Pubdate: Fri, 02 Jul 2010 Source: Vaughan Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 Metroland Media Group Ltd. Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2432 Website: http://www.yorkregion.com/community/vaughan Contact: http://www.yorkregion.com/generalform Author: Joe Fantauzzi PROGRAM TARGETS WHITE COLLAR CRIME An anonymous tip in 2006 led York Regional Police to marijuana grow operations across the GTA. In 2008, after two years of investigation, police during a news conference said they had raided several grow ops and a plant store near Vaughan and made several arrests as part of the probe. It was months later that investigators further alleged that someone had walked into two financing companies and used forged documents to buy properties in Richmond Hill and Aurora, which were then converted into pot-growing operations. The homes went into default and were seized by the finance companies, police said. While many people across Canada are employed by government and the private sector to probe financial crime, there is a lack of co-ordination and standardization among them, according to Matthew McGuire, a former intelligence officer at FINTRAC (Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada) - Canada's financial intelligence agency - who is now a financial crime director of Williams McGuire, a financial crime consulting firm in Markham. He believes financial and white-collar crime is on the rise in Canada. It can include card skimming, mortgage fraud and identity theft. Financial crime can be used to finance terrorism, he added. "These are things that must be detected and acted upon," he said. The company has partnered with Seneca College to establish the Canadian Institute for Financial Crime Analysis. Through a six-course certificate program, students will be provided with training, applied research in financial crime methods and trends and online access to networking opportunities and industry information, among other things. "Everywhere out there, you can find anecdotes about what fraud looks like," Mr. McGuire said. But nowhere has anyone created an exhaustive list of fraud types and put them together with actual transactions that show the tell-tale signs of those frauds. Financial crime is big business in Canada. Last year, $500 million in debit and credit card fraud was recorded in Canada, Mr. McGuire said. "That's the thing that keeps our interest rates high," he said. Billions of dollars were also laundered through this country in the last 12 months, he added. "Think about how the profits of that money is furthering organized crime." First responders to financial crime are often the people working for debit and credit card companies and the program was designed with them in mind. Dr. David Hicks has been appointed professor and chairperson of the institute. Dr. Hicks, who has spent his academic career researching and teaching about organized crime, money laundering and community safety, has been tapped to co-ordinate the academic and research programs. A current weakness in identifying financial crime is a lack of sharing of information among financial institutions, he said. For example, if a large Canadian bank identifies a problem with mortgage fraud, they may develop a system to identify that problem quickly and put a stop to it, he said. But, unless that information is shared, the perpetrators may simply try their scheme out on another financial institution. "Without a systematic sharing of information at a strategic level, you're sort of stuck with leaving these gaps wide open for offenders," Dr. Hicks said. He cited marijuana grow operators, who may be involved in or affiliated with organized crime, purchasing large homes in neighbourhoods with mortgage documents that may have been obtained through identity theft. "There's a big problem with sharing that information and there's a big problem with people dealing with these things in isolation," he said. "People will see different aspects of the problem and deal with it, but really we're being overwhelmed with this because there are too many gaps and not enough of the right people who know about this ... and how to deal with it in a more co-ordinated way." The Town of Markham has been supportive of the institute, said Stephen Chait, the town's director of economic development. The town hopes its support of the institute will help establish Markham as a destination for financial services training and certification, he said. Enrollment for the program will begin this month and classes will start in September, said Seneca's Samky Mak. The plan is to eventually build and equip the Markham campus of Seneca with a lab for the institute, but for now the college will use existing resources, Mr. Mak said. For more information visit www.senecac.on.ca/school/cfs/cifca/index.html - --- MAP posted-by: Matt