espionage
BREAKING — Diaspora Coalition Urges Canadian Foreign Minister to Sanction Hong Kong Security Chiefs for Illegal Bounties on Canadians

CCP targets include 2025 Conservative election candidate Joseph Tay and former Chinese-language media editor Victor Ho, both named in HK$1 million bounties issued by Hong Kong police.
In the August 8 letter the groups invoke Canada’s Justice for Victims of Corrupt Foreign Officials Act (Sergei Magnitsky Law) and the Special Economic Measures Act, calling for asset freezes and travel bans on a roster of Hong Kong political, judicial, and security officials. These individuals, the letter says, have “played critical roles in enforcing the region’s repressive policies, undermining judicial independence, and facilitating the persecution of pro-democracy activists.”
The push echoes pressure from several of the same groups to escalate the case of one Canadian bounty target — Tay. According to Canadian intelligence assessments, Tay was targeted by Chinese state security in a campaign allegedly amplified by his Liberal rival, MP Paul Chiang. In the aftermath, Tay’s relatives in Hong Kong were detained and questioned by police. Hong Kong authorities have since expanded their wanted list to include additional overseas activists.
The letter to Anand singles out officials most directly responsible for the December 2024 charges amplified by Paul Chiang — among them Chris Tang Ping-keung (Secretary for Security), who invoked Hong Kong’s Article 23 “Safeguarding National Security Ordinance” to impose special orders against former lawmakers and activists; and Raymond Siu Chak-yee (former Commissioner of Police), who led the Hong Kong Police in posting HK$1 million bounties for information leading to the arrests of dozens of overseas activists, including Canadian citizens Tay and former Sing Tao Daily editor Victor Ho.
Victor Ho’s assertion that the Chinese Communist Party has effectively taken control of all Chinese-language media in Canada is reflected in a 2022 CSIS document on Chinese election interference obtained by The Bureau. “The CCP weaponizes the Chinese media to gain election intervention,” Ho told The Bureau in a 2023 story on that document. “To do this, the Chinese Consulates in Canada make every effort to influence the top Chinese editing teams in Canada.”
Hong Kong authorities have issued international arrest warrants and cash rewards — ranging from HK$200,000 to HK$1 million (C$35,000 to C$175,000) — for six pro-democracy activists with ties to Canada, including three Canadian citizens.
In the August 8 letter to Anand, Edmund Leung, chair of the Vancouver Society in Support of Democratic Movement, says: “The actions of these officials constitute a direct attack on the principles of democracy, human rights, and the rule of law.”
“By targeting specific individuals who have misused their authority to oppress rather than uphold the integrity of the judiciary, Canada will send a clear message that judicial positions are not shields for impunity,” the letter says.
Cheuk Kwan, co-chair of the Toronto Association for Democracy in China, added: “We count on Canada to continue its leadership role post-G7 summit. By imposing these sanctions, Canada will send a strong message to the world that it stands firmly against human rights abuses and authoritarian overreach.”
His appeal carries particular weight: Kwan played a central role in exposing one of the most explosive diaspora interference cases in recent Canadian politics. As The Bureau reported in March, he helped publicize evidence that Chiang had amplified an illegal Hong Kong bounty targeting Tay — evidence the RCMP confirmed they were reviewing, but only after Hong Kong democracy groups intensified pressure on Ottawa.
The safety threats linked to that bounty effectively shut down Tay’s in-person campaign in Don Valley North. Despite calls for intervention, then–Liberal leader Mark Carney refused to remove Chiang from the race. Chiang stepped aside only after the RCMP announced its review — and the Liberals went on to hold the seat.
The new sanctions request names senior Hong Kong officials alleged to have orchestrated and enforced these transnational repression measures, including:
- Paul Lam Ting-kwok, Secretary for Justice, who in 2022 ordered 47 pro-democracy activists tried without a jury, breaking Hong Kong’s 177-year tradition of jury trials.
- Chris Tang Ping-keung, Secretary for Security, who in 2024 invoked Article 23 to cancel passports, freeze assets, and block financial transactions for exiled activists.
