Brandishing a U.S. tribal-law text like holy writ, B.C. lawyer Doug White insisted Indigenous peoples can have the same in Canada — their own laws, police and courts.

At a key meeting in November 2018 at the B.C. legislature involving government and Indigenous leaders, he pulled aside Attorney-General David Eby and Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth and pointed across the Juan to Fuca Strait at Washington State.

“I waved this book around,” he vividly re-enacted, “and said I want you guys to know what this is. Look across at the southern part of the Coast Salish world … and you will find Coast Salish courts with Coast Salish judges applying Coast Salish law. In the north here, it’s a completely different history of exclusion.

“If we are being serious about shifting into a period of rights recognition … if we are serious about the U.N. declaration, we have to be talking about the implementation of self-determination in terms of justice.

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B.C.’s inquiry into money laundering finally got a glimpse inside what was billed as Canada’s largest-ever money-laundering investigation, and it was an ugly, ugly sight.

The one-man inquiry commission was told hundreds of police officers and regulators worked from April to October 2015 on a massive joint operation dubbed Project E-Pirate — involving Mounties, municipal cops, the B.C. Gaming Policy and Enforcement Branch, the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre (Fintrac), B.C. Lottery Corp., and others.

After months of intensive surveillance and sleuthing, it ended spectacularly with coordinated raids on homes, two illegal casinos, a travel firm, and the main target, Silver International, an unregistered money service business.

Police crowed about seizing $4.8 million in cash, ledgers, casino chips, credit card skimmers, counterfeit IDs, weapons, and more.

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