Colel Chabad Lubavitch Foundation of Israel

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A CRA audit for the fiscal period of 2008-2009 uncovered[1] that Colel Chabad had been selling official donation receipts to donors, for 10% to 20% of their receipted value. When it comes to filing one’s personal taxes, these receipts, it is important to note, have a value of upwards of 50% or more of the donated principle, meaning that Canadian charities actually create wealth. One of Colel Chabad’s clients, Dr. Lorne Wayne Sokol, gained notoriety[2] for laundering money he had obtained by allegedly defrauding the Ontario Health Insurance Plan, through Colel Chabad. Sokol had incorporated a company in Belize, the Moshe Shmuel Deitsch Company, named for Colel Chabad’s self-claimed Israeli intermediary, Moshe Deutsch.[3]

Through the Belizean company, Sokol (and potentially others) was subsequently repaid by Colel Chabad for between 80% to 90% of the principal they had donated to the charity. Colel Chabad appears to have netted 10% to 20% off the principle, while Sokol and other unnamed participants netted the value of a tax credit while recouping 80% to 90% of their Belize-laundered principle, meaning a net profit for donors ballparked at 130-140%.

Colel Chabad’s president, Abraham Neuwirth, would plead ignorance to the scheme. Colel Chabad’s secretary Zalman Zirkind, along with his brothers, however, were involved in a wider, international, narco-trafficking/money laundering scheme.[4] In 2021, Zalman would be sentenced to 84 months’ imprisonment by a United States District Court for conspiracy to commit money laundering.[5] Zirkind’s association with Colel Chabad, it should be noted, far outlived the charity’s exposure as a potential money laundering operation; he was listed as Colel Chabad’s secretary between 2000 until at least 2015, at which point the charity simply ceased updating its Board of Directors filings with the CRA.[6]


See also

Notes