April 22, 2026
Leaked files reveal CRA refunded millions by mistake


More than two years after paying out $4.99 million in an allegedly bogus refund, the Canada Revenue Agency is stuck in Federal Court trying to figure out where the money went and how to get it back.

The seven-figure refund was issued through the CRAโ€™s automated processes in the spring of 2023 to Distribution Carflex Inc., a cash-strapped body shop in the Laurentians region of Quebec.

According to internal records obtained by the CBCโ€™s the fifth estate and Radio-Canada, the $4.99-million transaction went through automatically, as it fell just short of a $5-million threshold for manual review in this type of tax refund.

A source with inside knowledge of the CRAโ€™s workings said that returns are routinely processed electronically without human oversight, even in cases where millions are paid out that would later raise red flags.

โ€œThere should be eyeballs on that transaction, but there isn’t, and that’s the problem,โ€ said the source.

CBC is not disclosing the identity of the source, who is not authorized to discuss the internal workings of the CRA or specific tax files.

Aerial view of the CRA headquarters, a multi-storey building in the Tudor Gothic style.
An aerial view shows the Connaught Building, the Canada Revenue Agency’s headquarters, in Ottawa. (Fรฉlix Desroches/Radio-Canada)

If the $5-million threshold had been met, CRA auditors would have performed a manual review of the tax return and might have noticed potential irregularities, the source said.ย 

The $4.99-million reimbursement was issued on the premise that Carflex had paid taxes on a large capital gain, but auditors later found no record of such a payment.

The payment first attracted attention at TD bank, the institution where the money was deposited, and not the CRA, according to the leaked records.

The leaked Carflex documents are the most recent example of numerous instances uncovered by the fifth estate and Radio-Canada, which show the CRA has allegedly been duped into paying large reimbursements without conducting basic checks, affecting tens of thousands of taxpayers and raising questions about the agencyโ€™s credibility with the public.

Carflexโ€™s owner, Yvan Drapeau, and his lawyer could not be reached for comment by email or phone.ย 

According to documents filed in court, they have defended the transactions as valid and fought back against the CRAโ€™s attempts to freeze its account.

A federal court building in Montreal.
A Federal Court building in Montreal. More than two years after paying out $4.99 million in an allegedly bogus refund, the Canada Revenue Agency is in Federal Court trying to figure out where the money went and how to get it back.
(Sรฉbastien Labelle/Radio-Canada)

At Federal Court, the CRA is trying to recover the money, alleging the firm โ€œdid not have a right to this refund.โ€

โ€œCarflex is the one that caused the overpayment from the CRA through transactions that were questionable and potentially fraudulent,โ€ agency officials have said in court.

Call for outside investigation

At issue is CRAโ€™s use of thresholds that determine when a manual review is required before refunds are paid out.

Such thresholds are used internally by the CRA and not made public, but some fraudsters try to game the system by filing bogus returns that fall just below these limits, according to the source.

โ€œIn order for an automated process to allow a payment, there has to be a threshold that’s set,โ€ the source said. โ€œNo one is really looking at the vulnerabilities of these automated processes.โ€

The leaked records state that officials at the Agency realized there were โ€œno existing mitigations in place to preventโ€ the allegedly suspicious scheme.

Sources connected to the CRA have told Radio-Canada/the fifth estate that the government needs to hire outside experts to examine the Agencyโ€™s security measures. The agency falls under the responsibility of Finance Minister Franรงois-Philippe Champagne.

โ€œThe agency cannot police itself. It just can’t, because it will just make things look better than they are in order to [avoid] scrutiny,โ€ a source said. โ€œIt doesn’t matter who the minister is. This is entrenched administrative behavior.โ€

The CRA โ€œneeds to be externally investigated from the ground up,โ€ said another source.

A tangled web

The Federal Court is in the midst of unravelling the complex transactions that led to the legal showdown between the CRA and Distribution Carflex Inc.

In a decision in June, Federal Court Judge Yvan Roy said that CRAโ€™s $4.99-million reimbursement to the company seemed to have been โ€œgenerated artificially.โ€

After reviewing the court records, two tax experts at McGill University in Montreal said CRAโ€™s automated functions apparently failed to spot the fact that Carflex was claiming a refund for a 2021 tax bill that would not have been paid.

โ€œThere was not an individual, real person from the CRA looking at the case. This was all done by computers,โ€ said Raphaรซl Clรฉment, a tax lawyer and doctoral candidate who reviewed publicly available documents with McGill law professor Allison Christians.

โ€œIn order to get the refund, you should pay [taxes] first,โ€ he said.

Carflex was a relatively small company, having claimed expenses of $380,000 in 2020-21, with only $242,000 in revenue, according to court records.

The leaked records show that alarm bells first rang at TD Bank in April 2023, when officials noticed that the $4.99-million cheque issued to Distribution Carflex Inc. had been deposited in an account recently opened by a numbered company.

Records show that Carflex owner Yvan Drapeau had already withdrawn $1.5 million to go towards the purchase of a $2-million condominium in Montreal.

Exterior of a condo building.
Carflex owner Yvan Drapeau had spent at least $1.5 million on the purchase of a luxury condominium in Montreal before TD Bank froze the funds in a bank account. (Radio-Canada)

After TD Bank alerted CRA, the remaining funds were frozen.ย 

Drapeau immediately objected, stating in an email to TD that โ€œthe bank should not be able to seize my assets without notice and place me in a precarious situation.โ€

The CRA is seeking to interview Drapeauโ€™s business partner in the real-estate transaction, Jean-Franรงois Malo. A few days after Drapeau purchased the condo, the ownership was transferred to a trust called Fiducie Annie, which court records show is under Maloโ€™s control.

Malo has been invoking client-attorney privilege to avoid answering the CRAโ€™s question, arguing funds related to the transaction were transmitted through a notary.

Judge Roy rejected this rationale in a decision in June, stating โ€œthe existence of a client-solicitor relationship has in no way been established.โ€ย 

As a result, the judge called on Malo to answer the CRAโ€™s question in the matter.

A TD Bank branch in Laval.
Employees at a TD Bank branch in Laval, Que., were the first to question a $4.99-million deposit. (Radio-Canada)

In response to questions from CBC and Radio-Canada, the agency refused to comment specifically on the Carflex case, but said it is ready to use โ€œall available measures to ensure compliance.โ€ย 

The alleged scheme began with the company reporting a capital gain of $32.9-million on its 2021 tax return, without providing any supporting documentation, according to the information submitted in court by the CRA.

That capital gain triggered a $7-million tax charge. However, Carflex never paid that amount, according to the CRA.

The company then filed a tax return for the 2022 fiscal year, which stated that Carflex had paid out $13 million in shareholder dividends. That allowed the company to get a partial refund of $4.99 million on its 2021 tax bill, according to information presented in court.

Clรฉment said that in his view, โ€œif a human had looked at the file, they would have noticed quite quickly there was a problem.โ€

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