Canadian Lawyer

June 2017

The most widely read magazine for Canadian lawyers

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w w w . C A N A D I A N L a w y e r m a g . c o m J U N E 2 0 1 7 3 E D I T O R ' S D E S K @canlawmag tim.wilbur@tr.com Director/Group Publisher: Karen Lorimer karen.lorimer@tr.com Managing Editor: Tim Wilbur tim.wilbur@tr.com Associate Editor: Mallory Hendry mallory.hendry@tr.com Copy Editor: Patricia Cancilla Art Director: Bill Hunter Production Co-ordinator: Catherine Giles catherine.giles@tr.com Contributors: Elizabeth Thompson, donalee Moulton, Mark Cardwell, Shannon Kari, Geoff Ellwand, Jean Sorensen, Marg. Bruineman, Mallory Hendry, Jim Middlemiss, Jennifer Brown, Elizabeth Raymer Canadian Lawyer is published 11 times a year by Thomson Reuters Canada Ltd. All rights reserved. Contents may not be reprinted without written permission. The opinions expressed in articles are not necessarily those of the publisher. Information presented is compiled from sources believed to be accurate, however, the publisher assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions. Canadian Lawyer disclaims any warranty as to the accuracy, completeness or currency of the contents of this publication and disclaims all liability in respect of the results of any action taken or not taken in reliance upon information in this publication. Sales and Business Development Sales Manager: Paul Burton E-mail: paul.burton@tr.com Tel: 416-649-9928 Business Development Consultant: Ivan Ivanovitch E-mail: ivan.ivanovitch@tr.com Tel: 416-887-4300 Client Development Manager: Grace So E-mail: grace.so@tr.com Tel: 416-903-4473 Business Development Consultant: Kimberlee Pascoe E-mail: kimberlee.pascoe@tr.com Tel: 416-996-1739 Account Executive: Steffanie Munroe E-mail: steffanie.munroe@tr.com Tel: 416-315-5879 Canadian Lawyer Thomson Reuters Canada Ltd. One Corporate Plaza, 2075 Kennedy Rd., Toronto, ON. M1T 3V4 Tel: (416) 298-5141 Fax: (416) 649-7870 E-mail: cl.editor@tr.com Web: canadianlawyermag.com Linkedin: linkedin.com/groups/4917423 Twitter: @canlawmag Facebook: facebook.com/CanLawMag Publications Mail Agreement #40766500 ISSN 0703-2129 © 2017 HST Registration #R121349799 RETURN UNDELIVERABLE CANADIAN ADDRESS TO: CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT One Corporate Plaza 2075 Kennedy RD., Toronto, ON. M1T 3V4 RETOURNER TOUTE CORRESPONDANCE NE POUVANT ÊTRE LIVRÉE AU CANADA AU SERVICE DES PUBLICATIONS One Corporate Plaza, 2075 Kennedy Rd., Toronto, ON. M1T 3V4 Circulation/Address Changes/ Subscriptions Keith Fulford Tel: (416) 649-9585 Fax: (416) 649-7870 E-mail: keith.fulford@tr.com Subscription rates: Canada1 year print and digital $102 plus HST, 1 year digital only $99. Outside Canada 1 year print & digital $99 USD, 1 year digital only $99. For all circulation inquiries and address changes send a copy of your mailing label or labels along with your request in writing to Canadian Lawyer, One Corporate Plaza, 2075 Kennedy Rd., Toronto, ON. M1T 3V4 his issue of Canadian Lawyer has a money theme. We publish our annual Legal Fees Survey in this issue (p. 32), which we hope will help lawyers and law firms better understand how their fees com- pare to their competition. Often, lawyers make these business deci- sions based on little to no data, and our survey is meant to help address that. But we also include other articles related to money, and a theme run- ning through a number of these is the challenge of making rules with a lack of data. Take money laundering. The federal government brought in a set of rules to address this problem a few years ago, but tracking dirty money is proving difficult. The real estate market is one area where laundering often occurs. As millions of dollars come into the housing market, tracking the source of the money is very difficult. Governments are finding it hard to track even legitimate foreign purchasers when making rules to cool the housing market (p. 18), but when the money is laundered the murkiness is by design. And one of the biggest impediments in tracking the flow, according to many critics of our current regime, is lawyers. "Lawyers, they're the biggest problem with money laundering in this country, as far as I'm concerned," Kim Marsh, the former head of the RCMP's International Organized Crime Investigation Unit, told us (p. 26). Marsh is based in Vancouver and saw the challenges of tracking money laundering in the real estate market there. Law societies and other leaders in the legal profession say there is a very good reason for the lack of data: solicitor-client privilege. While law enforcement wants more information to be able to track money laundering, the Supreme Court ruled in 2015 that making lawyers subject to Canada's money-laundering rules risks vio- lating this fundamental right. But critics such as Marsh say that law societies are doing a lousy job and Cana- da is under increasing international pressure to close the lawyer "loophole." As our Ottawa correspondent reports, the federal government is listening to these critics and working on updating the rules soon. Representatives from the law societies say that the systems that are now in place are doing the job and there is no evidence that lawyers are part of the prob- lem. "We don't have evidence of lawyers being involved in money laundering. We have no evidence that it's happening once, twice or widespread," Herman Van Ommen, president of the Law Society of British Columbia, told us. Essentially, it is all about the facts. How many lawyers are helping to launder money and how are they doing it? It is possible that law societies are preventing this in many cases, but the government is not convinced. It needs more data. Law societies want lawyers to retain control, but they need to make a better case about why. As critics of our current regime might put it, show me the money. Show me the (laundered) money By Tim Wilbur T

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