Tech Entrepreneurs Testify They Witnessed Corruption, Fraud, Extortion During ArriveCAN Development

They raised concerns about the development of ArriveCAN after witnessing shady subcontracting deals that lacked transparency about where federal dollars went.
Tech Entrepreneurs Testify They Witnessed Corruption, Fraud, Extortion During ArriveCAN Development
A person holds a smartphone showing the ArriveCan app, which required people to upload their COVID-19 vaccination status to be able to enter Canada during the pandemic. Giordano Ciampini/The Canadian Press
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Factions within the federal government were complicit in corruption, extortion, and “ghost contracting” during the development of Canada’s ArriveCAN app, two tech entrepreneurs testified during a government committee meeting.

“An act of misconduct rarely happens in isolation. It is almost always symptomatic of a larger existence and tolerance of misconduct,” Amir Morv, co-founder of software company Botler AI, told MPs in his opening remarks on Oct. 26. “Individuals engaged in such conduct are also prime targets of exploitation and extortion.”