Licensed cannabis growers have ties to organized crime, Enquête investigation finds(Trudy Government

gb123

Well-Known Member
Despite security checks by Health Canada, investors with Mafia connections involved in legal production
Marie-Maude Denis · CBC News · Posted: Nov 01, 2018 3:56 PM ET | Last Updated: November 1

An investigation by Radio-Canada's Enquête shows Health Canada has granted production licences to companies with individuals with links to the criminal underworld. (Tijana Martin/Canadian Press)


An investor in a major Canadian cannabis company has had longstanding ties, including business dealings, with influential Mafia members and drug traffickers, Radio-Canada has learned.

Another investor in the same company has links with a prominent member of the Rizzutos, the powerful Montreal crime family.

In still another case, an individual managed to sell his cannabis business to one of the big players in the industry, despite his connections to drug traffickers. In return, he received shares in the company and rented out space for a cannabis grow-op.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's legalization plan was supposed to cut out organized crime, but an investigation by Radio-Canada's Enquête shows Health Canada has granted production licences to companies with individuals with links to the criminal underworld.

Enquête examined hundreds of documents as part of its investigation, including reviews conducted by Canadian securities oversight bodies. Enquête is not naming the companies or individuals involved.

For its part, Health Canada says it has not seen any cases of organized crime infiltration of more than 130 licensed cannabis producers since 2013.

To produce cannabis, those who hold certain positions in companies must first obtain a permit from Health Canada by taking a security screening.

Any past connections with individuals related to organized crime are part of the analyzed information.

Red flags raised
To secure a licence, Health Canada first checks if the individual has a criminal record.

Second, the RCMP consults police databases to review information that may indicate an applicant's links to criminals.

Health Canada makes its final decision with the information provided by the RCMP.

The RCMP says it raised red flags on about 10 per cent of the applicants it was asked to check out in 2016 and 2017.

"It's really criminal associations," says Supt. Yves Goupil, who gives the example of a person "associated with individuals who have criminal records."

In a statement, Health Canada said it can "categorically confirm" that it didn't issue "security clearance to an individual when the RCMP provided evidence to the department that it was associated with organized crime."

"Health Canada has found no evidence that organized crime has infiltrated one of more than 130 federally registered producers," spokesperson Eric Morrissette said in an email.

Security checks only scratch the surface
Throughout the period in which Canada's cannabis industry was developing, primarily for medical purposes, only individuals who directly ran the companies were required to obtain a security clearance.

This approach, says Conservative Senator Claude Carignan, demonstrates a naiveté about the workings of high-level organized crime.

"If there is someone who has a criminal record, it is not that person they will put to apply for the licence," Carignan said. "It would be completely naive to think that."

Last spring, Carignan and his Senate colleagues tried, unsuccessfully, to amend Bill C-45 on the legalization of cannabis in order to demand more transparency from companies entering the industry.

Several companies have opaque and complex structures.

"You never see who the real licence holders are," said lawyer and tax expert Marwah Rizqy, who raised the issue before a Senate committee last spring and has since been elected Liberal MNA for the Quebec riding of Saint-Laurent.

The black hole of trusts
It's not uncommon for cannabis companies to be funded through family trusts.

Originally designed for estate and tax planning, trusts are an ideal way to hide individuals with interests in a business, said Marie-Pierre Allard, who studies tax policy at the Université de Sherbrooke.

"The beneficiaries of the trust are not disclosed publicly. It's anonymous," she said, adding that it is "one of the great vulnerabilities of the Canadian legal system."

"If we want to eliminate the Mafia cannabis market, we cannot allow them to use tax havens or trusts to enter indirectly through the back door," Carignan said.

A report by the federal Department of Finance and several international organizations identifies trusts as one of the vehicles most at risk for money-laundering in Canada.

In a Senate appearance last April, Rizqy suggested refusing to grant production licences to companies financed through trusts.

"Maybe it would be wise to deny the licence outright because you are not able to unequivocally establish that the security clearance is really valid," said Rizqy.

The recommendation was not accepted. The federal cannabis legislation adopted this summer, however, did include more extensive background checks into individuals who back cannabis companies.

Too many requirements for the cannabis industry?
Carignan has faced criticism for his efforts to make cannabis companies more transparent.

Line Beauchesne, a criminologist at the University of Ottawa, believes Health Canada's investigations are adequate and consistent with the government's desire to ensure the quality of the product and to prevent smuggling.

"Why especially for the cannabis industry?" Beauchesne asked.

If there were to be new rules of transparency, "all industries moving into Canada" should be affected, she said.

She acknowledged, however, that Health Canada "is absolutely not equipped to conduct financial investigations."

