Pubdate: Wed, 14 May 2008 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Kathleen Harris, National Bureau Chief MOUNTIES GET HANDS ON $227M OF BAD GUYS' STUFF OTTAWA -- The Mounties have seized cash, cars, boats, homes, jewelry and livestock worth more than $227 million that was the bounty of big-time drug traffickers, prostitution rings and illicit arms dealers. Records obtained through Access to Information list major RCMP files on proceeds of crime cases across Canada, showing hundreds of hauls since new laws were installed a decade ago. So far, only $65 million of that has been ordered forfeited by the courts, with the remainder going to legal fees or the accused party's living expenses or whittled down through plea bargains. Many of the cases are still before the courts. While the RCMP seizures represent only a fraction of the estimated billions made each year in Canada's illicit drug trade, Staff-Sgt. Joel Godard of the proceeds of crime section said the key aim is to shut down the big operators. "A lot of these investigations are quite complex and take a long period of time, and because of that there are fewer investigations conducted. But the goal is to target the upper echelon of organized crime," he said. Some of the probes -- given names like Project Rags to Riches or Project Oilslick -- are carried out in parallel with a major drug or other investigation, while others begin after charges are laid. Investigations are complicated because clever criminals cover their tracks by registering assets in the name of third parties or using offshore accounts, laundering illicit cash by buying property, jewels or expensive vehicles. Cons have been nabbed putting money into everything under the sun to hide their wealth -- from a ski hill to cattle. But Godard said increasingly sophisticated methods of organized criminals are matched by sophisticated law enforcement to help remove the "incentive" of crime. "We seize vehicles, houses, condominiums, boats, planes, furniture -- anything we can prove was purchased through the criminal activity," he said. Ill-got property is turned over to the federal Public Works department, where the goods are guarded until legal proceedings are done. Courts can declare some or all the property "forfeited," or order it returned to the owner if there's no conviction. Most forfeited assets are sold through public auction. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath