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So out of the multiple trillions of dollars that are laundered internationally every year, how much of the proceeds of crime are actually seized and forfeited? According to the UNODC, the answer is less than 1 percent.
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Read More »John Cassara is a former U.S. intelligence officer and Treasury special agent. He has written four books on money laundering and terror finance. These days, a money launderer has to be either very stupid or very unlucky to get caught. In fact, data suggest the U.S. government’s efforts to enforce America’s money-laundering laws fail 99.9 percent of the time. As financial crime expert Raymond Baker notes, “Total failure is just a decimal point away.” All of which makes it all the more surprising that Paul Manafort and Rick Gates, President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman and his deputy, got busted last week. Special counsel Robert Mueller accused Manafort, with Gates’ help, of laundering approximately $30 million—an effort that, according to the indictment, began years ago but continued through their time on the Trump presidential campaign. The charges do not involve the president or his campaign. Had Trump lost the election, Manafort and Gates might have gotten away with their alleged crimes. But now they’re caught up in Mueller’s investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 election, and they have the misfortune of being pursued by skilled and motivated prosecutors with deep expertise in financial crimes and almost unlimited resources. Mueller’s team includes Andrew Weissmann, who no less than former White House strategist Steve Bannon has reportedly dubbed “the LeBron James of money-laundering investigations.”
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Read More »The IMF and UNODC don’t count trade-based money-laundering, either. When you include all its various forms, this technique is probably the world’s most common way to launder money. It is poorly understood, investigated or enforced—and therefore escapes our traditional countermeasures. Here’s one way it works: trade misinvoicing, an oft-used method of moving value illicitly across borders. Conspirators deliberately misrepresent the value of a commercial transaction on an invoice by misreporting the quantity, quality, price per unit and/or description of a good that results in the shipment being over or under-invoiced or other fraudulent schemes. The potential scale here is enormous, given that the amount of average annual global merchandise trade is approximately $20 trillion. According to some estimates, 80 percent of the world’s illicit money flow stems from trade-related activities. So out of the multiple trillions of dollars that are laundered internationally every year, how much of the proceeds of crime are actually seized and forfeited? According to the UNODC, the answer is less than 1 percent. The other bottom-line metric that matters is the number of successful anti-money laundering convictions. The State Department tracks these statistics on a yearly basis. They vary markedly from country to country. Yet a review of the overall reporting shows that the actual numbers of convictions are minuscule in comparison to the magnitude of transnational criminal activity. Many countries’ anti-money laundering efforts are essentially worthless. Some countries, the Philippines, for example—have never had a money laundering conviction. Criminals are attracted to the weak link; when one country fails to crack down on money laundering, it affects many others. By looking at the bottom-line numbers, unfortunately the United States is also a weak link. Manafort and Gates were allegedly able to exploit vulnerabilities for years until they were caught because of unique circumstances.
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Read More »We often forget about the money made on the money that is successfully laundered. Although this is simplistic, let’s assume the $39 billion figure is accurate and the cartels simply invest the illicit proceeds at a 5 percent annualized rate of return; after 20 years, just that one year has mushroomed into a $1.7 trillion problem! And that represents just one year and one straightforward money-laundering methodology limited to one geographic area. Some apologists in government or industry will have you believe that countering money laundering is all about “disruption,” or “deterrence,” or the number of financial intelligence reports filed by financial institutions. These platitudes are ridiculous. Stopping money laundering ultimately all comes down to enforcement—and America is doing a lousy job of it. Currently, there are about 1,200 money-laundering convictions a year at the federal level. That seems like a large number, and undoubtedly some money launderers plead to other charges. But if we factor in the amount of criminal activity and the multi-hundreds of billions of illicit proceeds generated, it’s just a drop in the ocean.
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