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2 hours ago

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EVERY CANADIAN WHO Votes or totally blames Trump needs to read this & WAKE UP before the next election…..or Canada is forever lost! Toronto is just the tiny tip of the corruption in action…

Since launching in June 2023, The Bureau has published over 650 stories. The investigation you’re about to read, posted February 8, 2025, remains our most popular—and for good reason. In light of this week’s explosive revelations about systematic corruption within the Toronto Police Service, in a case that alleges Toronto police officers facilitated a sophisticated transnational fentanyl, cocaine, methamphetamine and marijuana pipeline with evident connections to Latin Cartels, we believe it's crucial to revisit the warnings we issued 363 days ago about deeper, more troubling vulnerabilities within Canadian law enforcement.
While other media scramble to cover the TPS scandal as breaking news, The Bureau has been documenting this crisis at the federal level for years. This story—based on interviews with veteran U.S. and Canadian law enforcement officials—detailed something far more alarming than localized police corruption. Our sources alleged systematic obstruction of investigations into transnational organized crime at the highest levels of Canadian federal agencies.
Our sources revealed that American agencies, including Homeland Security and the DEA, had effectively sidelined Canadian law enforcement from sensitive investigations due to suspected infiltration and corruption. They described intelligence-sharing cutoffs, blocked investigations into Asian organized crime networks, and concerns that reached into the Prime Minister’s office itself. Most significantly, they warned that the Cameron Ortis case—Canada’s convicted intelligence leaker—was not an isolated incident but evidence of systemic compromise.
The TPS corruption scandal now validates these warnings. Much remains to be seen, but York Regional Police appear to have led a diligent and unflinching investigation, albeit one that seems to have been driven by the fact a Canadian law enforcement official was targeted for homicide. The Bureau’s sources confirm it is well known within Canadian police that corruption concerns have saturated numerous departments. Cameron Ortis’s case had evidence of deep corruption that extended well beyond himself, a fact that was not acknowledged by Canada’s government in the aftermath.
The pattern is unmistakable: organized crime has not merely exploited gaps in Canadian law enforcement—it has actively compromised it. Transnational gangs have access to files that allow them to target their competitors and innocent citizens. There are indications that Chinese Communist agents could similarly have access to police files that may enable targeting of politicians, The Bureau has been informed credibly. While the TPS story focuses on local detectives selling confidential information, our reporting exposed federal-level obstruction of billion-dollar money laundering investigations, blocked intelligence on fentanyl trafficking networks, and corruption concerns that caused the Biden and Trump administrations to lose faith in Canada’s institutions.
Ottawa has not addressed these vulnerabilities. Instead, political leaders have responded to criticism—including from U.S. President Trump—with denialism. Our sources warned that Canada’s inability to confront Asian organized crime, Hezbollah money laundering networks, and Mexican cartel infiltration in Canada’s law enforcement systems, was not merely incompetence. They described a pattern suggesting corruption and political interference that prevented investigations from advancing.
This story documented a crisis that threatens national sovereignty—one that Ottawa continues to defensively ignore even as the evidence mounts.
We republish this investigation not as vindication, but as an urgent reminder: the corruption now making headlines in Toronto is symptomatic of vulnerabilities that reach far higher and cut far deeper than Canadians have been led to believe.
The Bureau’s expertise is about more than drugs, corruption and ineffective governance. Our second most-read story, posted February 4, 2024, accurately exposed the systematic scheme of Chinese transnational money laundering run through Toronto banks into local real estate—the same type of corruption prosecuted by the U.S. government in the TD Bank fentanyl money laundering scandal, a systemic vulnerability in Canada still largely unaddressed by the Canadian government.

OTTAWA February 8, 2025
Veteran law enforcement officials—both active and retired—from the United States and Canada have come forward with explosive allegations suggesting that Canada’s federal government may have systematically obstructed investigations into the highest levels of Asian organized crime. According to these sources, American agencies, including the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, have grown so alarmed by suspected corruption and legal loopholes in Canada that they have effectively sidelined Canadian law enforcement from sensitive investigations and intelligence-sharing.
Several veterans of Canadian law enforcement argue that while U.S. President Donald Trump’s critiques of Canada’s handling of fentanyl trafficking and border security are politically charged and often harsh, they underscore an uncomfortable reality: Canada is increasingly perceived as compromised—either incapable or unwilling to confront entrenched transnational criminal networks. American and Canadian sources alike describe a nation whose law enforcement agencies are in disarray, inhibited by suspected infiltration at the highest levels, obstructing investigations into billion-dollar drug networks and money laundering operations.

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2 hours ago

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These American and Canadian experts pointed to the notorious case of Cameron Ortis, Canada’s former top police intelligence official, who was convicted of leaking Five Eyes signals intelligence to some of the world’s most dangerous Iranian state-sponsored criminals. His case, still cloaked in national security secrecy, is believed to have also involved Chinese espionage investigations. But concerns about corruption within Canada’s law enforcement and intelligence agencies extend far beyond Ortis himself, according to enforcement experts who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter.
Several said that U.S. officials suspect corruption within the ranks of Canadian border authorities, yet those suspects allegedly retained their security clearances.
“It was mind-boggling. The Americans would say, we have good reason to suspect that this particular CBSA officer is corrupt,” a Canadian policing expert said. “This information would be provided to higher-ups in CBSA with the understanding ...

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I met MartyUpNorth tonight! 😃

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