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Mystery shoppers sent to Ontario casinos made away with over $35K despite no proof of winnings

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Mystery shoppers sent to four Ontario casinos to assess money-laundering practices were able to make away with a number of cheques totalling over $35,000 despite limited play and no proof of winnings, Wednesday’s auditor general report finds.

The mystery shoppers were independently hired by auditor general Bonnie Lysyk as part of an audit of Ontario’s Lottery and Gaming Corporation (OLG) conducted between January and September 2022.

“The point of it was to determine whether or not, in Ontario, it was possible to launder money through the casinos,” Lysyk said Wednesday, who has since issued recommendations to OLG to reduce the risk of money-laundering.

READ MORE: Highlights from the Ontario auditor general's 2022 report

The shoppers entered the casinos with amounts ranging from $5,000 to $11,000 in cash, the report says, played at table games and slots for 10 to 15 minutes, and then proceeded to be cashed out with cheques.

At one casino on two separate occasions, the shoppers were able to obtain two cheques worth $4,900 after entering with $5,000 cash, and a cheque worth $10,600 after entering with $11,000 cash.

The auditor says, although staff attempted to verify whether the mystery shopper had played at the casino, they failed to verify whether the funds were coming from legitimate wins.

"Similarly, the shoppers obtained cheques of $10,500 after entering with $10,600 cash, and $10,750 after entering with $11,000 cash at the other casino on two separate occasions," the report found.

According to the AG, the shoppers were able to leave these casinos with almost 98 per cent of the funds they had originally brought in as cash – in total, $36,700.

“Now these funds could be considered ‘laundered’ because the cheque could be represented as casino winnings as the source of funds for deposit at a bank," it said.

The shoppers were appropriately denied cheques at the other two casinos and left with only cash.

While speaking to reporters Wednesday, Lysyk underlined the shoppers weren’t given money, but used money of their own.

“The exercise was a low-price exercise,” she said. “We did not provide money to the investigators, they had their own money”

In response to its findings, the AG issued a number of recommendations to the OLG to reduce the risk of money-laundering, including obtaining proof of source of funds at buy-in for transactions of $10,000 or more, and issuing casino cheques only when the funds are verified as a casino win.

More broadly, the AG says the OLG needs to revamp its money-laundering practices, with an emphasis on proactive enforcement.

When reached for comment, Tony Bitonti, spokesperson for the OLG, told CTV News Toronto “combatting the risk of money-laundering remains a top priority for OLG.”

“We will work with casino operators to evaluate additional cheque issuance restrictions and strengthen our anti-money laundering oversight as required,” Bitonti said, underlining that Ontario casinos have” an accuracy of over 95 per cent in applying cheque verification controls.”

“We look forward to increasing that number in collaboration with our casino operators,” he said.

The corporation also says it's expanding its current requirements to include obtaining a source of funds for all cash buy-ins above $10,000, consistent with federal regulations that are coming into force in June 2023.  

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