Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to have the opportunity to speak at second reading of Bill C-22, which is, as hon. members are aware, intended to remedy the flaws in the present legislation as far as money laundering is concerned, which is the common term for laundering the proceeds of crime.
It is estimated that, every year, up to $17 billion from the proceeds of crime are laundered in Canada alone, most of that amount coming from the drug trade, heroin, cocaine, cannabis and hashish in particular.
It is estimated that, out of that $17 billion from the proceeds of crime that are laundered in Canada alone, the bulk of it, some $10 billion, is connected to the traffic in illegal drugs.
This is a major problem. Internationally, according to federal government figures, the total proceeds of crime that are laundered are in the order of $500 billion U.S., a considerable sum.
Since our arrival in the House of Commons, we in the Bloc Quebecois have been calling for money laundering to be considered a violent crime and to be treated as such by judges hearing money laundering cases.
I must say that the government listened to us—a first really for the Bloc Quebecois since we got here—because, when the Criminal Code was recently amended, the government paid heed and decided that money laundering would now be considered a violent crime.
The word “violent” is not used lightly. As I mentioned, in Canada, the laundering of proceeds of crime is a $17 billion business, including $10 billion from drug trafficking. There are human tragedies behind these figures.
For example, every year, thousands of children in Canada become addicted to so-called hard drugs. Perhaps we should stop making a distinction between hard and soft drugs. For example, while, 100 years ago, cannabis was considered a soft drug, it now has an hallucinogenic content 7 to 30 times greater than the cannabis that was being sold in the 1970s. Therefore, we can no longer talk about a soft drug. All drugs are becoming hard drugs.
Associated with the laundering of proceeds of crime are human tragedies, particularly in the case of illicit drugs. Thousands of children become addicted to these hard drugs, with all the social costs that this situation might generate.
Every week there are tragedies, such as killings between biker gangs for control over criminal activities, including the drug market. In the end, the laundered money is the product of these tragedies, these wars between biker gangs, which often claim innocent lives.
We must never forget or lose sight of the fact that, in addition to the thousands of children who become addicted to hard drugs every year, there was also an 11-year old boy who died in Montreal in 1995 because a bomb exploded right beside him as a result of this war between biker gangs to control the drug trade.
Associated with money laundering are also murders. In 1994 alone, no fewer than 79 murders were committed in Quebec alone to gain control over the drug trade. Ultimately, the proceeds of such crime turn up as laundered money.
There were 89 attempted murders, 129 cases of arson, and 82 attempted bombings. In 1998, there were 450 acts of violence related to control of the drug trade. Such are the social and economic ramifications of this laundered money. Just to help children who have turned to hard drugs because of criminals get off them is costing Canada a minimum of between $4 billion and $7 billion annually. This is quite a sum of money.
Considering money laundering a violent crime and improving the existing legislation concerning the laundering of proceeds of crime is a step in the right direction.
As I mentioned earlier, without blushing, the fact that money laundering is now considered a violent crime is the product of the work of several members of the various political parties in the House, but particularly those of the Bloc Quebecois, who worked relentlessly to have this included in the Criminal Code, with everything that resulted from that in terms of toughening our laws.
Before getting into the provisions of this bill, I would like to make an important comment. Justice in this country has always been one of the Bloc Quebecois' main concerns. Our party has always wanted to see justice done. It has always wanted justice to be effective and to stop the real criminals.
Apart from money laundering, we have devoted our attention to at least six other issues. That has allowed us to progress in this parliament, with the measures that were announced both recently and earlier. They are the product of the work members of the Bloc Quebecois have done in the area of justice.
Take for example the removal of the $1,000 bill from circulation. Our colleague from Charlesbourg went on a crusade to have those Canadian bills taken out of circulation. Why was that so important?
First of all, Canada is the only country to have such high denominations. When one looks at the United States or Europe—and it has been demonstrated around the world—that having $1,000 bills in Canada facilitates criminal transactions. It also facilitates money laundering.
In order to better illustrate the crucial need for the elimination of the $1,000 bill, something the Bloc Quebecois has worked to convince the government on, let me give the following example.