Its traditional role is to ensure a product meets certain standards.

"Health Canada's job is to make sure that when I eat cheese, it's cheese. When it's eggs, it's eggs. And when [it comes to] cannabis, it's cannabis."

The limits of police investigations
The number of audits to be conducted in the cannabis industry is so great investigators have to make choices, said the RCMP's Goupil.

The work of police is complicated considerably when the sources of financing for businesses come from abroad, including from tax havens.

"Technically, there is nothing illegal there. But it's hard for [the RCMP] and for Health Canada to go out and check in those countries," he said.

"Often, it's going to be the janitor who will sign the company documents or a law firm in country X. At some point, we cannot do the research. It's a lot of investment, a lot of time, a lot of money," Goupil said.

"We cannot have a fully bulletproof system. If organized crime has an opportunity to make a profit, it will exploit it. "

Tax havens are not the only barrier to police work. Secrecy also exists in some companies in Canada.

"We need to use other more advanced techniques such as physical surveillance and wiretapping that will help us identify who is behind the company and who operates it," he said.

These survey techniques, however, require considerable resources and cannot be deployed for all cannabis companies.

"We cannot afford it."


said it from day one.. our feds are the organized criminals not us MMJ people
 

GreenHighlander

Well-Known Member
Is it really a secret how Quebec became the number one province production wise many years ago? And in a province so corrupt is it really that surprising that they implemented the friendliest to the BM laws?
Cheers :)
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
zero surprise here....you had to figure the medical cannabis that Lp's grew by the millions of grams and would never sell to medical patients....had to be back dooring itself somewhere...
from day one..said they were offing it for oil supplies out west coats way.only had a license to grow not sell but bob and doug still could ;).

business eh...........get it from both ends :hump:
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
They don't want to look because they already know some of the names that will pop up.
its not going to stop either.
It will ONLY get bigger with LPs off hing their shit to sell to the BM cause this way its CASH in their pockets. ;)

two books has never been an issue. theres no such things a s GARBAGE when CASH IS CONCERNED!:spew::idea:
not sure why our feds think things like this will change:?:roll:
just frigging "blind eyes" cause theyre getting theirs.. ..:hump:
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
its not going to stop either.
It will ONLY get bigger with LPs off hing their shit to sell to the BM cause this way its CASH in their pockets. ;)

two books has never been an issue. theres no such things a s GARBAGE when CASH IS CONCERNED!:spew::idea:
not sure why our feds think things like this will change:?:roll:
just frigging "blind eyes" cause theyre getting theirs.. ..:hump:
So what you're saying is that the LP's are going to contaminate the BM weed with their poison weeds? hahahahahaha
BOYCOTT or buy poison schwaggs.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
Canada's largest pot producers deny mafia ties after investigative report

shuold hear these fool yap about shit …

its funny..

suck it mofos..
yer done


The largest Canada-based marijuana producers denied to MarketWatch that they have done business with or taken investment cash from people tied to organized crime, after a bombshell report to that effect that did not name names.

Canadian Broadcasting Corp., the country’s government-backed news outlet commonly referred to as CBC, posted a report late Thursday that said some of the country’s major licensed marijuana producers had “longstanding ties” that included business dealings with members of the mob. Beyond links to a powerful Montreal, Quebec, crime family, the report also said that one of the large licensed producers acquired a business with ties to a drug trafficker. That deal included stock and rented space for a pot growing facility, according to the report.


Low cost flights : find cheap tickets starting at $65
See More Sponsored by Jetcost
Eliminating mob ties and organized crime from the cannabis business was one of the arguments government officials used in favor of recreational legalization, which took effect Oct. 17 in Canada.

“A very significant proportion of adults in Canada were choosing to disregard the law, and criminal enterprise had 100% control of the market for production distribution, and were profiting in the billions,” Bill Blair, Canadian Minister of Border Security and Organized Crime Prevention, said in an interview with MarketWatch last month in Ottawa.

A guide to pot stocks: What you need to know to invest in cannabis companies

Canadians with criminal records are prohibited from obtaining federally required licenses to grow weed, and while the government has suspended licenses in the past, it has done so because of mob ties since 2013.

“Health Canada has seen no evidence that organized crime has infiltrated any of the more than 130 federally licensed producers,” said Eric Morrissette, the spokesman for Health Canada, the government agency in charge of licensing weed companies.

According to Canada-based author and organized crime specialist James Dubro, there remains a healthy black market in Canada for weed, in large part supplied by organized crime outfits run by bikers and ethnic gangs that have historically pursued selling bootleg cigarettes. He said there’s little reason to risk the level of scrutiny that comes with doing business with a public company at this point, but it wouldn’t prevent a Mafioso from investing laundered profits through relatives.


