U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT MARCH 1996:
FINANCIAL CRIMES AND MONEY LAUNDERING
United States Department of State
Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
There were a number of significant developments in the money laundering
sphere in 1995:
Presidential Decision Directive announced in October through which
US agencies intend to identify and, if necessary, impose sanctions on
the most egregious offenders among governments and banks which analysis
indicates are facilitating the movement of proceeds of a variety of
serious crimes, including drug trafficking, arms smuggling, sanctions
violations and other offenses;
agreements on standards and objectives reached through the
communique issued at the conclusion of the Summit of the Americas
Ministerial Conference on Money Laundering, which established an action
plan for the 34 governments of this Hemisphere;
continued progress of the Financial Action Task Force, including
the conclusion of the first round of mutual evaluations of each of its
26 members; consideration of proposals to update FATF's universally-
accepted 40 recommendations to reflect new typologies and methodologies;
the beginning of evaluations of members of the Caribbean FATF; the
further enhancement of the Asian outreach program; the creation of a
common forum for major international bankers and government
policymakers; and the convening of an international conference of
financial intelligence units;
continued effectiveness of US agencies in cooperation with foreign
governments on major money laundering cases; and
several financial center governments, such as the Bahamas and
Panama, adopted broad, new anti-money laundering policies and/or laws,
while a number of governments were in the final stages of
presenting/adopting new legislation.
On October 21, 1995, President Clinton signed Executive Order 12978
utilizing the sanctions authority of the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) for the first time against 80 designated
individuals and businesses found to be significant foreign narcotics
traffickers, including those who assist in laundering trafficker
proceeds via financial transactions. The Order blocks the assets in the
United States and US banks overseas of these traffickers, their front
companies and individuals acting on their behalf and prohibits US
persons from commercial and financial dealings with them. The Treasury
Department published a list of target companies and individuals and
notified US companies and banks to block their assets and prohibit trade
with them.
Even as these impressive initiatives were undertaken, the problems
confronting policymakers and enforcement agencies were becoming ever
more complex and pervasive.
MONEY LAUNDERING: A CHANGING SCENARIO
The number of governments which have ratified the 1988 UN Convention
continued to increase in 1995. Many important financial centers have
now adopted legislation to curb drug-related money laundering. However,
too many priority financial centers have still not adopted needed
legislation or ratified the Convention. There is also a substantial
question whether the drug-trafficking-oriented money laundering laws
which many governments adopted in the earlier part of this decade are
adequate, given recent developments in money laundering practices and
new technologies used in banking.
Organized crime groups are increasingly a factor in major money
laundering schemes -- and the multiple sources of their proceeds
compounds the difficulty of linking the monetary transaction to a unique
predicate offense like drug trafficking. Moreover, criminal
organizations have distinct patterns of operation which vary from one
part of the globe to the next. Russian "mafiya" groups have enlarged
their presence in the Western Hemisphere, and are becoming as much a
concern as the traditional Italian/Sicilian "mafia", Colombian cartels
or the Asian triads and yakuza.
Meanwhile, an increasing number of drug traffickers do not directly
manage the laundering or conversion of their proceeds, but rely
predominantly on professional money brokers.
Such brokers are increasingly crafting effective schemes to evade normal
monitoring, detection and reporting devices.
To understand money laundering as it is practiced today on a global
basis, one has to appreciate money as a commodity. Professional money
launderers differ little in this respect from corporate money managers.
A corporate money manager enters the money markets of various countries
where the corporation will need national currencies during the next year
and buys/sells currencies in a constant effort to improve the manager's
average position at the time of payment. Similarly money launderers use
a bidding system to buy/sell drug proceeds, especially US dollars. Just
as a sound investment portfolio will contain stocks, bonds and other
monetary instruments, the money brokers vary their holdings.
How Money Is Laundered. Like institutional investors who put a
percentage of their money into hedge funds, money brokers and the drug
traffickers and other criminals who employ them collaborate to minimize
risk. The Cali Cartel, for example, minimizes risk by selling a
substantial portion of the drug proceeds it earns from the sale of
cocaine in the United States. Mexican traffickers in heroin, cocaine
and marijuana do the same, often selling to the same money brokers in
behalf of Cali or for their own account. These brokers will convert
proceeds for a fee, or, they will buy the proceeds at a discount. Given
the high profit margins of the drug trade, discounts of 7-10 percent or
even higher, depending upon risk, are common. At the end of the day,
Cali and other trafficking groups may own or control 50% or less of the
initial drug proceeds.
The following hypothetical example illustrates the options available.
Assume that the Cali Cartel is moving $100 million over the rather
porous border from the United States to Mexico and operating on a 75%
profit margin (earnings minus costs). Just $25 million must reach
Colombia to replenish the operating budget. Cali wants to net $60-65
million from the bulk of the cash, or $85-90 million in total. Brokers
have a bid or discount range of 10-15%. Cali agents will attempt to
sell $25 million on the gray market -- supported by Latin and even US
businessmen who want to convert pesos or other currencies into dollars -
- and go into the gray market to avoid exchange rates, or avoid taxes,
or, when profit margins are narrow on US goods which can be sold in
their countries, to realize higher profits. These currencies,
especially pesos, can be readily returned to Colombia. The amounts over
which Cali or Mexican traffickers retain actual control will be
influenced by prevailing discount rates, investment opportunities,
current risk dynamics, and gray market demand, more than it will by the
presence or absence of laws. At the same time, the need for fluidity
and convertibility, influenced by the strength/weakness of the Mexican
peso and the status of US investor confidence, among other factors, will
leverage the rate at which Mexican banks will do business with brokers.
Perhaps $25 million more will be "consigned" to allegedly licit
importers who use various invoice schemes, at a discount, to
legitimatize the return of dollars to their countries. The textile
trade is a typical cover. For example, a South American clothing
manufacturer working with Cali will obtain a permit to export $20
million of suits to New York. The manufacturer actually ships $6
million worth of suits to the Aruba Free Zone, where they are repackaged
and sent back to Colombia, and sold at discount. Meanwhile, the
manufacturer's agent picks up $20 million in drug proceeds in New York
and returns it to Colombia, covered by a export license.
The bulk of the $100M will be deposited in Mexican banks, after which a
number of schemes can be used. Commonly, the money will be wire-
transferred to accounts in the United States. The Mexican banks will
then issue checks drawn on its US accounts, payable to individuals or
corporations. These checks can be batched for resale in Latin America,
or deposited into foreign bank accounts. Enforcement officials believe
that as much as $10 billion in Mexican bank drafts is laundered through
such schemes each year in Panama alone. While some of the trade is in
contraband goods, these checks, certificates of deposit, and other
financial instruments have also been used to pay for legitimate
shipments. Gold trade in the Aruba Free Zone amounts to more than $200
million a year. The Mexican banks will also issue their own dollar-
denominated checks, up to a level which they think will not cause
inquiries.
Such brokers offer as much as $500 million to a bank or another broker
at a point or two below the official exchange rate. The offer is
probably not for a single transaction, but reflects the amount of money
this broker has at his disposal. However, transactions are increasing
in size. One recent transfer reportedly involved $78 million which went
through a US bank in a single transaction.
Why then don't US reports and economic indicators reflect this volume
of money transfer? The answer is fairly simple: these kinds of
transactions are designed to fall outside the scope of Treasury and
other reporting. For example, US banking law does not require reports
on bank to bank transfers, let alone transfers from branch to another of
a bank.
Some of this flow shows up in physical movements of currency back to the
US. Flows from Latin America, especially Panama, Paraguay and Mexico,
to Federal Reserve Banks are in fact in excess of the levels which can
be explained by traditional commerce. However, currency does not have
to leave a placement site physically. Banks are at least one generation
or more beyond the period in which physical money was moved to settle
accounts. Dollar settlements are accomplished through reciprocal
balances. For example, a Mexican bank wires $50 million to a bank in
New York, which gives the Mexican bank instant credit on the latter's
New York account because the Mexican bank has simultaneously given the
New York bank credit for $50 million at the latter's Mexican facility.
Rather than moving physical cash to New York, the Mexican outlet is more
likely to transfer physical cash south, as individual checks wend their
way through various payment schemes. However, some cash does move back
to the US in bulk, carried by Mexican transfer agents who are not
required to declare currency when crossing the US border north.
The US economy is one unintended beneficiary of the kinds of swaps and
schemes carried out in Mexico. The gray market enables Latin
businessmen to buy goods and services here, and pay for it dollars which
originated in the US drug market.
In sum, the schemes are real, and in fact are becoming more complex and
are being played out on a wider world stage.
Are the Laws Being Implemented? In the seven years since the 1988 UN
Convention was adopted, and particularly since FATF issued its 40 money
laundering recommendations in April 1990, dozens of governments have
statutorily enacted various countermeasures, as indicated by the charts
in this chapter.
The pace of implementation of these laws, and the scope of their
application varies. A review of results reported by key financial
centers relative to the generation of suspicious transaction reports
indicates that several such centers have reporting ratios which are
disproportionately small, given the volume of financial activity and
diversity of enterprises in their systems. Such minimal results could
be an accurate reflection of a low level of suspicious activity, but,
such results could also indicate a law which is drawn too narrowly or a
banking system which is not giving a full faith compliance.
In addition, it has been difficult to assess the degree to which newer
electronic banking practices may render banks more or less vulnerable to
money laundering. Few governments have control mechanisms adequate to
identifying and tracing such transactions should they occur.
Apart from financial institutions in which officials are complicit in
the money laundering transaction, financial institutions are rendered
most vulnerable by the combination of correspondent banking relations
and electronic transfers. In 1995 the twin problems of regulating wire
transfers and tracing wire transfers in pursuit of an investigation were
on the threshold of some containment because FATF had reached agreement
with the dominant system (SWIFT) and its key members on including in
each message critical information needed to identify transmitters and
receivers and especially beneficial owners of transactions.
Recordkeeping may have improved, however, over the past year there has
not appeared to be any diminution of electronic transfers of illicit
proceeds. Control efforts are being sorely challenged by the creation
of new, independent wire transfer services, some which service small
clusters of banks.
Correspondent Banking. Regulators, money laundering investigators, and
international policymaking bodies like FATF are facing profound
challenges from a banking world which not only knows no geographic
horizons and is open 24 hours a day, but is increasingly inter-
connected, as large multinational banks extend their reach not only
through branch and subsidiary networks but through correspondent
relationships that cross the globe.
The concern is not with the growth or dominance of the largest banks, or
the extension of their networks, but, whether standards of prudential
supervision are met at every juncture in this web of correspondent
banking. The emergence of active financial service industries in every
jurisdiction capable of becoming active players on the electronic
highway of super-banking, places ever more emphasis on vetting
transactions at the bank of origin. There is not the confidence today
that the scope of current know-your-customer policies are sufficient to
actually cover most financial transactions at origination.
The scope of international banking was made clear at the winter meeting
in 1995 of the International Bank Security Association. The world's 12
major financial centers except Japan have one or more banks or financial
institutions among IBSA's 52 voting members and six associate members,
and these banks include many of the world's largest international banks.
An IBSA survey showed that 27 of these 58 banks have headquarters
offices and or branches in 146 countries. A separate survey showed that
19 of the 58 members own percentages (and sometimes controlling
interest) in 144 other banking institutions. The actual "reach" of
these big banks, both in terms of branches and holdings, is far greater
as only 27 of the 58 responded to the surveys on branches.
While FATF has conducted an extensive external relations program, which
has engaged an estimated 65 governments outside its own 26-member
roster, no single agency, not even the UNDCP, has accepted the
responsibility for ensuring uniform standards of anti-money laundering
enforcement, or bank regulation, among all nations and territories.
Offshore Banking. Concerns about the regulation of offshore banking did
not lessen over the past year. The assurance of absolute secrecy by
many jurisdictions which license such facilities makes it possible for
such facilities to be manipulated to move and conceal or generate
illicit proceeds. While the Offshore Group of Banking Supervisors
continues to promote adherence to FATF countermeasures among its
members, most offshore facilities have not been evaluated by FATF, OGBS
or other organizations and far too many questions remain about the
regulation of such facilities. FATF has completed evaluations by
outside experts of its own members which have offshore facilities, such
as Switzerland and Singapore.
The concern about regulating offshore facilities remains high with
respect to most governments which issue such charters, but nowhere more
so than the Caribbean. The Bank of International Settlements has
estimated that $5 billion of the $12 billion which is transacted
annually through offshore facilities involves Caribbean offshore banks.
Other Compliance Factors. Other priority concerns which carried over
through 1995 included the counterfeiting of currencies and other
monetary instruments, especially bonds; the boom in contraband
smuggling; the buying of banks and other financial institutions by
suspected criminal groups; the resort by criminals to the use of
smaller, less-monitored banks; and the sophisticated use of such new
phenomena as direct access and pass-through banking, and electronic cash
systems. There is continuing concern, given that financial crimes and
money laundering are occurring with varying degrees of regularity in
more than 125 jurisdictions, that some governments still have not
criminalized all forms of money laundering. Some have not given
sufficient regulatory authority to central banks and other institutions;
many do not have adequate data systems to monitor trends and methods
used in their territories; and many have not made adequate provision for
mutual legal assistance.
CYBERCURRENCY
The use of microchip-based electronic money for financial transactions,-
via smart cards and the Internet, are assuming a potentially important
place in the domestic and worldwide payments system. These chip-based
electronic cyberpayments are emerging very rapidly. Cyberpayments may
soon become an addition to the major means of payment--currency, checks,
credit cards, debit cards, and Automated Clearing House (ACH) transfers
that are used currently to make purchases.
Currency--paper notes and metal coins--has always been of particular
importance in payments involving illicit activities. Currency
attributes include ease of use, wide acceptability, and, most
importantly from the standpoint of law enforcement, anonymity. The
demand for the paper dollar is enormous. US currency in circulation, at
the end of 1994, totaled approximately $405 billion. Of this amount,
foreign holdings were approximately $270 billion. A significant feature
of the new cyberpayments is that they include a new form of currency--a
cybercurrency that is engineered to be an electronic emulation of paper
currency. Cybercurrency includes the attributes of conventional
currency: a store of value, a medium of exchange, a numeraire, anonymity
and ease of use.
But there are added features: transfer velocity (almost instant
electronic transfers from point to point) and substitution of electrons
for paper currency and other physical means of payment. Obviously this
is an innovative addition to the payments mechanism, but it requires
close attention since the use of microchip and telecommunications
technologies adds some significant new dimensions for law enforcement.
Yet currency is not the only monetary instrument innovation.
Cyberpayments also comprise other payment components. Already in use or
design are cyberchecks, an emulation of paper checks, cybercredit,
cyberdebit and so on. Furthermore, cyberpayments can replace or
substitute for conventional wire transfer and financial message systems.
Within the next few years, cyberpayments will to some degree substitute
and supplement all current means of payment and a variety of monetary
instruments.
Many issues are raised by this new technology, including the issue of
whether such payments constitute legal tender and are susceptible to
monetary reporting and supervision measures. Must reporting regulations
be completely redesigned to include the reporting of currency in
electronic form moving to other countries via the Internet or across the
border in a smart card or electronic purse? Law enforcement issues
likely to arise in this area include fraud, counterfeiting and computer
hacking. Moreover, high speed, worldwide transfers that are a facet of
the cyberpayment technology add complexity to law enforcement's ability
to trace criminal activity and recover narco proceeds.
CONCERNS
Over one hundred governments have ratified the 1988 UN Convention,
including the great majority of high to medium priority governments.
However, inconsistent enforcement of its anti-money laundering
provisions is an important factor in the continued high level of global
financial crime.
Eight governments ranked as High, Medium-High or Medium Priority money
laundering concerns by the US Government have signed but not ratified
the 1988 UN Convention, and three other governments ranked among the
higher priorities have not yet signed. Thus, almost one-fifth of the 67
governments in the three highest priority categories have not ratified
this universal accord six years after its declaration.
Too many affected or vulnerable governments have not criminalized all
forms of money laundering and financial crime, nor given sufficient
regulatory authority to central banks. There is need for an intensified
education and persuasion effort by the world's major financial
institutions and organizations, to ensure a higher level of compliance
on a global basis.
Too many governments continue to place limitations on money laundering
countermeasures, particularly the requirement that the offense of money
laundering must be predicated upon conviction for a drug trafficking
offense.
Too many governments still refuse to share information about financial
transactions with other governments to facilitate multinational money
laundering investigations.
There is need for enhanced bilateral and multilateral international
communications to inform governments and financial systems in some
systematic and ongoing way about the methods and typologies of drug and
non-drug related money laundering and financial crime.
The layering and integration stages of money laundering are using more
sophisticated money laundering techniques. Cash is now being held in
bulk or placed into the financial system through exchange houses and
other non-bank financial institutions. Not only is it moved through
wire transfers but innumerable varieties of licit and illicit financial
instruments, including letters of credit, bonds and other securities,
prime bank notes and guarantees, without a parallel increase in the
capability of the far-flung elements of the world's financial system to
verify the beneficiaries or authenticity of instruments.
The electronic highway now links banks and non-bank financial
institutions (NBFIs) worldwide to facilitate expanding world trade and
financial services, placing ever-greater priority on banks of origin to
establish the identity of beneficial owners and their sources of funds.
There are few controls on electronic transfers, and, compounding the
problem, the bank or non-bank of origin is increasingly based outside
major financial centers in jurisdictions which do not adequately control
money laundering and other financial crimes.
Narcotics money launderers have adapted the invoicing schemes used by
contraband smugglers and are similarly manipulating commercial trade
practices to move and convert illegal proceeds. The vast proceeds
generated by both types of crime magnify the need for control mechanisms
to address non-drug-related financial crimes.
There is emerging concern about new banking practices, such as direct
access banking which permits customers to process transactions directly
through their accounts by computer operating off software provided by
the bank. This system limits the bank's ability to monitor account
activity, such as of joint accounts and pass-through banking schemes
which have been a traditional method of layering. Beneficial owners of
funds can now manipulate the identity of the ultimate recipient of the
funds without the review by bank officers. Pass-through banking by
itself poses myriad problems for regulators, by creating the ability of
depositors unilaterally to create accounts within accounts, or even to
provide quasi-banking services to off-line customers in a kind of bank
within a bank. These new bank services can limit the utility of systems
in place to have both originator and recipient information travel with
the electronic funds transfer.
There is continuing concern that the need for capital of many financial
systems overwhelms prudent banking practices and safeguards, with
respect to deposits, loans and underwriting practices, and contributes
to the increasing problem of takeovers of banks and non-bank financial
institutions by criminal groups.
The concern about the concentration of economic power in drug cartels
and other criminal organizations, and its potential translation into
political power now embraces the Caribbean, Europe, the Middle East and
Asia as well as the Americas.
Professional money laundering specialists sell high quality services,
contacts, experience and knowledge of money movements, supported by the
latest electronic technology, to any trafficker or other criminal
willing to pay their lucrative fees. This practice continues to make
enforcement more difficult, especially through the commingling of licit
and illicit funds from many sources, and the worldwide dispersion of
funds, far from the predicate crime scene.
Non-bank financial systems are still unevenly regulated in most parts of
the world, especially at the placement stage for cash. The US, which is
taking a leadership role in regulatory non-bank financial institutions,
is still drafting the regulations that would subject them to federal
regulation. Non-bank financial institutions include a wide variety of
exchange houses, check cashing services, insurers, mortgagors, brokers,
importers, exporters and other trading companies, gold and precious
metal dealers, casinos, express delivery services and other money movers
of varying degrees of sophistication and capability. Even less
regulated are the underground banking systems, like the "chop" houses of
the Orient, and the "hundi" and "hawala" systems of Europe, South Asia
and the Middle East.
Asset forfeiture laws have not kept pace with anti-money laundering
investigative authority, much less with traffickers' wide-ranging
schemes. There is a conspicuous gap between the number of institutions
and accounts identified by government investigations with money
laundering and the authority of many governments to seize and forfeit
drug and money laundering proceeds.
Many banking systems remain obliged to inform account holders the
government is investigating them and may seize their accounts, providing
criminals the opportunity to move assets and leave town.
There is an urgent need to prescribe corporate as well as individual
sanctions, including actions against financial institutions that
repeatedly fail to take prudent measures to prevent their institutions
from being used to launder money.
There is need for continuous fine-tuning of bilateral and multilateral
strategies, which define responsibilities and objectives on a country-
by-country basis, and set specific goals for cooperating with the
varying money laundering and money transit countries.
Many governments and financial systems continue to rely on voluntary
reporting mechanisms, despite the inadequacy of voluntary control
systems. Reports from government after government demonstrate that the
adoption of mandatory controls has not caused declines in legitimate
deposits or resulted in threats from traffickers.
Prudential supervision of many domestic banking systems has improved
with respect to money laundering, but foreign branch offices,
subsidiaries and other foreign operations continue to figure prominently
in drug and other money laundering and financial crime. There is a
particular need for major international banks to ensure that governments
and regulatory agencies in all jurisdictions they serve are enforcing
the same high standards as charter governments.
Many governments seek to superimpose money laundering controls on
systems which still employ loose incorporation standards and permit
bearer share ownership, which vitiate the impact of these controls.
The implementation of free trade agreements and regional compacts,
creating trading and economic zones which transcend national borders
could increase the use of international trade as a mechanism for
laundering proceeds of criminal enterprises. The impact of the
liberalization of border and other customs controls, liberalized banking
procedures within these zones, and freedom of access within the zones
creates additional potential risks for the future.
There is a need for countries which cooperate on money laundering
investigations and prosecutions to share forfeited proceeds so as to
reflect equitably their respective contributions. A "finder's keepers"
approach is unfair and fails to provide an incentive for multinational
efforts.
WHAT WE NEED TO DO
In an electronic world in which the banking system operates through
chain-linked computers 24 hours a day, there must be increased emphasis
upon thorough vetting of personal, company and financial institution
accounts at the bank of origin, wherever in the world it is located.
There is no substitute for a thoroughly applied know-your-customer
policy, especially as applied to those placing currency into the system
and converting it to an account susceptible to immediate transfer
outside the jurisdiction.
Considerable attention must be focused on establishing international
standards, on obtaining agreements to exchange information, establishing
linkages for cooperative investigations, and on overcoming political
resistance in various key countries to ensure such cooperation.
Governments need laws which: establish corporate criminal liability for
bank and non-bank financial institutions; apply to all manner of
financial transactions not limited to cash at the teller's window; apply
reporting and anti-money laundering laws to a long list of predicate
offenses not limited to drug trafficking; criminalize investments in
legitimate industry if the proceeds were derived from illegal acts; and
enable the sharing of financial and corporate ownership information with
law enforcement agencies and judicial authorities.
But governments also need strategies, end-games which project change and
progress along the same continuum as the changes in both financial
system procedures and the methods criminals develop to exploit them--
strategies which focus on specific governments and specific financial
systems.
Over time, a number of actions can be seen as needed on a continuing
basis to keep pace with the dynamics of money laundering in a high-tech
world. Continuous action is needed on each category in 1996, and for
the foreseeable future.
1. Constant Monitoring of Money Laundering Patterns, Trends,
Typologies. More sophisticated techniques, involving both bank and non-
bank financial institutions, in a wider array of traditional and non-
traditional financial center countries, have complicated identification,
tracing and investigation. Information exchanges have been improving,
but critical gaps in know-how must be closed in tandem with improved
cooperation.
2. Analysis of Money Management Practices. We need improved
information from more countries on what factors influence traffickers
and their money managers to use particular systems in specific
countries, to keep reserves in cash vs other monetary instruments, to
invest rather than park funds. Interviews of arrested drug money
managers are producing detailed profiles of money management schemes.
The best data so far applies to the cocaine trade, but we need to
develop the same level of knowledge about heroin and marijuana
syndicates.
3. Analysis of Non-Drug Related Money Laundering and Other Financial
Crimes. Traffickers seldom invent new methods or practices of handling
and investing money. In general, they rely on techniques perfected by
corporations and individuals to shelter proceeds from taxation or to
avoid strict currency controls. Terrorists, arms dealers, and other
criminals, similarly rely on standard measures used to shelter funds
from taxation by legitimate enterprises. We need to identify the
parallels between drug money laundering and financial crimes of every
description and achieve an equal capability to investigate and prosecute
such crimes. A number of governments are willing to impose new
restrictions on drug-related financial crimes, but hesitate to apply
such strictures to other forms of financial crime.
4. Equating Economic Power with Political Clout. The increasing
concentrations of wealth among criminal groups in a number of
jurisdictions is a concern, not only because of possible impacts on
investments, real estate values, legitimate commerce and government
integrity, but also because these organizations have the wealth to make
large campaign contributions to candidates who in turn agree to assist
the criminals. We need to assess the national security and political
implications of these shifts and accumulations of wealth for all
financial centers where such wealth is being concentrated. Illicit
funds and corrupt officials represent a continuing threat to democracy
in literally every region of the world.
5. Eliminating Systemic Weaknesses. We need banks to maintain the same
kinds of records on clients which are also financial institutions, as
they do for other customers, and to report suspicious transactions by
such clients when the same financial institutions are named repeatedly
in investigation after investigation. Some currently available but
underutilized mechanisms include revocation of licenses, changes in
ownership and management, levying of fines, and prosecution.
6. Assessing The Trafficker as Entrepreneur. We need to explore the
extent to which criminal organizations are penetrating legitimate
financial and other businesses, using their vast resources to gain
control and to influence economic, financial and business decisions.
More data, and systematic analysis are needed on the role played by the
trafficker and money launderer in foreign exchange markets, including
their use of and creation of gray markets.
7. Analyzing the Impact of Money Laundering on National Governments and
Economies. The interplay between political and structural factors in a
country upon its receptivity to money laundering, and that of money
laundering on the political life and economic life of the jurisdiction,
need to be better understood. Among the questions that need to be
analyzed are the extent to which structural macro-economic factors such
as commodity deflation, sustained high levels of unemployment, and
recession have in making a country susceptible to becoming a money
laundering haven. At the sectoral level, we need to determine the
influence of black markets on legitimate enterprises. At the
institutional level, we need to identify the major factors that may
influence bankers and other financial managers in some jurisdictions to
be more likely to accept money they have reason to believe is tainted.
As we better identify where money laundering is most likely to have a
macro-economic or political impact, we need to evaluate the potential
effectiveness of economic countermeasures. These could include limiting
or excluding access to the global financial system of entities or states
identified as major problems.
8. Regulating Exchange Houses and Remittance Systems. There is ample
evidence that the various "hundi, hawalla, and chop" remittance systems,
so essential to economic life in the Middle East, South and East Asia,
are being used by drug traffickers, just like the "cambios" of Latin
America, and non-bank institutions of all kinds in the Western financial
community. They serve vital functions for key sectors of many
economies; Systems for regulating them to discourage their use to
launder the proceeds of crime are essential, but will fail unless they
take into account the very informality that makes them effective and
desirable.
9. Concentrating Efforts for Maximum Effectiveness. Enforcement
operations have proven we can disrupt cartel operations. But these
organizations are resilient and recover quickly. We need to develop
more effective strategies for disruption in order to achieve the
destabilization of criminal organizations.
10. Pursuing A Continuously Evolving Strategy. For much of the 1980s,
concerned governments operated under a strategy which involved a handful
of key countries whose cooperation was essential and/or which were drug
money laundering centers. But the traffickers have changed tactics and
moved to new locales. Banks are but one portal. They also use
securities brokers, insurance companies, import and export companies.
Every means the worlds of business and finance have to offer, linked by
wireless and facsimile transmissions, are today used by traffickers and
the managers of their illicit proceeds. Financial regulation,
supervision and enforcement needs to expand both to cover transactions
that transcend national boundaries and to cover the widening array of
types of financial service businesses.
11. The United Nations Drug Control Program (UNDCP) should intensify
its efforts to ensure that all significant financial center countries
are implementing fully the anti-money laundering and asset forfeiture
provisions of the 1988 UN Convention. As an immediate priority, UNDCP
should focus on securing ratification by the 12 significant financial
center governments which have not yet ratified the Convention.
12. The Financial Action Task Force, working with the Offshore Group of
Banking Supervisors and other relevant organizations, should focus
increased attention on offshore banking. FATF has been quite effective
in reaching out to this group; a majority of offshore banking centers
are either members of FATF or the Caribbean FATF, or, have participated
in FATF/CFATF seminars which provided guidance on adopting/implementing
FATF and UN guidance. More analysis is needed of the methods used to
move money through offshore banks, and OGBS should be supported in
efforts to include as many offshore banking centers as possible within
its membership, and, a parallel effort to evaluate progress by its
members.
13. The adoption by governments of information standards recommended by
FATF and the SWIFT banking information network is a welcome if not yet
universal step. Many more governments need to cooperate in adopting
regulations to help curb the misuse of electronic transfer and payment
mechanisms to launder illicit funds.
14. Governments and banking systems alike must be more vigilant in
efforts to detect counterfeit currency and other monetary instruments.
The schemes involving counterfeit bonds and other securities, usually as
collateral, suggest there is the need for an international clearinghouse
to assist banking and financial systems outside the major centers in
determining the authenticity of offered documents.
15. Governments and banking systems must exert greater efforts to
identify and prevent a wide range of financial crimes, not just drug and
non-drug money laundering, but also financial frauds, such as prime bank
guarantees. Again, the history of such frauds suggests a need for a
clearinghouse which can assist financial houses in identifying customers
and authenticating documents.
|