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Hongcouver
This Week in AsiaSociety
Ian Young

The Hongcouver | Special report: how Canadian immigration fraud saw 860 rich Chinese blacklisted

How policymakers ignored alarm bells for years about a systemic flaw in the world’s biggest wealth migration system

Reading Time:15 minutes
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Disgraced Toronto immigration lawyer Martin Pilzmaker (left) is pictured on July 6, 1989, after being freed on C$75,000 bail; he committed suicide two weeks before trial on April 19, 1991. Right is Xun Wang, mastermind of the biggest immigration fraud in Canadian history, who mirrored Pilzmaker’s tactics. Wang refused to answer questions from Radio-Canada's investigative programme Enquête as he was leaving his home in Richmond, BC, this year. Photos: Getty/Harold Dupuis, Radio-Canada/CBSA/SCMP Graphic
Ian Youngin Vancouver

On the morning of October 17, 2012, Canadian border agents began their raids simultaneously, targeting offices in downtown Vancouver and nearby Richmond, as well as a large house on a busy arterial road.

They seized 90 crates of documents and 18 computers, stacks of supposedly “lost” Chinese passports, even a handful of red rubber stamps. There was so much evidence it would take more than a year to translate and organise.

The vast haul, seized from unlicensed immigration consultant Xun “Sunny” Wang, would send shock waves through the lucrative arena of millionaire migration, and in 2015 sent Wang to prison, for scams that had earned him C$10 million (US$7.6million). Sentenced to seven years’ jail, Wang was paroled late last year, having served a third of his time.

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But an investigation by the South China Morning Post – based on dozens of court and immigration hearings, as well as on interviews with lawyers, tax auditors, officials and industry veterans – shows that the scandal of the biggest immigration fraud in Canadian history is far from over.

And the story began years before officers pulled up outside Wang’s home.

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Some of the hundreds of Chinese passports, along with fake Chinese passport stamps, that were seized from the home and offices of the former unlicensed immigration consultant Xun ‘Sunny’ Wang, by Canadian border officers in raids across greater Vancouver on October 17, 2012. Photo: Canada Border Services Agency
Some of the hundreds of Chinese passports, along with fake Chinese passport stamps, that were seized from the home and offices of the former unlicensed immigration consultant Xun ‘Sunny’ Wang, by Canadian border officers in raids across greater Vancouver on October 17, 2012. Photo: Canada Border Services Agency

Canada’s border authority told the Post at least 860 clients of Wang’s firms, New Can Consultants and Wellong International Investments, had already either lost immigration status – resulting in expulsion and five-year bans from entering the country – or been reported for inadmissibility.

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