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Nova ScotiaCBC Investigates

How common is mail forwarding fraud? Canada Post won't say

Canada Post refuses to release the number of complaints and confirmed cases of mail forwarding fraud in the country, citing several reasons. Two access-to-information advocates say there is no good reason not to release them, aside from the fear of embarrassment.

Canada Post cites several reasons for not disclosing info, also says it doesn't audit mail forwarding process

Almost two years after CBC News requested information on the number of mail forwarding fraud complaints, Canada Post is still refusing to release the data. (Darren Calabrese/The Canadian Press)

It's not clear how frequently mail forwarding fraud is happening in the country becauseCanada Post refuses to release details about its occurrence.

Mail forwarding is a service that allows people to redirect their mail when they move. Fraud occurs when someone forwards another person's mail in an attempt to gather theirpersonal information and steal their identity, allowing the fraudster to apply for credit in the unsuspecting person's name.

CBC News has spent the past two years trying to obtain information about mail forwarding fraudfrom Canada Post, but the Crown corporationhas refused to disclose the number of complaints and cases it deals with each year. It has citedseveral reasons, including concerns that disclosing the information "could reasonably be expected to facilitate the commission of an offence."

Michael Karanicolas, president of the Right to Know Coalition of Nova Scotia,said the information should be released.

"It's very difficult to fathom what legitimate harm could flow from broad statistics like that other than harm to reputation or embarrassment on behalf of government and that is absolutely not a legitimate reason to withhold information," he said.

Canada Post even redacted part of the table of contents of a PowerPoint presentation it prepared for the Crown corporation's president. (Robert Short/CBC)

In July 2017, CBC published a story about aNova Scotia man whose identity was stolen through mail forwarding fraud.The victim only became aware of the fraud when he received a notice in the mail from Canada Post, addressed to himself and a man he didn't know, confirming his mail would be redirected.

CBCfiled an access-to-information request in August 2017 asking Canada Post for the number of complaints and confirmed cases of mail forwarding fraud, as well as guidelines on procedures and policies to be followed when mail forwarding fraud is reported.

The following month, Canada Post sent a response saying that information was being withheld. It said the information "is sensitive to Canada Post as it relates to vulnerabilities of particular systems" and because the records contained personal information.

Michael Karanicolas, president of Right to Know Coalition of Nova Scotia, says Canada Post's refusal to release the requested numbers is indicative of a bigger problem. (Robert Short/CBC News file photo)

"The clear implication from their initial response is that they did not take the first application for information seriously," saidKaranicolas.

In October 2017, CBC filed acomplaint with the Information Commissioner of Canada.

What Canada Post provided

In June 2019, Canada Post provided a revised response with 676 pages of redacted information, as well as 30 pages of a partially redacted presentation on mail forwarding fraud mitigation that was prepared for the company's CEO. Even the table of contents was partially redacted. The revised response did not include mail forwarding fraud statistics.

Freedom Of Information Timeline

Aug 2017:CBC News files freedom of information request
Sept 2017: Canada Post issues response, withholds all information
Oct 2017: CBCNewsfiles complaint
June 2019: Canada Post responds with 676 of 690 pages redacted

Canada Post's additional reasons for not releasing the requested information includedthat it "contains trade secrets or financial, commercial, scientific or technical information that belongs to, and consistently has been treated as confidential by the Canada Post Corporation."

Karanicolas said theexceptions cited by Canada Post are being applied too broadly.

CBC also requested reports and audits on mail forwarding fraud, but Canada Post said it doesn't audit the mail forwarding process.

Tom Urbaniak, a political science professor at Cape Breton University, said if the fraud numbers are concerning, that's all the more reason for Canada Post to reveal the information.

He saidthat would have provoked public discussion and would have prompted policymakers to look at what additional systems and checks and balances should be put in place to prevent mail forwarding fraud from occurring.

"It would be analogous to saying that the public should not receive reports about the frequency of other crimes because that might give ideas to potential criminals,"said Urbaniak, adding thatinformationis a critical tool for policy makers and community crime prevention.

On its website, Canada Post says when customers purchase the mail forwarding service, their identity is validated through an authentication process using the customer'scredit card information. If the customer's identity cannot be validated, the site says the customer still has the option to purchase the service online, buttheir identify will be verified at a post office by using government-issued customer identification.

Canada Post redacted 676 of 690 pages sent to CBC News in response to an access-to-information request for the number of mail forwarding fraud complaints. (Robert Short/CBC)

Urbaniak said there may be security and commercial issues behind the decision not to release the information, but he still thinks it's in the public interest to release the numbers.

KaranicolassaidCanada Post's response to the access-to-information requests points to a bigger problem.

"It is certainly in line with a broader resistance to transparency and disclosure that we see across both the federal and provincial governments, in terms of the exceptions themselves," he said.