Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

British Columbia

Man charged with murder of accused in high-profile B.C. money-laundering case

A suspect has been charged with the murder of a B.C. man alleged to have been at the centre of an international money-laundering operation.

Richard Charles Reed also charged with aggravated assault of alleged loan shark Paul King PaoJin

2 police officers standing in front of crime scene
A suspect has been charged with murder in connection with the shooting of accused money-launderer Jian Jun Zhu in September 2020. (Shane MacKichan)

A suspect has been charged with the murder of a B.C. man alleged to have been at the centre of an international money-laundering operation.

According to court documents, Richard Charles Reed has been charged with the first-degree murder of JianJun Zhu, who was accusedin a high-profile laundering case that collapsed in dramatic fashion in 2018.

Zhudied in September 2020 after he was shot at a Japanese restaurant in Richmond, B.C.,alongside Paul King PaoJin, an associate who was namedas a loan shark at a recent commission into money laundering in the province.

Reed has also been charged with aggravated assault in connection with the attack on Jin, as well aspossession of a prohibited weapon without a licence, and recklessly firing a gun in a place where other people were present.

The charges were sworn Mondayand Reed was scheduled to make an appearance in provincial court in Richmond on Tuesday. A bail hearing has been set for Dec. 14.

Underground bank

Both Zhu and Jin were key figures in theRCMP'sfailed E-Pirate investigation into money laundering.

Documents related to E-Pirate alleged that Zhu ran anunderground bank that laundered more than $200 million per year.

Evidence recovered by the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit as part of an investigation into money laundering in B.C. Two key figures in a money-laundering inquiry were shot in September 2020. Charges have now been sworn in relation to that attack. (CFSEU-BC)

All charges against Zhu, who denied any wrongdoing,were eventually stayed in November 2018.

Federal prosecutors haverefused to provide the reasonbut court recordings and documents detailed months-long delays sparked by the realization the Crown had mistakenly disclosed privileged information.

The names of both Zhu and Jin arose repeatedly at B.C. Supreme Court Justice Austin Cullen's commission into money-laundering,which was established in May 2019to examine the alleged flow of billions of dollars worth of dirty money through the province's casinos, real estate market, luxury car sales and the drug trade.

Jin was granted standing at the inquiryafterCullen noted that hisname had emerged in testimony suggesting he"has been engaged in money laundering and loan sharking relating to activities at British Columbia casinos."

On the final day of the hearing in October, Jin's lawyer notedthat his client was investigated but never charged as part of E-Pirate.He told Cullen there clearly wasn't enough evidence to prosecute.

Cullen is scheduled to release a final report in December after hearingfrom 198 witnesses and considering1,063 exhibits, totalling70,000 pages of evidence.

The 'Vancouver model'

During hearings at the Cullen Commission, criminologist Stephen Schneider described the "Vancouver model" used to launder illegal funds fromChina and revenue fromdrug trafficking.

The model, which has since been studied worldwide, involves movinglarge amounts of funds from China through informal value transfer systems to avoid China's limits on money leaving the country. Once in Canada, those funds are mixed with cash from the drug trade, and the cash is then laundered through B.C. casinos and private mortgages.

Schneidersaid Silver International Ltd. was at the centre of this operation. Zhu was one of the directors of the company.

"You wouldn't have the Vancouver model without Silver International and their directors," Schneider said.

At the time of the shooting in September 2020, the IntegratedHomicide Investigation Unit called the attack "brazen" and said that whileboth victims were well known to police there was noevidenceit's connected to ongoing gang conflicts in the Lower Mainland.

None of the charges against Reed have been proven in court.

With files from Yvette Brend