6 people, 3 Winnipeg stores face charges after millions of cigarettes seized in smuggling investigation - Action News
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Manitoba

6 people, 3 Winnipeg stores face charges after millions of cigarettes seized in smuggling investigation

An interprovincial investigation led to authorities seizing over three million illegal cigarettes in Manitoba.

Largest-ever seizure from individual, with more than 3 million cigarettes confiscated from 1 person: province

Six people face charges and three Winnipeg convenience stores have had their retail tobacco licences suspended after an interprovincial cigarette smuggling investigation, the province of Manitoba says. (sruilk/Shutterstock)

More than three millioncontraband cigarettes have beenconfiscated from one personin what the province says is the largest seizure from a single person in the Manitoba's history.

Several other people and three Winnipeg stores also face charges aftera smuggling investigation led by the special investigations unit of Manitoba Finance's compliance and enforcement division, with help from police in Winnipeg, Quebec and Ontario, the province of Manitoba said in a Thursday news release.

The investigation, dubbed "Project Shrek," led to a total of more than 3.4 million cigarettes being confiscated, the province says over three million from one person, and smaller quantities from other people.

Those cigarettes represent more than $1 million in lost tobacco tax revenue to the province, according to the news release.

Police also recovered more than $3,000 in cash, a personal truck and a utility trailer from the person who had the bulk of the cigarettes.

Six adults facea variety of charges under the Tobacco Tax Act, the Tax Administration and Miscellaneous Taxes Act and the Criminal Code, the province says, and face more than$4 million in financial tax penalties.

The province didn't provide any details about the individuals accused.

As well, three Winnipeg convenience stores face charges and have had their retail tobacco licences suspended: Royal Supermarket on Wellington Avenue, Honey Convenience on ProvencherBoulevardand Muncheez on Dufferin Avenue.

CBC reached out to the stores for comment.

No one at Royal Supermarket orMuncheez was immediately available for comment. An employee who answered at Honey Convenience said they were not aware of the investigation or thatthe store's licence had been suspended.

Individual fines under the tax acts range from $1,000 to $10,000 and up to six months in jail, aswell as a potential triple tax penalty, the province says.

For any further offences, those penalties increasetofines of$10,000 to$50,000 and up to 12 months imprisonment, and a potential quadruple tax penalty.

Businesses can have their tobacco licence suspended for violations.