Pubdate: Sat, 04 Dec 1999 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 1999 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.montrealgazette.com/ Forum: http://forums.canada.com/~montreal Author: R. T. Naylor Note: R. T. Naylor is Professor of Economics at McGill. He is the author of History of Canadian Business, Hot Money & the Politics of Debt and Patriots & Profiteers. He is also part author of the recent study by the United Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention entitled Financial Havens, Banking Secrecy and Money Laundering. CANADA'S NEW "PROCEEDS-OF-CRIME" BILL The federal government is about to reintroduce one of its potentially most dangerous legislative initiatives. Left in its present form, Bill C-81 will try to turn financial managers into police informants, grant Customs officers the power to strip travellers of undeclared cash and create a new bureaucracy to sift through financial records without a targeted individual's knowledge or consent. All this is supposedly necessary to combat a scourge called "money laundering" and to help take away from criminals the proceeds of their crimes. Yet "money laundering" is a contrived offense which has no business in the criminal code. And there already exists perfectly satisfactory instruments for stripping criminals of their ill-gotten gains. The current legislation is driven not by need, but by police hype, political somnambulation and U.S. pressure for the rest of the world to imitate its mistakes. The current zeal for chasing "proceeds of crime" emerged in the U.S. out of frustration with previous crime-control strategies. Until the 1980s the buzz-word had been "targeting up." Rather than wasting time on street punks, the police decided to pursue the big boys who really ran things. But no matter how many "godfathers" wound up in the slammer, just as much weed got toked up in college frat houses, just as much money got blown in illegal gambling dens and just as many prim and proper citizens abandoned wives and children in the dead of night to prowl the streets in search of forbidden carnal delights. Some might have deduced that the notion of criminal markets controlled by a handful of crime-lords whose names were suspiciously hard to pronounce was Hollywood fiction. Some might have figured that the criminal market-place was actually a competitive free-for-all. Some might have concluded that as long as governments made the mistake of criminalizing personal vice, there would always be people happy to supply the resulting demand. Instead the consensus became that mob bosses were continuing to run their rackets from six-room prison suites with gold bars on their seaview windows. Hence the decision to go after the one thing deemed indispensable - - the money that formed the motive (profit) and the means (working capital) for further crimes. Even better, given that era's huge budget deficits and severe cutbacks in public services, the new strategy promised to load onto the bad guys the cost of enforcing criminal justice - by seizing the "proceeds of crimes" and turning them over to the cops to use. The results have been appalling. The follow-the-money frenzy has loaded the U.S. financial system with useless paper work, destroyed traditional guarantees against self-incrimination and double jeopardy and reversed the burden of proof. There is no need for the police to even lay charges for a person's property to be taken. All it takes is a tip-off, which could be pure hearsay, from an anonymous and paid informant, and the owner then has to prove the legal origins of his/her property. The police, who are given performance bonuses based on how much they grab, shifted resources away from violent crimes towards lucrative ones, seizing cars, jewelry, boats, planes, houses and bank accounts. Some police forces began running at a profit, with no further need to submit to civilian oversight by taxpayers. Since seized proceeds must go to law enforcement, small-town forces came to boast everything short of full-fledged SWAT teams though there hadn't been a seriously violent crime in their jurisdiction for years. Once again, there was no proof it did any good. The U.S. still jailed a higher percentage of its population than any major country except Russia, yet remained by far the world's most lucrative market for criminal goods and services. So the rationalization became that the money chase wasn't reducing American crime because the big bucks kept escaping abroad. Meanwhile US banks complained that the reporting requirements were driving up their costs and driving away their customers to the advantage of their foreign competitors. The answer to both? Everyone else was to imitate American folly, or face sanctions ranging from exclusion from the U.S.-controlled international financial clearing system to loss of trade privileges. In response, Canada began to introduce U.S.-style procedures. First came the criminalization of money laundering and sweeping new asset-seizure provisions, albeit stopping just short of the grosser forms prevalent in the U.S. Police investigating drug cases were given the right to fish through tax records, seriously compromising the confidentiality on which the entire tax system is premised. To find, freeze and forfeit assets, special Proceeds-of-Crime units were set up, funded by a federal government loan repayable out of what the units could seize. The proceeds were then turned over the provinces to finance criminal justice administration, giving the police an indirect financial interest in the outcome of their own investigations. Then came Bill C-81. The bill does three things. It introduces U.S.-model controls on cross-border cash movements. Failure to fill out prescribed forms permits Customs officers here, as they do in the U.S., to grab money, even if its origin is strictly innocent. The burden of proving that the seizure is unjustified is then thrown onto the owner. Despite all the rhetoric, the real purpose of the regulation is to deputize Canada Customs at Canadian taxpayer expense as part of the U.S. effort to more closely control its own border. The bill also introduces Mandatory Suspicious Transaction Reports that financial managers must fill out in secret - if they inform their clients, the financial managers can face charges. Yet such reports have been an abysmal failure elsewhere. It is impossible to create an objective list of "suspicious" characteristics. Mandatory reports inevitably encourage over-reporting. And the whole trend of modern banking is towards making transactions more impersonal. The only "suspicious" transaction reports that have ever make sense are voluntary and informal, and go from a bank officer who detects a problem straight to the police. Finally the bill establishes a new agency to study all the resulting paperwork. The agency is supposed to decide whether information should be passed on to a police force (for criminal investigation), to the revenue authorities (for tax enforcement) or to CSIS (to leave on the back seat of a car at a Maple Leafs game). The entire process seems to have been inspired by the children's game called "broken telephone." One kid whispers a sentence in someone's ear, they whisper it to someone else, and so on, until it comes out total gibberish at the other end. And it is all unnecessary. There is no need for a crime called "money-laundering." Money launderers do not stick guns in people's faces or pass bum checks. They make deposits, wire money and set up foreign bank accounts - just like a lot of honest citizens do. Since no one can be convicted of "money-laundering" without proof that the money came from some sort of criminal activity, the Crown should simply charge the individual who handles criminal money with participation in the offense that generated the money to begin with. Creating a stand-alone offense called "money-laundering" is about as logical as creating a separate crime called "driving the getaway car" for bank robbery cases. And it trivializes the real crime. Nor, to take away the proceeds of crime, is there any need to turn police forces into self-financing bounty-hunting organizations. Prior to the current follow-the-money fad, the task of seizing criminal earnings was left to the branch of government that already had the legal tools and the skills. The tax authorities are quite capable of stripping a criminal of his/her illegal earnings, and a fair chunk of the legal along with it. In fact the proceeds-of-crime units came up almost empty-handed until Revenue Canada began participating. And most of the money now reported as seized "proceeds of crime" was in fact recovered using ordinary tax procedures. In short, Bill C-81 is superfluous in terms of its supposed criminal law objectives, and dangerous in terms of its potential impact on hard-won and easily-lost fundamental rights. It is time to tell the government to tailor law and policy to genuine need, not to mass media stereotypes and American police propaganda. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake