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Senator reports herself to ethics czar over tax-haven revelations

A Conservative senator is taking the unusual step of reporting herself to a parliamentary ethics czar after leaked tax-haven records revealed she was a director of an offshore corporation for 12 years without, she says, ever knowing about it.

'I had no knowledge of, or participation in the listing of my name as a director' of offshore firm

Senator Nicole Eaton says she never knew that for 12 years, she was listed as a director of a Bahamas-based offshore corporation owned by her friend. (Dany Veillette/Rideau Hall handout)

A Conservative senator is taking the unusual step of reporting herself to a parliamentary ethics czar after a joint CBC/Radio-Canada/Toronto Star investigation into leaked tax-haven records found she was a director of an offshore corporation for 12 years without, she says, ever knowing about it.

As a result, Senator Nicole Eaton failed to disclose the position, as required, to the Senate's ethics officer, which would normally be a violation of the upper chamber's conflict-of-interest rules.

But both she and a longtime friend, who acknowledges installing Eaton as a director of the Bahamas-based company, say Eaton didn't know about it, and only learned the newswhen reporters made inquiries this week.

"I knew nothing of this andnever served on this company's board of directors," Eaton said in a statement to CBC News and the Star. "This clearly occurred without my knowledge or consent."

Beyond the odd circumstances, experts say the revelation points to a glaring gapin the regulation of offshore companies in the Bahamas, a tax haven that vows it is "largely compliant" with international standards on anti-money-laundering measures and know-your-client rules.

Wealthy families

The bizarre tale embroils not only Senator Eaton, who married into the Eaton's department store dynasty, but the heirs of another prominent Canadian business family, the Bassetts, who at one point controlled CTV, the Toronto Argonauts football team and a stake in the Toronto Maple Leafs.

The story begins in 1999 when Eaton was appointed as a founding director of a corporation called Mount Bodun Ltd., according to some of theleaked Bahamian corporate records made public on Wednesday by the Washington-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.

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Mount Bodun Ltd. belonged to Eaton's friend Marian Bassett, daughter-in-law of John W.H. Bassett, the late media mogul who once owned the Toronto Telegram newspaper and stakes in the Leafs and Argos.

Marian Bassett said in interviews this week that the company was incorporated at a time when her husband was in deteriorating health, as a way to split their assets and for her to safeguard her and her children's share. She wanted a reliable, familiar face to serve as a director.

"I put Nicky [Eaton] down as a director because she is a very, very old family friend," said Bassett, who has lived in the Bahamas for most of the last 36 years. "I knew that the kids, the estate would be in good hands."

But, Bassett said, she didn't tell Eaton. "I know you would under normal circumstances," but amid the stress of her husband's illness and treatments, she said, "it just fell through the cracks."

Remarkably, there was nothing Eaton had to sign, no paperwork to fill out, and no documentation she had to submit,Bassettsaid.

"There's so many compliance rules now I'm sure it's no longer possible, but back then it was," she said, adding,"Only in the Bahamas, right?"

Fast-forward 10 years, and Prime Minister Stephen Harper named Eaton, a former director of theConservative Party's fundraising wing, to the Senate. That obliged her to fileannual disclosures, under theConflict of Interest Code for Senators, setting out any corporate directorships that she held.

She has declared none since taking office.

Finally,Bassettsaid, she switched to a new lawyer in the Bahamas in 2011 and decided to rearrange the officers and directors of her holding company. Eaton was dropped and two ofBassett'schildren were added.

A register of MountBodunLtd.'s directors and officers is among the leaked documents from the Bahamas. It shows Eaton's occupation as "senator" and her date of resignation as Oct. 6, 2011.

But that step, too, apparently didn't require an official resignation letter from Eaton. "I don't even know if there was a signature attached to it,"Bassettsaid.

'Prepared to swear an affidavit'

Eaton said she only found about her role in MountBodunLtd. on Monday thanks to inquiries from a reporter.

An adviser to Senate ethics officer Lyse Ricardconfirmed Thursday afternoon thatEaton has since reported the matter and that Ricard is looking into it.In her statement earlier this week,Eaton promised "full co-operation."

Democracy Watch co-founder Duff Conacher says the Senate ethics officer should not accept Eaton's story without solid evidence. (Adrian Wyld/CP)

"I am prepared to swear an affidavit attesting that I had no knowledge of, or participation in, any part of the listing of my name as a director of MountBodunLtd. in any way," the statement says.

Duff Conacher, co-founderof government watchdog group Democracy Watch, said anyinvestigation must go deeper than that.

"The ethics officer should not accept the story without evidence," he said. "It's up to Ms. Bassett and Ms. Eaton to prove this is the case by showing incorporation documents and other filings that would have had to have been made."

CBC and the Star also reached out toBassett'scurrent and former lawyers in the Bahamas to try to understand how someone could be officiallyinstalled as a corporate director without knowing it and without signing any acknowledgments or submitting any proof of identity. Neither of them returned calls oremails.

Because directors typically have the power to sign documents, open bank accounts, approve payments and make other significant financial decisions on behalf of companies, anti-money-laundering rules in many countries require that corporate directors at the very least file a copy of an ID document, and sometimes a utility bill, with their company's bank or registration agent.

The lack of such checks is precisely what drawspeople in other cases to offshorejurisdictions like the Bahamas, saidRichard Powers, an expert on corporate governance and professor at the University of Toronto's business school.

"It's not Canada. It's not the United States. They have not gone through and tightened up a lot of these things," he said. "That someone could perpetrate this without someone knowing about it, it goes to the lax compliance regime that goes on there. That's what attracts people."


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