Trudeau security adviser approved of removing China’s ‘economic fugitives’
OTTAWA — The top-level Trudeau adviser overseeing a possible extradition treaty with China told the previous government that China’s so-called “economic fugitives” don’t belong on Canadian soil, The Canadian Press has learned.
Then-deputy minister Daniel Jean offered that advice in a 2015 briefing note to the former Conservative government prior to his appointment in May as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s national security adviser.
“Canada does not want to be seen as a safe haven for fugitives and it is in Canada’s interest to have such persons removed,” said the note, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act.
In his new role with the Liberal government, Jean was in Beijing last week for the start of a new “high level dialogue” between Canada and China on national security and the rule of law — talks that include breaking ground on an extradition treaty.


