B.C. attorney general warns against doing deals with ICE, amid pending Pattison sale
British Columbia’s attorney general said business leaders in the province need to consider whether their decisions could be contributing to an immigration crackdown in the United States that she and others are watching “in horror.”
Niki Sharma’s remarks on Tuesday came after it emerged that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security was planning to buy a building owned by the property arm of Vancouver-based conglomerate Jim Pattison Group to use as an Immigration and Customs Enforcement “holding and processing” facility.
Asked about the potential sale of the 43.5-acre site and 550,000-square-foot industrial warehouse in Virginia, Sharma said B.C. and Canadian business figures needed to consider what connections they might have to “what’s happening in the states with ICE and certainly the death of citizens of America.”
Two people have been shot dead by federal agents amid the crackdown in Minneapolis, triggering widespread protests.


