VANCOUVER — Lawyers for British Columbia’s largest gaming companies say compliance with provincial regulations to combat money laundering is and always has been a top priority at provincial casinos.
In final submissions at B.C.’s public inquiry into money laundering, lawyers representing Great Canadian Casino Company and Gateway Casinos and Entertainment say their clients consistently met obligations to report the appearance of suspicious cash.
Great Canadian Casino lawyer Mark Skwarok told Commissioner Austin Cullen that the company went beyond its reporting obligations to the Crown-owned B.C. Lottery Corporation, including installing a surveillance system that extended to parking areas near the River Rock casino in Richmond, B.C.
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Lawyer David Gruber, representing Gateway Casinos, told the inquiry that it’s a myth that large cash transactions are casino money makers because data shows the high-limit tables are not important revenue drivers.
The inquiry has heard testimony over the past year that investigators raised concerns more than a decade ago with gaming and government officials about increasing amounts of suspicious cash at Vancouver-area casinos.
Closing submissions conclude Tuesday and Cullen’s final report, including recommendations and possible findings of misconduct and corruption, are due Dec. 15.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 18, 2021.