“Mafia itself isn’t going to be heavy into the pot thing,” Dubro said. “It’s bikers, they get into bars and strip clubs and, naturally, marijuana shops. They’re all over Toronto and Montreal — in the port there and god knows what else.”

The CBC article did not name the people or companies involved with the mob, so MarketWatch asked the largest publicly pot producers by market cap if they would deny mafia ties on the record. Those companies were Canopy Growth Corp. (CGC) , Tilray Inc. (TLRY) , Aurora Cannabis Inc. (ACB) , Cronos Group Inc. (CRON) , Aphria Inc. (APHQF) , (CA:APH) CannTrust Holdings Inc. (CNTTF)(CA:TRST) and Hexo Corp. (CA:HEXO)(HYYDF)

Here’s what they said

Aphria spokeswoman Tamara Macgregor said the company has no ties to organized crime or drug traffickers.

Aurora Cannabis, through spokeswoman Heather MacGregor, said “Aurora is not involved with individuals associated with organized crime.”

CannTrust Chairman Eric Paul denied that the company had ties to the mob, saying that he and a partner founded the company and only took money from friends, family and institutional investors. CannTrust also has not made any acquisitions other than greenhouse investments, he said. “I’ve been here since day one, and we’re the money guys behind things,” he said over the phone. “We have no connection to anything like that, we’re squeaky clean.”

Canopy Growth spokeswoman Caitlin O’Hara wrote in an email, “ We are publicly traded because we value transparency, our business is run with integrity by a carefully vetted group of people. Any suggestion or insinuation otherwise would be unfounded and reckless.”

Cronos Group spokeswoman Anna Shlimak wrote “No” to each one of MarketWatch’s queries about investors with ties to the mob, conducting business with those with mob ties and acquiring an organization with ties to drug traffickers.

Hexo said in a statement the company does not control who buys its shares — responsibilities for vetting retail investors falls to investment advisers, which are regulated by provincial authorities. “We are also not aware of any ties to organized crime and would not conduct business with anyone we were aware had such ties,” Hexo director of communications Isabelle Robillard said. Robillard also said that in order to obtain its contract with Quebec’s government-run pot retailer, the company received clearance from provincial regulators which includes an investigation by Quebec’s anticorruption and economic crime unit.

Tilray spokesman Zack Hutson wrote in an email responding to questions of mob ties, “Absolutely not.”

How Canada checks for mob ties

As part of the Cannabis Act in Canada, licensed producers are subject to criminal background checks conducted by Health Canada. Health Canada doesn’t conduct the background checks itself, relying on the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, or RCMP — Canadian law enforcement akin to the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the U.S. — which consults various information sources and databases at its disposal. The results are submitted to Health Canada, which makes the final determination about a license.

Read:Cannabis is now legal in Canada, but pot companies expect a rocky start

Key investors in cannabis companies are also subject to the same security clearance as executives and others such as members of the board listed on licensing applications. “Health Canada has the authority to identify additional positions or individuals in an organization who require a security clearance,” Morrissette wrote in an email.

The RCMP checks investors, but in some cases,such as those involving shell companies and offshore accounts prove more difficult — an issue that arose during the passage of the bill legalizing cannabis. Regardless of the challenges, any ties to the mob that the RCMP can uncover are enough to kill a license.

“Any ties to organized criminality automatically leads to a rejection of the application,” Health Canada’s Morrissette wrote.

Weed stocks were trading up midday Friday. Horizons Marijuana Life Sciences Index ETF (CA:HMMJ) was up 2%, and the ETFMG Alternative Harvest ETF (MJ) gained 0.9%. The S&P 500 index rose 0.3% (SPX) as of midday Friday.

Aurora Cannabis responded to MarketWatch after this article was originally published, it has been updated with the company’s response.
 

Farmer.J

Well-Known Member
"Aurora Cannabis, through spokeswoman Heather MacGregor, said “Aurora is not involved with individuals associated with organized crime.”

But didn't Terry Booth admit to selling dime bags in highschool and in college?

Selling cannabis back then was a crime, and I'm assuming he made a profit, so he must have been organized.
 

MedicatedHiker

Well-Known Member
"Aurora Cannabis, through spokeswoman Heather MacGregor, said “Aurora is not involved with individuals associated with organized crime.”

But didn't Terry Booth admit to selling dime bags in highschool and in college?

Selling cannabis back then was a crime, and I'm assuming he made a profit, so he must have been organized.
Criminalizing kids for selling weed is not cool, buddy.
 
Top