- Raymond Siu Chak-yee and Joe Chow Yat-ming, current and former Police Commissioners, who authorized HK$1 million bounties against overseas activists, including Tay and Ho.
- Andrew Kan Kai-yan and Steve Li Kwai-wah, National Security Department officers accused of freezing activists’ bank accounts and criminalizing financial support.
- John Lee Ka-chiu, Chief Executive, whose administration advanced Article 23 legislation and intensified mass arrests under the National Security Law.
The signatories argue these actions breach international law, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and meet the threshold for Magnitsky and SEMA sanctions.
Magnitsky sanctions stem from the case of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in a Moscow prison in 2009 after exposing a massive state-backed tax fraud scheme. Canada’s version allows Ottawa to freeze assets and ban travel for foreign officials involved in human rights abuses or significant corruption.
Crime
Canadian Sovereignty at Stake: Stunning Testimony at Security Hearing in Ottawa from Sam Cooper

Canada’s Border Vulnerabilities: Confronting Transnational Crime and Legal Failures
The Bureau has chosen to publish the full opening statement of founder Sam Cooper before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security, during the session titled “Canada–United States Border Management,” held on Tuesday, October 7, 2025, and webcast live at https://www.ourcommons.ca/ Committees/en/SECU/Meetings (Opening statement from Sam Cooper begins at 11:11:23)
https://www.ourcommons.ca/Committees/en/SECU/Meetings?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
I offer these remarks and recommendations with humility. I’m still learning every day. I speak regularly with numerous law-enforcement and security professionals in both the United States and Canada. For over a decade, I’ve focused professionally on the threats that transnational crime poses to Canada’s borders, institutions, and people, alongside deep reporting on our financial and legal vulnerabilities to threat networks that often include ties to hostile state activity. Canada’s recent terror designation of the India-based Bishnoi gang is important. But that particular action recognizes only one facet of the many-sided transnational fentanyl, human-trafficking, Chinese-supplied chemical precursor, weapons-trafficking, terror and extremism threats that I will discuss today.
Across hundreds of interviews with Canadian and U.S. experts, I have come to a conclusion: many Canadians — including citizens, lawmakers, and judges — do not yet fully understand the scope and nature of the problem, and also seem defensive in engaging it. And if we don’t understand it, we cannot solve it.
In these politically divisive times, I hope I can add value by relaying, clearly and fairly, what professionals on both sides of the border are saying about the cultural, legal, and political differences that impede cooperation between the United States and Canada. My reporting has emphasized Canadian enforcement challenges — not to be unduly critical of my homeland, but because I think we should focus first on the levers we control, and reforms we should have already tackled decades ago.
This isn’t my opinion only. As you know, Canadian Association Police Chiefs president Thomas Carrique recently warned that police are being asked to confront a new wave of transnational threats with “outdated and inadequate” laws “never designed to address today’s criminal landscape.” He added that Canada would have been far better positioned to “disrupt” organized crime had Ottawa acted on reforms first recommended in the early 2000s.
As RCMP Assistant Commissioner David Teboul said this year after the discovery of major fentanyl labs in British Columbia — notable for their commercial-grade chemistry equipment and scientific expertise — “There’s a need for legislative reform around how such equipment and precursor chemicals can be obtained.” More border regulations could help, but will not be sufficient absent foundational legal change.
It has long been my experience in discussions with senior U.S. enforcement experts that American and Australian police can collaborate effectively because the two nations are able to authorize wiretaps on dangerous transnational suspects within days. In Canada, that speed is impossible, and it has become a major obstacle.
As former RCMP investigator Calvin Chrustie testified before British Columbia’s Cullen Commission several years ago, due to judicial blockages arising from Charter of Rights rulings, it had become practically impossible to obtain timely wiretaps on Sinaloa Cartel targets in Vancouver. In recent years, such delays in sensitive investigations have undermined cooperation between the RCMP and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in major cases of fentanyl trafficking and drug money laundering. In 2017, I was personally alerted to these longstanding concerns about the breakdown in RCMP–DEA cooperation by a U.S. State Department official.