A street sale of 20 kilos of cocaine generates profits of between $2 million and $4 million, depending on its purity. How much does a mix of bills of $10, $20, $50 or $100 denominations weigh? The small denominations weigh 120 kilos. Imagine the handling involved for the criminals doing the laundering, who collect the proceeds of crime, of the sale of the 20 kilos of cocaine, how much easier it would be for them to carry higher denominations such as $1,000 bills and to launder them. It would be a lot easier.
If they just use $1,000 bills, if they have them to convert $5, $10 or $100 bills, they have to handle only two kilos worth of bills. They start off with 120 kilos of bills of small denominations and, with $1,000 bills, they cut the weight of the proceeds of crime to two kilos. It is a lot easier to go around with a two kilo bag of money from the sale of cocaine, heroin or some other illicit drug than to have to handle $5, $10, $20 or $100 bills.
We worked very hard with law enforcement authorities to convince this government that the $1,000 denomination needed to be withdrawn. The Secretary of State for International Financial Institutions recently announced that he would soon be withdrawing the $1,000 bill from circulation. That is good news, and I would again like to congratulate my colleague from Charlesbourg for his considerable efforts in this connection, along with my leader, the hon. member for Laurier—Sainte-Marie, and all of the Bloc Quebecois. They have fought long and hard to get this measure implemented, in order to have the $1,000 bill taken out of circulation.
Any measure—and we can never say this too often—that can hinder organized crime is a welcome one. Any improvement to the Criminal Code, like the other measures created to make the police forces' work easier, is a welcome one, if the objective is to fight more effectively against organized crime and to make it harder and harder for them to operate in Canada and internationally.
We in the Bloc Quebecois have addressed one other important matter, on which we have also taken action: pawnbroking. My colleague from Hochelaga—Maisonneuve has done an admirable job in this connection to ensure compliance with municipal bylaws concerning record keeping by pawnshops. Such compliance prevents these businesses from becoming a means of laundering money, the proceeds of crime, or other crime related property. This represents a considerable victory for the Bloc Quebecois, and this action again arose out of a concern for greater justice and for making it easier for law enforcement officers to collar real criminals.
The efforts by the Bloc Quebecois member for Hochelaga—Maisonneuve have led to tighter controls on pawnbroking establishments. Following these efforts, 70 pawnshops closed in Montreal. These businesses did not comply with municipal bylaws and they bordered on being illegal. These 70 pawnshops were probably used to launder money.
The fourth issue that we in the Bloc Quebecois tackled because we care about justice, which is also reflected in Bill C-22—and we will get back to this a little later—is the fight against organized crime. A few months ago, the hon. member for Berthier—Montcalm, who is here today, tabled a motion in the House to establish a justice subcommittee to find ways to fight organized crime more effectively.
I was very pleased to see that, through the work of the hon. member for Berthier—Montcalm and all members of the Bloc Quebecois, we were able to convince not only the government but all the parties in this House of the need to set up such a committee. Incidentally, the subcommittee will begin its work next week to report back in the fall, with a series of recommendations on how to increase the effectiveness of our fight against organized crime. These measures will not only allow us to catch petty criminals, but also the leaders, for crimes that they commit or that they ask others to commit.
I hope the work of that committee will be successful, because it is in everyone's interest. I do hope that the consensus achieved by the hon. member for Berthier—Montcalm and the Bloc Quebecois is a guarantee that we will get recommendations that will take us one step further in the fight against crime.
The fifth issue concerns the increase in the RCMP budgets, particularly as regards the fight against drug traffickers.
It is something that we have often talked about here. Recently, under special circumstances which you know, I had the opportunity to express to you the terror experienced by farm families not only in my riding, but throughout Quebec and Canada, particularly in southeastern Ontario.
That feeling of terror sets in every year as criminals confiscate certain plots of farmland in May, at the beginning of the farming season, to prick out cannabis seedlings and let them grow until late fall. During that period, not only thousands of farm families throughout Canada live in terror, but they can no longer enjoy their property. These farmers receive death threats. They are told their children could be harmed. They are told they themselves could be physically harmed should they venture too close to the cannabis planted by these criminals.
We had the opportunity to discuss that. From the example we saw in the Montérégie region, particularly in Saint-Hyacinthe, we, in the Bloc Quebecois, had the opportunity to demand that the government increase the budgets of police forces and give them the tools they need to do their job.
