Canadian authorities are set to begin proceedings today against former media tycoon Conrad Black, who is accused of a scheme to take proceeds from the newspaper business he once controlled.
Black has already spent more than three years in a Florida prison following US convictions on related actions, which occurred more than a decade ago.
Canada's proceeding is being handled by the Ontario Securities Commission. It alleges that directors and officers of Hollinger Inc and Hollinger International engaged in a scheme to take company proceeds through a system of 'non-competition' payments.
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Of the many criminal charges against him in the US, just two convictions survived years of appeals on one count of fraud and one count of obstruction of justice.
The Canadian-born Black served 37 months out of a 42-month sentence and was fined USD 125,000.
Among Hollinger's holdings were the London-based Daily Telegraph, the Chicago Sun-Times and numerous Canadian publications including the National Post.
Black renounced his Canadian citizenship in 2001 to accept a British peerage.