British Columbia

Money-laundering commission resumes hearings in B.C.

The NDP government launched the inquiry after reports that illegal cash was helping to fuel the real estate, luxury car and gambling sectors in the province. The inquiry is scheduled to hear this week from former RCMP officers and officials from the British Columbia Lottery Corp.

Dirty money in the real estate, luxury car and gambling sectors under examination at the Cullen Commission

Commissioner Austin Cullen presides over opening statements at the Commission of Inquiry into Money Laundering in British Columbia on Feb. 24. Hearings will resume today after being suspended for the provincial election. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

An inquiry into money laundering in British Columbia is scheduled to begin hearing witnesses today in Vancouver.

The hearings were delayed until after Saturday's B.C. election.

Commissioner Austin Cullen rescheduled the hearings to preserve the independence of the commission and to protect the integrity of the electoral process.

B.C.'s New Democrat government launched the inquiry after reports that illegal cash was helping to fuel the real estate, luxury car and gambling sectors in the province.

The government also commissioned three reports that said those businesses were hotbeds for dirty money. Attorney General David Eby has said the inquiry will be able to dig deeper because it can compel witnesses to speak.

The inquiry is scheduled to hear this week from former RCMP officers and officials from the British Columbia Lottery Corp. (BCLC).

In February, the B.C. Real Estate Association told the inquiry that it supported the creation of a provincial land registry that identifies those buying property. It has also struck a working group to make anti-money laundering recommendations.

BCLC has said it consistently reported suspicious transactions to Fintrac, Canada's financial transactions reporting centre, and pointed out unusual conduct to the gaming policy enforcement branch.

The lottery corporation has also brought in measures to control or prevent the flow of dirty money since 2012, including creating an anti-money laundering unit made up of certified investigators and intelligence analysts.

The Great Canadian Gaming Corp., which owns several B.C. gambling sites, also defended the company's efforts to limit money laundering, telling the inquiry that criticism of the industry is unfounded.

A coalition of tax fairness groups have told the inquiry that hiding ill-gotten cash behind shell companies is so widespread in Canada it's known globally as "snow washing."