It was ridiculous. Since 1994, the Minister of Finance, who prides himself on being a good manager, had reduced the RCMP budget to fight money laundering and drug trafficking by 12% or 15%, depending on the item.
While we were witnessing exponential growth in organized crime activity, the Minister of Finance, with his usual wisdom—when something does not concern him or his shipping companies and his profits, I think he is less interested in the common good—had cut budgets to fight criminals.
I want to make the point again that Bloc Quebecois members, who are concerned about justice and brought pressure to bear, have managed to get the RCMP budget increased this year and additional resources allocated to the various RCMP detachments in order to wage a more effective battle against drug traffickers.
In addition, Bloc Quebecois representations resulted in the maintenance of all RCMP detachments in Quebec threatened with closure, in many cases because of bureaucratic decisions that ignored the fact that an effective fight against organized crime must be like a chess game. If there are gangs of organized criminals in one location, there must be a strong police presence nearby.
There has been such a presence for several years now. Trust must be established between these police forces, which include the RCMP, the Sûreté du Québec and municipal forces, and the public, particularly in a case where the law of silence reigns, where there is a regime of terror surrounding the activities of drug traffickers. It take time to build up this trust.
And yet the federal government threatened to close down many detachments in Quebec when what should be done is to increase the resources in order to wage a more effective anti-crime campaign. It should not be forgotten that it is Ottawa that has the means to increase budgets to wage a more effective battle against organized crime.
Once again, because of the Bloc Quebecois' efforts, budgets were increased and RCMP detachments kept open in order to wage the battle against organized crime more effectively.
One more step remains—increasing resources in the short term—and I will have an opportunity to get into this a little later on. If there is to be another year this year of “agricultural” activity by drug pushers in the fields of Quebec and Ontario, and it takes two or three years before any action occurs, this means two or three years more of a reign of terror threatening whole families, with the billions these criminals pocket from their illicit activities.
Another productive effort by the Bloc Quebecois in its concern for improving justice and the means available to the government and to justice to fight organized crime involved the requirement to disclose any dubious transaction involving $10,000 or more and increasing the number of institutions obliged to report such transactions or any other dubious transaction.
In its 1997 election platform, the Bloc Quebecois expressed its concern at identifying all dubious transactions and ensuring that all institutions and individuals suspected of handling dirty money be obliged, in case of doubt about the amount of a transaction, to report such a transaction.
The law was distinctly lacking in this regard. Under it, an impressive number of financial institutions were and still are not obliged to report dubious transactions of $10,000 or more or any other transaction. They do so on a voluntary basis.
As far back as 1997, we were calling for this declaration to be made mandatory, for there to be a ceiling above which all dubious transactions of sizeable amounts, say $10,000, would have to be reported, along with any other suspicious transactions or transactions by suspicious individuals. We called for the scope of this legislation to be expanded to other institutions, bodies or individuals liable to be dealing with such suspicious amounts or transactions.
We are pleased to see that, with Bill C-22, the government has finally grasped what the Bloc Quebecois has been calling for since 1997, out of concern for justice and effectiveness of police and customs operations to nab criminals. The government has finally understood that it was in the common interest, the national interest and the interest of Quebecers and Canadians, to implement these recommendations by the Bloc Quebecois.
Essentially, Bill C-22 does what the Bloc Quebecois had proposed. This was essentially what had to be done, for the present at least. There are some questions, but we are only at second reading. Other steps are yet to come, including consideration by a committee and report stage. We will have some questions to ask, but overall what we find in this bill is satisfactory to us in principle. It is also satisfactory in its application, with a few minor reservations I shall go into later.
First of all, the bill makes it mandatory to report suspicious transactions, at a level that has been set at $10,000 or more, but also any other transaction where there are grounds for suspicion about the origin of the funds, in other words transactions which might involve the proceeds of crime, whether drug trafficking or any other criminal activity.
The bill also broadens the scope of existing legal provisions. Again, this responds to our repeated representations, since 1997, regarding certain flaws in the provisions dealing with money laundering. The bill specifies that this reporting, which is now compulsory in the case of suspicious transactions, has been broadened to include all regulated financial institutions, casinos, businesses involved in foreign exchange dealings, persons engaged in the business of dealing in securities, insurance companies and persons acting as financial intermediaries, such as lawyers and accountants.
