MONEY LAUNDERING

36

description

Money Laundering (History, Process, Methods, and Impact)

Transcript of MONEY LAUNDERING

Page 1: MONEY LAUNDERING
Page 2: MONEY LAUNDERING

MONEY

LAUNDERING

Page 3: MONEY LAUNDERING

A Brief History• The term “money laundering “

originate from Mafia ownership of Laundromats in the United States.

• Gangsters there were earnings huge sums in cash from extortion, prostitution, gambling, and bootleg liquor.

Page 4: MONEY LAUNDERING

• Robinson states that:

“Money laundering is called what it is because that perfectly describes what takes place-illegal, or dirty, money is put through a cycle of transactions, or washed, so that it comes out the other end as legal, or clean, money. In other words, the source of illegally obtained funds is obscured through a succession of transfer and deals in order that those same funds can eventually be made to appear as legitimate income.”

Page 5: MONEY LAUNDERING

What is Money Laundering?

is the process of disguising illegally obtained money occurs in connection with wide variety of crimes, including illegal arms sales, drug trafficking, robbery, fraud, racketeering and terrorism. is to convert cash to some other form of asset to conceal the illegal source of origin of cash income.

Page 6: MONEY LAUNDERING

The Money Laundering Process

Placement

Layering

Integration

Page 7: MONEY LAUNDERING

PLACEMENT

The initial movement of criminally derived currency or other proceeds of crime, to initially change it’s form

or location to places beyond the reach of law

enforcement.

Page 8: MONEY LAUNDERING

Process of Placement:

1.Blending of Funds

2. Bank Complicity

3. Asset Purchase

Page 9: MONEY LAUNDERING

LayeringThe process of separating the proceeds of

criminal activity from their origin.. Disguising the origin through the movement of funds trough accounts and financial institutions.

The use of layers of complex financial transactions; loans, letters of credit,

investments and insurance

Page 10: MONEY LAUNDERING

Process of layering:

1. Cash converted into Monetary Instruments 

2. Material assets bought with cash then sold 

Page 11: MONEY LAUNDERING

IntegrationThe process of using an apparent legitimate transaction to disguise the illicit proceeds allowing the laundering of funds to be disbursed back to the criminal. Funds often are used for payment for operations, spending on luxury goods or investments in businesses.

Page 12: MONEY LAUNDERING

Process of integration:1.Property Dealing

2. Front Companies and False Loans 

3.Foreign Bank Complicity 

4.False Import/Export Invoices 

Page 13: MONEY LAUNDERING
Page 14: MONEY LAUNDERING

MONEY LAUNDERING

METHODS

Page 15: MONEY LAUNDERING

Money Laundering schemes may vary greatly in character and complexity. They may involve any number of intermediaries and utilize both traditional and non-traditional payment systems.

The scope and nature of a money laundering operation is limited only by the creativity of those involve.

Page 16: MONEY LAUNDERING

In 1996, Harvard-educated economist Franklin Jurado went to prison for cleaning $36 million for Colombian drug lord Jose Santacruz-Londono. People with a whole lot of dirty money typically hire financial experts to handle the laundering process. Its complex by necessity:The whole idea is to make it impossible for authorities to trace the dirty money while it's cleaned.

Page 17: MONEY LAUNDERING

There are lots of money-laundering techniques that authorities know about and probably countless others

that have yet to be uncovered. Here are some of

the more popular ones:

Page 18: MONEY LAUNDERING

1. Black Market Colombian Peso Exchange -

This system, which the DEA calls the "largest drug money-laundering mechanism in the Western Hemisphere", came to light in the 1990s.

Page 19: MONEY LAUNDERING

2. Structuring deposits –

Also known as smurfing, this method entails breaking up large amounts of money into smaller, less-suspicious amounts.

Page 20: MONEY LAUNDERING

3. Overseas Banks –

Money launderers often send money through various "offshore accounts" in countries that have bank secrecy laws, meaning that for all intents and purposes, these countries allow anonymous banking.

Page 21: MONEY LAUNDERING

4. Underground/alternative banking -

Some countries in Asia have well-established,

legal alternative banking systems that allow for

undocumented deposits, withdrawals andtransfers. These are trust-based systems,Often with ancient roots, that leave no paper

trail and operate outside of government control. This includes the hawala system in Pakistan and India and the fie chen system in China.

Page 22: MONEY LAUNDERING

5. Shell companies 

These are fake companies that exist for no other reason than to launder money. They take in dirty money as "payment" for supposed goods or services but actually provide no goods or services

Page 23: MONEY LAUNDERING

6. Investing in legitimate businesses

Launderers sometimes place dirty money in otherwise legitimate businesses to clean it. These businesses may be "front companies" that actually do provide a good or service but whose real purpose is to clean the launderer's money

Page 24: MONEY LAUNDERING

Impact of Money Laundering in

the Society

Page 25: MONEY LAUNDERING

•The first, and most obvious, impact is the increase in corruption and crime.

• The second impact (valid in any jurisdiction) is on legitimate businesses.

Page 26: MONEY LAUNDERING

How Can We Prevent it?

Page 27: MONEY LAUNDERING

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on Money Laundering has identified certain “choke” points in the money laundering process, that the launderer finds difficult to avoid and where he is vulnerable to detection.

Page 28: MONEY LAUNDERING

The choke points identified are:

a. Entry of cash into financial system

b. Transfers to and from the financial system

c. Cross-border flows of cash

Page 29: MONEY LAUNDERING

How Does Fighting Money Laundering Help Fight Crime

Page 30: MONEY LAUNDERING

Money laundering is a threat to the good functioning of a financial system; however, it can also be the Achilles’ heel of criminal activity.

Hitting him where he is vulnerable

Without a usable profit, thecriminal activity will notcontinue

Page 31: MONEY LAUNDERING

What Individual Governments

should Do about Money Laundering

Page 32: MONEY LAUNDERING

Many Governments have already established comprehensive anti-money laundering regimes.These regimes aim to increase awareness of the phenomenon – both within the government and the private business sector – and then to provide the necessary legal or regulatory tools to the authorities charged with combating the problem.

Page 33: MONEY LAUNDERING

What Role the Financial Task Action Force (FATF) Play

Page 34: MONEY LAUNDERING

FATF – is a multidisciplinary body that brings together the policy-making power of legal, financial and law enforcement experts from its members.

FATF monitors members’ progress in implementing anti-money laundering measures; reviews and reports on laundering trends, techniques and counter-measures; and promotes the adaption and implementation of FATF anti-money laundering standards globally.

Page 35: MONEY LAUNDERING

The FATF issued the Forty Recommendations in 1990 and

completely revised them in 1996 and more recently in 2003.The 40

Recommendations require are a comprehensive blueprint for action

against money laundering. They cover the criminal justice system

and law enforcement; the financial system and its regulation; and

international cooperation

Page 36: MONEY LAUNDERING