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British Columbia

Fast cars and bags of cash: Gangsters using B.C. luxury car market to launder dirty money

B.C. money launderinginvestigator and former MountiePeter German says thousands of luxury cars worth millions of dollarsare being purchased every year in B.C. by criminals as a way to launder proceeds of crime.

Investigator Peter German says criminals use straw buyers, off-shore purchasers and even claim the PST rebate

Attorney General David Eby (left), and Peter German, former deputy commissioner of the RCMP, talk to media about the latest section of a report into money laundering in B.C. The 300-pages released today address money laundering in the luxury car and horse racing sectors. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

B.C. money launderinginvestigator and former MountiePeter German says thousands of luxury cars worth millions of dollarsare being purchased every year in B.C. by criminals as a way to launder proceeds of crime.

Many of the vehicles are then resold to exporters who ship themoff shore. In a particularly galling twist, German says the criminals then turn around and apply for a rebate of theprovincial sales tax.

The former RCMPdeputy commissioner was speaking at a news conference in Victoria where the latest segment of his investigation into money laundering in B.C. was released to the public.

The report looked specifically into the luxury vehicle and horse racing industries in B.C. German said he found no "excessive issues" of money laundering at the two active horse racing tracks in the province Hastings Park and Fraser Downs.

However, the report doesdescribe the number of ways dirty money is being cleaned both domestically and internationally through the buying, selling, leasing and stealing of luxuryvehicles.

A saleswoman shows customers an Aston Martin at a luxury car dealership in Vancouver, British Columbia in October 2015. (Julie Gordon/Reuters)

'Criminals don't drive smart cars'

German said the "luxury" aspect of the schemes appealto gangsters.

"Criminals don't drive smart cars," he said. "It goes with the lifestyle they're interested in luxury goods."

In one scheme,acriminal willhire a straw buyer to purchase an expensive vehicle, supplying the buyer with a non identifyingbank draft or, evensometimes, bags of cash. Cash purchases are not illegalandluxury car dealers are not required to report largetransactions to the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada(FINTRAC).

The straw buyer makes the purchase and turns the car over to the true owner who then sells it to anexporter to shipoff shore, most often to China. Once the car is sent overseas, the purchaser can apply for a rebate of the provincial sales tax.

German's report says prior to 2014, the number of PST refund applications for exported vehicles was fewer than 100 per year. In 2014 and 2015 the number jumped to over 700, before jumping exponentially in 2016 to 3,674, and rising even further to 4,452 in 2018.

German said the 'luxury' aspect of the luxury car money laundering schemes appealsto gangsters. 'Criminals don't drive smart cars. It goes with the lifestyle,' he said. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

German said the province has been forced to hire additional staff to deal with the increased demand for PST refunds, noting that "as part of their legitimate duties, provincial civil servants are assisting straw buyers and exporters to maximize their profits ..."

According to the report, Ministry of Financestaff identified one straw buyerwho made in excess of25 suspicious purchases in 2016/17, and another 48 who made in excess of 11 transactions each.

The province has paid out $85 million in export vehicle PST refunds since 2013.

Attorney General David Eby says the government is looking at ways of cracking down on the scheme.

"The piece about the PST refunds was totally shocking to me ... and incredibly disturbing," said Eby. "We are moving very quickly to address this."

Stolen luxury vehicle scheme

The report also highlightsthe need to crack down on the export of stolen luxury vehicles, noting that a full quarter of luxury cars that werestolen last year in B.C. werenever recovered.

German said hundreds of such vehicles are likely shipped out of Metro Vancouver ports every year, adding that a lack of police presence in B.C. ports since the demise of the Ports Canada Police in 1997has left a serious gap in the law enforcement umbrella.

Today's 300-page release is the second section of German's larger report into money laundering in B.C.

Last June, he released"Dirty Money,"a report into the links between money laundering and B.C. casinos. It found thatcasinos had "unwittingly served as laundromats for proceeds of crime."

New Car Dealers Association of B.C.responds

Blair Qualey, the president and CEO of the New Car Dealers Association of B.C. (NCDA), saidin a statement that theorganization applauds German's latest report.

The NCDA, which represents 390 new car and truck dealers in the province, say dealers follow the requirements established by the Vehicle Sales Authority. Qualey says NCDA members fully report qualifying transactions to FINTRAC.

"We agree that thisreviewis importantfor British Columbians, andshould there be regulatory changes to any reporting requirementswith respect to new car sales, wecertainly will complyas our members always do," read the statement.