We feel this is an improvement. As I said, we will have questions for the government, officials and numerous witnesses who will soon appear before the Standing Committee on Finance, but, on the face of it, the Bloc Quebecois is pleased with this measure.
The bill also increases the penalties for illicit or criminal activities, namely the laundering of proceeds of crime.
As I mentioned earlier, since money laundering is now recognized as a violent crime, these penalties are harsher than they used to be.
A second improvement found in Bill C-22 is the series of provisions dealing with transborder operations, such as imports or exports of currencies or instruments, such as travellers cheques, and any illegal trafficking of these currencies or instruments. The provisions have been strengthened precisely to catch the real criminals who engage in this type of illicit trafficking.
First of all, the bill increases the powers of customs officers to search people and vehicles. In this regard, we have certain reservations but, overall, we agree with the principle that when there is serious and reasonable suspicion—and customs officers are well trained—with respect to the trafficking of such currency or the failure to report such currency or monetary instruments—it would be normal—let us be honest—to check whether or not such instruments should be seized, the traffickers pursued and the real criminals required to pay.
There are also provisions for co-operation with foreign countries. Too often, discussions about globalization ignore the fact that it is not just about trade and legal matters in the noblest sense. One example given is international tribunals trying war criminals. Globalization also has to do with very close co-operation between governments to catch criminals. We must never forget this.
Recently, there was a conference in Russia on the evolution of organized crime. We must remember that organized crime is becoming increasingly international. I repeat what I said earlier: every year, world wide, approximately $500 billion U.S. is laundered—and money launderers do not file tax returns. This is the amount laundered internationally. Part of this money falls into the hands of organized crime in Quebec and in Canada.
This is a lot of money and it leads to some tragedies, as I mentioned earlier. Co-operation between governments is essential. Such co-operation, which was also called for in a recent international conference on the subject, is made possible by Bill C-22.
Finally, Bill C-22 provides another innovation. Following consideration in committee and questioning of officials and witnesses appearing before the committee, we will be more certain of our final analysis. At first glance, though, the third major clause of this bill, which provides for the creation of a financial transactions and reports analysis centre of Canada, is a step in the right direction in that, at the moment, information on criminals, money laundering and interprovincial transactions is spread here and there.
All efforts to centralize this information or to obtain the co-operation of other police forces or between the investigators of the financial transactions and reports analysis centre of Canada, the various police forces and even Revenue Canada are welcome.
In the future, with this centre, all information on suspicious transactions and those that may lend themselves to money laundering will be centralized. There will also be information on individuals or institutions found guilty of failing to make the mandatory disclosure in the case of a suspicious transaction or of having been accused of money laundering themselves.
I am pleased to note the bill provides that information disclosed by the centre—very confidential information will pass through it—will be carefully controlled and governed by the Privacy Act. This is good news, but we would like to question the government and the officials who worked on the bill, and hear them as witnesses before the Standing Committee on Finance to be sure this information will not be used and cast to the four winds or, more importantly, sold for financial gain.
Very sensitive information will pass through the centre. We want to make sure the requirements of the Privacy Act are met.
As I have said, we do have certain reservations about the bill nevertheless. The first of these relates to increasing the powers of customs officers. This may be beneficial. Often, customs officers may have their hands tied by various constraints that make it impossible, even if they are suspicious, to carry out the necessary search in order to collar real criminals.
We are concerned, at the same time, about people's rights and freedoms. This will be one of our concerns during the next stages of examination of this bill. We would like tight controls over the work of the customs officers, with strict regulations, so that there will not be any abuse relating to searches of individuals or their vehicles. Customs officers must have a framework of operation.
Second, a question arises, particularly in the light of clause 73 of Bill C-22: the extraordinary power assigned to the Governor in Council, and the minister responsible, for making any regulations relating to the legal provisions of Bill C-22.
We have misgivings about this. To give so much power to a group of individuals, to the Governor in Council or the minister responsible, on matters that might become criminal in nature, without involving parliament, has always meant to us that the powers of the departmental employees and the minister are extraordinary. This has also come up in other bills.
