Unexplained wealth orders will make life harder for B.C. criminals: compliance expert
VANCOUVER — Plans by the British Columbia government to confiscate suspected proceeds of crime with “unexplained wealth orders” are drawing praise from an expert in financial compliance as a way to make life harder from criminals.
Alexandra Wrage, CEO of Trace International, a global business association focused on commercial transparency and good governance, said unexplained wealth orders would help to redress and deter financial crime in the province, including money laundering.
But she cautioned there should be “realistic” expectations of the financial rewards from such seizures, since “criminals who have amassed substantial assets are going to fight hard to hang on to that money.”
Critics object to the unexplained wealth orders on the grounds they undermine presumption of innocence, placing an onus of proof on the target of the seizure order.