Canada's nuclear waste agency says it was scammed out of $300K meant for First Nation in Ontario - Action News
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Canada's nuclear waste agency says it was scammed out of $300K meant for First Nation in Ontario

Canada's nuclear waste agency says someone posing as an Indigenous chief convinced agency officials to put nearly $300,000 into a private bank account, money that was meant for a community development on a First Nation in Ontario.

Most of the funds recovered, payment in full was made to Chippewas of Saugeen

Someone believed to be a cyber criminal posing as an Indigenous chief cheated the Nuclear Waste Management Organization into paying the person almost $300,000, money meant for work at aFirst Nation in Ontario, according to Canada's nuclear waste agency.Most of the funds were recovered and transferred to Chippewas of Saugeen. (RedPixel/stock.adobe.com)

The agency in charge of Canada's nuclear waste says an alleged cyber criminalposing as an Indigenous chief managed to cheat the organization into paying the person almost$300,000, money meant for community development at aFirst Nation in Ontario.

The funds werethe second of two payments totalling $600,000 from the Nuclear Waste Management Organization (NWMO)to Chippewas of Saugeen First Nation,part of a controversial community development efforttied to finding a host site for a $23-billion tomb toseal Canada's stockpile of used nuclear fuel for millennia.

"Earlier this year, we were made aware that we were the victim of fraudulent cyber activity when a payment was diverted from the intended recipient," NWMO media relations manager Bruce Logan told CBC News in an email.

"Thankfullywe were able to recover most of the funds. We have also transferred the full amount toChippewas of Saugeen, the rightful recipient."

Court filings answer questions agency won't

Logan said the NWMOhas opened an internal investigation. It had also reported the crime to the RCMP's Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, buttheMounties aren'tinvestigating, he said.

Logan wouldn'tanswer any furtherquestions.

Saugeen First Nation, an Ojibway First Nation along the Saugeen River and Bruce Peninsula in Ontario, eventually was the 'rightful recipient' of the money, slated to be used for community development. (Google Street View)

However, court documents filed by lawyers for theNWMOin its attempts to find the missing moneywere obtained and reviewed by CBC News. They provide some insight into how the allegedscammer got away with some of the money.

According to affidavits, the agency received two emails on Dec. 21, 2021, from anemail account professing to be that ofSaugeen First Nation Chief Lester Anoquot.

The first email containedinstructions to make the payments to an account with the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) instead of the band's usualCanadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) account.The second email held a copy of a void RBC cheque.

Fraudster claimed to be Saugeen chief

A series of emails were then exchanged between thepersonclaimingto be the chiefand agency officials as they tried to sniff out the legitimacy of the sudden changein payment instructions, the court documents said.

a sign that says 'stop canada's nuclear dump'
This bright yellow sign was erected by protesters in Teeswater, Ont., a small farming town in South Bruce municipality, one of two sites where the NWMO is considering storing Canada's stockpile of used nuclear fuel. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

On Dec. 29, 2021, the NWMOmade anelectronic payment to the specified account in good faith. The court documents said itwasn't until Jan.27, 2022, when the band council said the money never arrived, thatNWMO officialsrealized the account claiming to be that of thechief had beencompromised.

The documents said at that point,NWMO officials realized they knew neither the identity of the person who received the money nor how much wasspent.

According to the documents, lawyers for the nuclear waste agency then applied for a Norwich order, a rare move in Canadian law that would compelan innocent third party to turn over information to aid a prosecution.

A Toronto court placed a restraint order on the account on March 9, 2022,court filings said. At the time, there was a remaining balance of $228,465.07.

Anoquotdeclined to comment to CBCNews on the matter, saying the band council is still trying to determine its next steps.

"We are still discussing a path forward [and] are not prepared to do a story yet," he wrote in an email.

Bank records included in court filings

But RBC records included in the court filings indicate the account in question belonged to a Robert Soloman Gruger, who runs a company called RSG Ventures, registered at a residential address inBurlington, Ont.

a rendering of a deep geologic repository
Diagram shows what the $23-billion tomb for nuclear waste would look like once construction is complete. The facility is designed to store over three million bundles of spent nuclear fuel for 100,000 years. (NWMO)

The home is a former duplex andis currently listed for sale on the province's Multiple Listing Services website. Google Streetview images show the property undergoing extensive renovations. No one is currently living at the residence.

The bank records state the physical address of RSG Ventures is a commercial plazain Oakville, Ont.The mailing address is a mall in Mississauga, Ont.

The bank records also listed a phone number for the company, but when CBC News called the number, Douglas Finchanswered and said he had never heard of RSG Ventures or Robert Solomon Gruger.

Finch said he had recently acquired the phone number as an executive line for his company,DraftCo, a draught beer monitoring service for bars and restaurants in the Greater Toronto Area.

"That's a business number I just picked up," he said. "I've only had the number for six weeks type thing."

As for Robert Solomon Gruger, CBC News ran his name through a number of databasesincluding bankruptcy, insolvency, and a lien search in Ontariobut no matches showed up.

With files from Kate Zieman