More details emerge about scale of alleged fraud by suspended Denesoline CEO - Action News
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More details emerge about scale of alleged fraud by suspended Denesoline CEO

Suspended Denesoline CEO Ron Barlas designed contracts which gave him the power to bankrupt the company at his whim, lawyers for Denesoline owner utsel K'e Dene First Nation argued in Northwest Territories Supreme Court on Friday.

utsel K'e Dene First Nation argued case on Friday in suit against Ron Barlas

The outside of a building with the sign 'Yellowknife courthouse.'
Lawyers for utsel K'e Dene First Nation made their case against suspended CEO Ron Barlas in front of the Northwest Territories Supreme Court in Yellowknife last week. (Walter Strong/CBC)

Suspended Denesoline CEO Ron Barlas designed contracts which gave him the power to bankrupt the company "at his whim", lawyers for Denesoline owner utsel K'e Dene First Nation alleged in Northwest Territories Supreme Court on Friday.

It was, they said, just one of a long list of actions Barlas took over his time as CEO of Denesoline which were contrary to the best interests of the company and the people it was created to help, members of Lutsel K'e Dene First Nation (LKDFN).

The First Nation's claim rests on proving that Barlas "acted oppressively" towards LKDFN members, or unfairly disregarded their interests.

They argued that, if the court finds Barlas did meet that threshold, Canadian corporate law gives the presiding judge "broad discretion" to make orders to remedy the damage.

They are asking justiceKaren Shaner to permanently remove Barlas as Denesoline CEO and order him to pay back all the money he took from the first nation.

They also want three properties he is alleged to have bought with Denesoline money to be put in a trust.

They argue thatShanerhas enough information to make those orders based on the written evidence alone, sayingthat because so much of the case rests on financial documents and Barlas's own emails, a trial isn't necessary.

On Friday, LKDFN lawyers spent the bulk of the day going over evidence they have gathered to support their claim.

The evidence was presented by lawyer Matthew Sammon.

The joint venture

Sammon has said that much of Barlas's self-dealingwas related towhat he called a"sham" joint venture agreement Barlascreated 2016 between Denesolineand Northern Consulting Group, a company owned by his wife.

Northern Consulting Group was solely registered and owned by Barlas's wife Zeba, but Sammon alleged that Barlassaidunder cross-examination that his wife wasn't very involved, and described the agreement as part of his compensation for his work with Denesoline.

By 2017,the joint venture entitled Northern Consulting Groupto half of the profits from Denesoline's major contracts, Sammon said.

In the fall of 2018, Barlasmade changes to the agreement,Sammon said. The new agreement dictated that if either Denesoline or Barlas's family companybowed out of the joint venture,Denesoline would have to pay out $4.25 million to Northern Consulting Group.

The payout was structured as a secured debt, essentially giving Barlas, throughNorthern Consulting Group, a stake in all Denesoline's assets.

"These contracts were designed to put him in a position to, at his whim, bankrupt the company," Sammon alleged.

Later in 2020, Denesoline paid Northern Consulting Group a lump sum payment for $3.25 million dollars under the same joint venture.

The aeroponic farm

Another "particularly cynical" act of self-dealing from Barlas, Sammon said, related to the purchase of an aeroponicfarmin 2017.

Barlas bought the aeroponic farm under one of the Barlas family companies, Equipment North, for $160,000, according to evidence from Equipment North financial records, Sammon said.

A couple months later, he sold it to Denesoline, purportedly so the community could use it as a year-round garden to help alleviate food insecurity.

The sale price was well over $300,000. Barlas, by his own report in Equipment North financial documents, made over$100,000 in profit over the deal, Sammon said.

But the farm never made it to utsel K'e, Sammon alleged. It was instead transferred into the keeping of Barlas's friend and real estate agent in B.C., so he could use it to set up a business supplying produce to restaurants.

Later, Sammon said, Barlaspermanently transferred the ownership of the aeroponic farm to the friend, recording it as severance for the termination of his employment with Denesoline.

The man had purportedly beenon the payroll to look for real estate opportunities.

Man in hat smiles at Camera
Ron Barlas is accused of funneling $11.5 million from Denesoline into companies owned by his family. (Ron Barlas/Facebook)

Sammon also pointed to a $47,000 invoice Northern Consulting Group sent Denesoline in 2015, which Barlas said during cross-examination was compensation for phone calls he had with a friend who owned a call centre about possible opportunities to open one in utsel K'e.

According to Sammon, Barlas said he spent 20 hours speaking about this with his friend, meaninghe charged a rate of over $2000 per hour for the call.

Sammonalleged that Barlas continued to send similar invoices from his companies throughout his time at Denesoline.

Sammon alleged on Wednesday that Barlas appropriated about $11.5million from Denesolineoverall through his companies, not including his salary, bonuses, or charges he made to company credit cards.

Barlas's lawyers will present their arguments on April 2.

Barlas was suspended as Denesoline's CEO by a court injunction last year. The injunction also froze his assets,though hestill has access to an allowance of $15,000 per month for expenses until the case is resolved equivalent to $180,000 a year.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Friday was the last day of arguments for LKDFN.
    Mar 12, 2024 1:57 PM CT