'Sometimes your outcomes aren't perfect,' says former minister on B.C. money laundering report
'Never once did I ever say, Go easy on money laundering''
The minister once responsible for B.C.'s gaming industry is downplaying an independent report which saysofficials failed to act on money laundering in the province, allowing it to flourish over a decade.
Rich Coleman, former solicitor-general,also contradicted a police statement surrounding the decision to disband anRCMPunit once in charge of investigating organized crime at the province's casinos.
Coleman said he wasn't lenient with the issue, but that public officials and law enforcement tried "to do the best job they could.
"In this case, there was a period of time it didn't work so well, but it's been fixed," he said Sunday.
'Collective systemic failure'
Thereport, released Wednesday, said a "collective systemic failure" cleared the way for unwitting casinos in B.C.'s Lower Mainland to become"laundromats" for proceeds of crime.
Authored by formerRCMPcommissioner Peter German, the in-depthreview said more than $100 million has likely been cleaned in B.C. over the last decade-and-a-half.
The report said organized crime groups, primarily from Asia, launderedmoneyfrom illegal drugsand then invested themoneyin Vancouver-area real estate.
Attorney General DavidEby said the money laundering is tied to organized crime, the ongoingopioidcrisis, the real estate market andskyrocketing housing prices across the Lower Mainland today.
The reportdoesn't name names or blame specificindividuals but many demanded a response fromColeman, former solicitor general who took over the gaming file in 2001.
He did not respond to repeated media requests in the days after the review's release, but was interviewed by the CBC at a Canada Day event on Sunday.
Coleman said German's report was "balanced" and "honest," but not overly critical.
"I don't think it was scathing," he said.
"Sometimesyour outcomes aren't perfect and that's when you fix things and do better."
Coleman said he wasn't soft on the money laundering issue.
"Absolutely not," he said. "Never once did I ever say, 'Go easy on money laundering.'"
German's report made nearly 50 recommendations for the province to solve its money laundering problem moving forward.
SpecializedRCMPunit dissolved
Coleman took over the province's gaming file in 2001.
The RCMP'sIntegrated Illegal Gaming Enforcement Team warned B.C. how vulnerable its casinos were to money laundering five years later.
In early 2009, the unit asked for more power to investigate money laundering in theprovince.
But Coleman disbanded the $1-million unitmonths later, saying it wasn't cost effective.
After German's report was released, theRCMPsaid thedissolution decision came from government but Coleman contradicted that statement on Sunday.
"I was actually pushing pretty hard for that IIGET thing to work,but you have to bring the expertise in," Colemansaid.
"The law enforcement community made some recommendations of change to improve, which we did."
'No knowledge' of senior director warnings
The former senior director of investigations for B.C.'s Gaming and Policy Enforcement Branch got a shout-out in German's report for"nailing" the issue of money laundering in casinos back in 2012.
Joe Schalk said he went to the province's deputy minister about the problem, but was ignored.
He said he was fired without cause in 2014.
On Sunday, Coleman said he had "no knowledge" of a conversation between Schalk and the deputy minister.