B.C. files unexplained wealth order after seizing gold, cash and jewelry from crypto co-founder
The British Columbia government has filed an unexplained wealth order in an effort to seize a quarter-million dollars in cash, as well as 45 gold bars and luxury jewelry from the operator of a fraudulent cryptocurrency exchange company.
B.C. Supreme Court documents show the items were discovered in a safety deposit box belonging to Michael Patryn, one of the co-founders of the Vancouver-based Quadriga Coin Exchange.
Fellow founder Gerald Cotton, 30, died suddenly while travelling in India in 2018, leaving platform users and investors unable to access an estimated $215 million in cash and cryptocurrency assets.
The company sought creditor protection and was placed into bankruptcy in 2019.
An investigation by the Ontario Securities Commission found the company operated like a Ponzi scheme, and concluded in a 2020 report that what happened at Quadriga "was an old-fashioned fraud wrapped in modern technology."
Safety deposit box seized
In a statement Wednesday, B.C. Solicitor General Mike Farnworth announced that the province's civil forfeiture office had filed its third-ever unexplained wealth order, targeting Quadriga as a "demonstration of our government’s commitment to take decisive action against criminals and organized crime."
According to the notice of civil claim, Mounties seized the valuables from Patryn's safety deposit box located at a CIBC branch in downtown Vancouver in June 2021.
Inside the box, police found $250,200 in Canadian currency bound into five bundles held with elastic bands, gold bars from Canada and Australia, two Rolex Datejust watches, a Chanel J12 Black Diamond watch, a Baume & Mercier Men’s Classima Executive watch, as well as various pieces of jewelry, according to the claim.
A .45-calibre Ruger 1911 pistol, two magazines of ammunition and various pieces of identification under Patryn's name and his assumed names – Omar Dhanani and Omar Patryn – were also found, according to the claim.
Patryn responds to claim
Patryn was last known to be in Thailand and his occupation is not known, the claim states.
In his response to the claim filed last October, Patryn denies the items were the proceeds or instruments of unlawful activity.
He also alleges the police investigation "was conducted in such a manner" that breached his Charter rights.
Farnworth went on to note that thousands of people lost their life savings in the collapse of the Quadriga Coin Exchange.
"Gold bars may be highly liquid, and flashy luxury goods, such as jewelry and Rolex watches, attract attention, but they are also attracting the attention of police and our government," he said.
"If they are the proceeds of criminal activity like fraud, drug trafficking or money laundering, we will go after them."
It is estimated that more than 76,000 Quadriga clients – approximately 40 per cent of them in Ontario – were owed a combined $215 million when the company collapsed.
Ernst & Young, Quadriga's bankruptcy trustee, was only able to recover approximately $46 million in assets to pay out to clients.
The B.C. government filed its first unexplained wealth order late last year in an attempt to force a couple to explain how they purchased a $1.8-million property on Salt Spring Island in 2017.
With files from The Canadian Press
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
NEW Pack the macaroni necklace: Lessons on evacuations from a woman who fled one of Canada's worst wildfires
Carol Christian had 15 minutes to evacuate her home during the Fort McMurray wildfires in 2016. She ended up losing the house and everything inside. Now, she wants to share the lessons she learned.
Scheffler detained by police at PGA Championship for not following orders after traffic fatality
Masters champion Scottie Scheffler was detained by police Friday morning on his way to the PGA Championship, with stunning images showing him handcuffed as he was led to a police car. ESPN reported he failed to follow police orders during a pedestrian fatality investigation.
Ontario sees first measles death in more than a decade after young child dies
A young child has died of measles in Ontario, marking the first death in the province from the highly contagious virus in more than 10 years, a Public Health Ontario report confirms.
Think twice before sharing 'heartbreaking' social media posts, RCMP warn
Mounties in B.C. are urging people to think twice before sharing "heartbreaking posts" on social media.
'Ugly produce': One way Canadians are shrinking rising grocery bills
As the cost of food in Canada has risen, grocery shoppers are looking at ways to reduce their grocery bill, and more are choosing price over beauty, turning to companies that deliver so-called 'misfit' produce at a fraction of the cost.
Vatican revamps norms to evaluate visions of Mary as it adapts to Internet age and combats hoaxers
The Vatican on Friday radically reformed its process for evaluating alleged visions of the Virgin Mary, weeping statues and other seemingly supernatural phenomena, insisting on having the final say in whether the events are worthy of popular devotion.
Wildfires are dampening against cool, rainy weather, but there's plenty left to contain
An opportune system of cool, wet weather Friday is dampening the spread of wildfires across Western Canada, but there's still plenty of work for responders and residents alike.
Jessica Biel hopes to normalize the conversation around menstruation with a new children's book
Jessica Biel is the author of a new children’s book focused on destigmatizing and normalizing the conversation around menstruation.
5 secrets to moving better and preventing avoidable injury
Countless people seek emergency care for back pain, muscle strains and similar injuries resulting from “moving wrong” during mundane, everyday tasks such as bending over to tie shoes, lifting objects or doing household chores.