The RCMP deputy commissioner’s remark equating partnerships with Chinese police to those with the FBI is raising concerns among former law enforcement officials and politicians, who say the Beijing regime should not be treated the same as Canada’s democratic allies.
He said such agreements involve how law enforcement agencies share information, disclose information, conduct mutual investigations when requesting information, and address the cost of investigations.
Larkin noted that he could not speak to the specifics of what is in the MOU and referred to the Chinese regime as a “partner.”
“We would not disclose anything in the agreement without their permission, and mutually they would do the same,” he told the Senate.
The federal government has so far kept details of the MOU confidential, though other MOUs signed during Carney’s China visit have been made public.
Conservative MP Dean Allison called Larkin’s comments “a complete failure of judgment.”
“But being told that Canadians can’t even see the details of that arrangement without Beijing’s permission? That’s not partnership. That’s submission to a foreign authoritarian regime.”
Allison noted that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been “repeatedly accused of interference, intimidation, and operating illegal police stations on Canadian soil,” and now they have a say in what Canadians are allowed to know about Beijing’s relationship with the RCMP.
He called it “completely unacceptable” that Canadians are unaware of what is contained in the MOU, “while a hostile regime is treated like a trusted ally.”
“Who is actually in control here?” he said, adding that the issue raises concerns in terms of transparency and Canada’s sovereignty.
‘Not Comparable’
RCMP and Canadian military intelligence veteran Scott McGregor told The Epoch Times that Allison’s concern is “not theoretical.”“That history matters,” McGregor said. “It shows why Canadians should reject any language that normalizes the CCP’s policing apparatus as equivalent to trusted democratic partners.”
China’s Ministry of Public Security is “not comparable” to U.S. institutions, he noted, adding that “pretending” otherwise weakens Canada’s response to foreign interference.
McGregor said the attempt to equate Chinese police with American police is “not a minor verbal slip” and reflects a “serious failure” to understand the difference between democratic law enforcement and the security arm of an authoritarian one-party state.
He noted that while the FBI operates within a constitutional system with judicial oversight, legislative scrutiny, and a rule-of-law culture, China’s Ministry of Public Security serves the interests of the CCP and “has been tied, through open source reporting, parliamentary study, and allied law enforcement cases, to transnational repression, surveillance, intimidation, and covert policing activity beyond China’s borders.”
‘Guardrails’
Garry Clement, former national director of the RCMP’s proceeds-of-crime program, told The Epoch Times that the federal government’s MOU with Beijing on police cooperation is not comparable to MOUs signed “with democratic countries that uphold the rule of law.”“This cannot be said for China and thus should have contained well-defined guardrails,” he noted.
“Law enforcement in China is part of the PRC [People’s Republic of China] apparatus,” Clement said. “You can’t separate them from the government, and they do not operate under the rule of law. I experienced it first-hand.”
He also noted that Ottawa and Beijing are “not even close” to being equal partners and have “totally different” agendas.
Chinese Police Went ‘Missing’
Approximately 14 Chinese police officers with China’s Ministry of Public Security were hosted by Canadian police in Vancouver and Toronto at the time to work on “mutual files” related to fraud, money laundering, and “economic fugitives” cases, Tsui said.
Tsui’s April 20 testimony came during the trial of former RCMP officer William Majcher, who has pleaded not guilty to allegations he helped Beijing in a scheme to “induce” a Chinese expat to turn himself over to China, where the expat was accused of financial crimes.






