Lawsuit reveals details of alleged fraud at Regina vehicle dealership

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Lawsuit reveals details of alleged fraud at Regina vehicle dealership

SaskatchewanA lawsuit filed by Go To Auto Inc. accuses husband and wife Aggrey Fynn and Stephanie Fynn — the owners of Regina Electric Vehicle (REV) Automotive Group — of operating a fraudulent scheme for three years between 2022 and May 2025.Go To Auto Inc. alleges it was defrauded of more than $947,000Alexander Quon · CBC News · Posted: Oct 14, 2025 2:28 PM EDT | Last Updated: 4 hours agoStephanie and Aggrey Fynn are identified as the owners of Rev Auto Group, which has been named in a civil lawsuit. (Stephanie Fynn/Facebook)A civil lawsuit contains some of the details of an alleged fraud at a car dealership in Regina. Go To Auto Inc., filed the civil suit at Regina Court of King’s Bench last month. The lawsuit accuses husband and wife Aggrey Fynn and Stephanie Fynn — the owners of Regina Electric Vehicle (REV) Automotive Group — of operating a fraudulent scheme for three years between 2022 and May 2025.Aggrey is alleged to have been a former salesman at Go To Auto, and to have used the company to facilitate sales and financing once he launched REV Automotive.”The defendants fraudulently misrepresented to Go To Auto and other customers that it was selling vehicles to them, when the defendants had in fact already sold the vehicle to others, sometimes selling the same vehicle numerous times,” the statement of claim alleges. “Through this scheme, the defendants also fabricated the existence of vehicles that they purported to sell to Go To Auto.” Go To Auto alleges it was defrauded of more than $947,000 as a result of the scheme. According to the lawsuit, Go To Auto only learned of the alleged fraud when the company’s principal operator was questioned by police. Police investigators searched Go To Auto’s records as part of the investigation into REV Auto, the lawsuit alleges. Go To Auto is seeking more than $947,000 as well as unspecified damages for claims, refunds and reputational impacts. A statement of defence filed by Stephanie denies “doing anything dishonest” and denies knowing of any dishonesty on the part of Rev Auto or anyone associated with the company. Stephanie also denies that Go To Auto has suffered loss or damages. As part of the filing she requests dismissal of the suit and legal costs.Criminal chargesIn May 2025, Regina police jointly charged Aggrey and Stephanie with fraud and laundering proceeds of crime. At the time, police said the investigation into money laundering began after a drug bust that saw two members of the University of Regina Rams football team arrested and charged.The lawsuit claims and criminal charges have not been tested in court. ABOUT THE AUTHORAlexander Quon is the provincial affairs reporter for CBC Saskatchewan. He has been a reporter with CBC Saskatchewan since 2021 and is happy to be working in his hometown of Regina after half a decade in Atlantic Canada. He has previously worked with the CBC News investigative unit in Nova Scotia and Global News in Halifax. Alexander specializes in freedom of information requests and data reporting. He can be reached at: alexander.quon@cbc.ca. FacebookTwitter

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