Other Areas of Practice
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July 09, 2025
Yukon announces it is reducing barriers for more free internal trade
The Government of Yukon has announced it is working to strengthen internal trade in Canada, as the territory’s Minister of Economic Development Ranj Pillai met with the Committee on Internal Trade in Quebec City on Tuesday.
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July 09, 2025
FINTRAC advisory updates G7 list of high-risk and monitored nations to counter money laundering
The G7’s anti-money laundering (AML) task force has updated its alert levels for some high-risk jurisdictions to protect the international financial system from money laundering and terrorist financing risks, according to a July 9 advisory issued by Canada’s AML watchdog.
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July 09, 2025
Court dismisses application relating to production of over 4 million documents
The British Columbia Supreme Court has dismissed an application in a case where nearly four million documents were produced by a party concerning contract breach proceedings arising from the construction of a water plant.
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July 08, 2025
B.C. proposes banning exotic cat ownership
The B.C. government is proposing regulation changes to ban the “breeding, sale and future ownership of all non-native and non-domestic cat species.”
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July 08, 2025
B.C. court upholds Quebec decision on $1.6M illegal payroll scheme
The British Columbia Supreme Court has dismissed an application to set aside a decision of the Quebec court in which the applicant failed “to report and remit approximately $1.6 million in employee source deductions.”
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July 08, 2025
Candidates barred in Ontario licensing exam cheating scandal can reapply for registration: LSO
Ontario’s highest court has refused to reopen a past appeal by a group of lawyer licensing candidates caught in a bar exam cheating scandal — but those who were banned from registering to be licensed are free to reapply if they have not already done so, given the “invalidation period” has come and gone.
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July 07, 2025
Federal Court rejects judicial review to remove name from Russian sanctions
The Federal Court has dismissed a judicial review of a decision by the minister of foreign affairs to not recommend that the Governor in Council remove a billionaire’s name from the Special Economic Measures (Russia) Regulations, in a dispute of the meaning of “associate.”
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July 04, 2025
The Friday Brief: Editor-In-Chief’s must-read items from the past two weeks
Here are my picks for the top stories we’ve published over the last two weeks.
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July 04, 2025
Court quashes appeal relating to 23andMe’s insolvency after global data breach
The B.C. Court of Appeal has quashed an appeal finding that the appellant failed to seek required leave in relation to insolvency proceedings. The appellant sought to bring class actions relating to a 2023 cyberattack on genetic testing company 23andMe.
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July 03, 2025
Court: B.C.’s new arbitration ban doesn’t apply in Rogers customer dispute over $1M hacking loss
In one of the first tests of British Columbia's amended consumer protection law, the B.C. Supreme Court has allowed a bid by telecom giant Rogers to block court action in favor of arbitration in a case where a customer’s phone was hacked, allegedly resulting in her losing an estimated $1 million in Bitcoin. The court found that the amended legislation, which prohibits mandatory arbitration clauses and class action waivers in consumer contracts, did not apply retroactively despite a transitional provision.