We want to know if it would be possible to ensure that the House has a say in the process, to make sure that the powers are not concentrated in the hands of a few individuals when it comes to such important issues, particularly as regards the regulations that have yet to be drafted to implement Bill C-22.
This is another concern we will raise when a more in-depth review of the bill is conducted by the Standing Committee on Finance and at the various legislative stages.
We have a third concern regarding this bill, but also the whole issue of organized crime. Next week, the justice subcommittee will be meeting. It enjoys the unanimous support of the House of Commons, with regard to what still needs to be done to give adequate tools to police forces and what changes must be made to the Criminal Code to fight organized crime more effectively.
Last year, I went through a harrowing experience, not just me, but several other people too. Some people have been going through that experience for years. I am referring to the reign of terror, the law of silence imposed by organized crime on people whose lands they invade. These people cannot say anything, otherwise they are beaten or receive death threats.
I would like to send a message to the government. Will this subcommittee get the government's co-operation so that, by early fall, we can have measures that will truly help us fight organized crime effectively?
Second, was the government's support for the establishment of that subcommittee just a smoke and mirrors operation, or will it truly help the subcommittee to propose a series of recommendations with, of course, the input of opposition members, including Bloc Quebecois members, to fight organized crime more effectively? The hopes of several thousand people rest on that subcommittee.
I do not say that as a figure of speech. I have met people who have been living in terror for the last three, four or five years because of threats from organized crime. They place a lot of hope on the work of the justice subcommittee, on measures to fight organized crime more effectively and to protect them.
They also place a lot of hope on short term measures. I will put particular emphasis on the illegal production of cannabis on Quebec and Ontario farms, for obvious reasons.
I remind the government that, in the short term, before the justice subcommittee can make its recommendations in the fall, it is imperative that we take a series of measures immediately, this year, to fight the illegal production of cannabis, with the farming season that will start at the beginning of May and with the pricking out of cannabis seedlings in our farmers' fields.
If we do not take action this year, we are giving one more farming season, one more year of illegal profits to criminal organizations in Quebec, Ontario, British Columbia and throughout Canada, but particularly in eastern Canada and in the westernmost part of Canada. It is one more year of extraordinary profits, or proceeds of crime, that we are giving them.
It is also one more year to convince even more school children—and the Standing Committee on Finance will have an opportunity to hear from people involved in the schools who see what is happening—to sell them not just cannabis or hashish, but also heroin and cocaine. They will have another year in which to damage the future of thousands of children in Quebec and in Canada.
If action is not taken immediately in April or May to let organized crime know that things will no longer be the same and that, this year, measures will be implemented on the strength of increased budgets, for the RCMP among others, I think that a good opportunity will have been missed to show that we are really serious about fighting organized crime.
As I said, starting with my riding of Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot, there are thousands of farm families and owners of woodlots who are waiting for short term action from the government and who are probably glad that money laundering provisions are being tightened.
The more we cut the ground out from under organized crime and money laundering, which is the key to the long term profitability of criminal activity, the less it will tend to increase its annual production or squatting on land in order to grow cannabis, exchange it for cocaine or heroin on the American market and so forth, and profit from the proceeds.
People are also happy that the continued pressure brought to bear by the Bloc Quebecois has meant an increase in budgets to fight organized crime. That is undeniable. But they are waiting for short term action.
I bring this message to the government. We must see improvements before the start of the next criminal cannabis production season. We must see improvements. After breaking the law of silence, and I am not the only one to have done so, there were others after me in my riding and throughout Canada, we have to improve the situation. Organized terrorism in the fields of Quebec and Canada must stop this year or at least there must be a marked improvement, because it cannot continue. I have met farm families who are victims of organized crime, and this has to stop.
If the government hears us as members, and I think that opposition members are very aware of this issue, it must announce, this year, in the coming weeks, that it is taking steps to reduce criminal activities, beginning with those of the drug dealers.
We will continue to analyze this bill considering it a step in the right direction but recognizing that there are many things yet to be done so that the freedom we were proud of in Quebec and in Canada is not a false freedom, but rather true freedom because we will deprive organized crime of the power to threaten the freedom of the majority of the people.