MONTREAL - The RCMP continues to investigate Islamist terrorist financing in Canada 10 months after it raided IRFAN-Canada for allegedly funnelling money to Hamas, QMI Agency has learned.

A source told QMI that as recently as September, Mounties were investigating other Canadian-based Muslim groups for links to terrorism.

"It is still active," the source said of the RCMP's probe.

No charges have been laid in Project Sapphire, which involved wiretaps, two months of surveillance in the Toronto area and in Montreal.

Police raided IRFAN locations in Mississauga, Ont., and Montreal last April 28 and Ottawa declared the group to be a terrorist organization the following day.

The RCMP's 113-page search warrant, obtained by QMI, says IRFAN funnelled $14.6 million to Hamas.

IRFAN had its charity status revoked in 2011 but the RCMP said the group continued to raise money and send funds to Hamas.

IRFAN denies any wrongdoing and is currently fighting its terrorist listing in Federal Court.

QMI has learned that intelligence investigators on three large local Canadian police forces are pressing for a wider probe into the terrorism money trail.

The IRFAN-Canada search warrant names three organizations that gave money to the charity, including two the RCMP suspect did so under the table.

One is the Muslim Association of Canada (MAC), which owns or controls at least 35 schools and mosques across Canada.

The Mississauga, Ont. umbrella group gave $296,514 to IRFAN from 2001 to 2010, according to tax records.

MAC issued a statement late last month following a QMI investigation that showed the RCMP believe the group continued to provide money to IRFAN even after it lost its charity status.

"MAC has not supported IRFAN in any way since the allegations that led to its delisting as a charity by the Government of Canada in 2011," the group said.

Also named in the RCMP warrant is the Islamic Centre of Quebec, based in a large, minaret-adorned building in north-end Montreal.

The 50-year-old ICQ, which bills itself as the first mosque in Quebec, was visited by IRFAN's Montreal representative and another man on March 21, 2014, the RCMP warrant says.

The other man was working undercover for the Mounties.

"At 14:10 hours, (REDACTED) exited the Islamic Centre of Quebec together with an undercover operator, operating under the name (REDACTED)," the warrant reads. They sat at a Tim Hortons for half an hour, then parted ways. "At this time, (REDACTED) was carrying what appeared to be the IRFAN receipt book."

QMI Agency's repeated attempts to reach ICQ went unanswered.

The third organization listed in the warrant is Human Concern International (HCI) an Ottawa-based charity with offices in Beirut, Somalia and Pakistan.

HCI granted $68,820 to IRFAN between 2005 and 2009, according to tax records.

An RCMP wiretap revealed that "the user of the Montreal IRFAN telephone number ... was in contact with HCI office in Montreal in October 2013 and December 2013."

The content of the phone call wasn't in the warrant. HCI's lawyer, Michel Drapeau, told QMI the call was "of a purely personal nature caused by the fact their respective children are attending the same school."

HCI has previously raised red flags at the federal level for alleged links to infamous terrorists.

Canadian al-Qaida financier Ahmed Said Khadr, father of convicted murderer Omar Khadr, ran HCI's Pakistan office at the time.