of economic crime in the past 12 months, which is 4% higher than in 2007. Of those companies, 24% indicated their direct fraud losses were greater than $500,000. Approximately 59% indicated that the perpetrator was from outside of the company.
The cost to an individual whose identity has been stolen can be enormous. Financial loss and the investment of hundreds of hours spent trying to re-establish identity and good credit all take their toll. In 2008 the Canadian Anti-Fraud Call Centre received identity fraud reports from more than 11,000 Canadian victims, who collectively lost more than $9.6 million. While this figure indicates an increase of more than 48% over the losses reported during the previous year, it's estimated that the complaints received by the call centre represent just a small portion of the problem.
A study by McMaster University estimated that in 2008, 1.7 million Canadian victims of identity theft spent 20 million hours and $150 million clearing their names. The McMaster study also indicated that only 19% of identity frauds are ever reported to the police or the credit agencies. With the vast majority--roughly 81% of all identity frauds--going unreported, the actual losses are probably staggering.
In consultation with key stakeholders and other law enforcement agencies, the RCMP is developing an identity fraud strategy to address criminal intelligence and analysis; prevention through education and awareness; and disruption, enforcement, and prosecution of identity fraud cases.
We are also heading up the creation of an international identity fraud working group, the objective of which is to obtain an overview of other countries' identity fraud strategies, discuss related joint priorities, and develop an international strategy.
In 2004 Canada had the highest level of currency counterfeiting among G10 countries. In 2005 the RCMP, in cooperation with the Bank of Canada, developed a national counterfeit enforcement strategy to combat counterfeiting by providing national focus in three key areas: enforcement, prosecution, and prevention. By using new and existing resources, the RCMP established integrated counterfeit enforcement teams in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver.
I am pleased to report that this effort has resulted in a dramatic decrease in the level of counterfeit activity in Canada. The National Anti-Counterfeiting Bureau statistics indicate that since 2004, currency counterfeiting has dropped approximately 80%, from more than 500,000 notes in 2004 to just 107,000 notes in 2008. Even lower numbers are forecast for 2009.
When you eliminate profit, you eliminate the incentive to commit profit-driven crimes. Therefore, the main objective of the integrated proceeds of crime program is to identify, restrain, and forfeit all illicit and unreported wealth accumulated through criminal activities. Across the country the RCMP operates in partnership with other law enforcement and government agencies in 13 integrated proceeds of crime units. Since 2003 these units have obtained the forfeiture of more than $64 million in cash and property. They have an additional $142 million seized and waiting for disposition.
The mandate of the RCMP's Money Laundering Program is to implement specific measures to detect and deter money laundering and to facilitate the investigation of these types of activities. The RCMP Money Laundering Program participates in the exchange of information between initiative partners, such as FINTRAC and the Canada Border Services Agency. It also provides an investigative assessment of money laundering intelligence and monitors national and international money laundering trends.
In 2003 the integrated market enforcement teams, or IMETs, were established in Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, and Calgary. The teams are made up of RCMP investigators, Public Prosecution Service of Canada legal advisers, forensic accountants, and, at some locations, representatives of security regulators and local law enforcement agencies. The IMETs investigate serious Criminal Code market fraud offences that threaten investor confidence or economic stability in Canada.
In 2007, Mr. Nick Le Pan, former federal Superintendent of Financial Institutions, was appointed by government as the senior expert adviser to the RCMP to help develop and guide the implementation of recommendations aimed at improving the IMETs. His report was tabled in October 2007, and key to the recommendations made throughout his report is the challenge of equipping an IMET with the tools and resources it needs to succeed in the environment it operates in.
Since his report was tabled, the RCMP has implemented Mr. Le Pan's recommendations. Today the IMET program is achieving results and working effectively. Over the last year the IMETs have laid criminal charges in a number of major investigations, and more investigations are proceeding.
As I indicated in my opening remarks, white-collar crime is pervasive and increasingly complex, but we do have the experience, expertise, and partnerships to get results. As Canada's national police service, the RCMP will continue to play a critical role in combatting economic crime and helping to protect Canada's economic integrity.
Thank you. We look forward to answering your questions.