These impeded investigations have involved the upper echelons of Chinese Triads, which maintain deep global leadership in Canada and align with Chinese state-interference networks, as well as senior Iranian and Hezbollah-linked networks operating here. Both networks are engaged in fentanyl trafficking and money laundering in collaboration with Mexican cartels active in Canada.
Canada must urgently reform what it can fix on our side.
My first recommendation is this — there is no “low-hanging fruit.” I have not spoken to a single knowledgeable Canadian officer — current or former — who believes that simply spending more on personnel, equipment, training, or border staffing will solve this. What I hear is that, from ten to twenty years ago, before the evolution of Charter-driven disclosure and delay jurisprudence in Canada, our nations enjoyed a much closer enforcement relationship. Experts point above all to two Supreme Court rulings — Stinchcombe and Jordan — as the core legal obstacles. Our Stinchcombe disclosure standards and Jordan time restrictions, as applied, disincentivize complex, multi-jurisdictional cases and deter U.S. partners from sharing sensitive intelligence that could be exposed in open court. Veterans describe enterprise files stalling for lack of approvals or because specialized techniques are denied. When police and prosecutors anticipate disclosure fights they cannot resource — and trial deadlines they cannot meet — the rational choice is to avoid the fight altogether.
I can explain in greater detail, but without question these rulings have devastated Canada’s ability to prosecute sophisticated organized crime. The result is a vicious circle of non-prosecution and impunity. To deny the need for deep legal reform is to deny the depth of the problem.
To sum up, my reporting at The Bureau has highlighted interlocking failures — legal, political, and bureaucratic — that have turned Canada into a permissive platform for synthetic narcotics and criminal finance, badly misaligning us with our Five Eyes law-enforcement and intelligence partners, and bringing us to the brink of a rupture with the United States.
Thanks for your attention, Chairman and Members.
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espionage
Canada’s federal election in April saw ‘small scale’ foreign meddling: gov’t watchdog

From LifeSiteNews
A new exposé by investigative journalist Sam Cooper claims there is compelling evidence that Prime Minister Mark Carney and former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are strongly influenced by an “elite network” of foreign actors, including those with ties to communist China and the World Economic Forum.
A report from a federal watchdog confirmed that foreign meddling did occur in Canada’s April 2025 federal election on a “small scale.”
Canada’s Security and Intelligence Threats to Elections Task Force (SITE TF) said in a recent note that the “small-scale” interference that happened was hard to attribute to one particular state actor.
The task force does have the power to warn of any threats during an election. It did not do so this year despite warnings from opposition Conservatives that meddling at the hands of Communist China is a reality.
“Over the course of the election period, the SITE TF observed instances of foreign interference such as transnational repression, inauthentic and coordinated amplification of online content, and online threats such as scams and disinformation,” the report’s conclusion reads.
“These activities were observed at a small scale and often remain difficult to attribute to a foreign actor.
As reported by LifeSiteNews, election interference from China’s Communist Chinese Party (CCP) government has been a real issue in Canada in recent years.
In March, the SITE TF warned that the CCP government would most likely try to interfere in Canada’s federal election.
When it comes to the integrity of elections in Canada, there have been reported issues of meddling at the hands of foreign powers.
As reported by LifeSiteNews, a new exposé by investigative journalist Sam Cooper claims there is compelling evidence that Prime Minister Mark Carney and former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are strongly influenced by an “elite network” of foreign actors, including those with ties to communist China and the World Economic Forum.
In light of multiple accusations of foreign meddling in Canadian elections, the federal Foreign Interference Commission was convened last year to “examine and assess the interference by China, Russia, and other foreign states or non-state actors, including any potential impacts, to confirm the integrity of, and any impacts on, the 43rd and 44th general elections (2019 and 2021 elections) at the national and electoral district levels.”
The commission was formed after Trudeau’s special rapporteur, former Governor General David Johnston, failed in an investigation into CCP allegations after much delay. That inquiry was not done in public and was headed by Johnston, who is a “family friend” of Trudeau.
Johnston quit as “special rapporteur” after a public outcry following his conclusion that there should not be a public inquiry into the matter. Conservative MPs demanded Johnston be replaced over his ties to China and the Trudeau family.
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