If
you're into privacy and freedom, Big Brother, with his intrusive
legislation, is the enemy. If you support efforts to maintain a
healthy global economy, then money laundering is your enemy. Get
to know them both, and you keep the power in your own hands ...
well, that's the theory.
Is money laundering the scapegoat that allows governments, particularly
of the G7 nations, to ply, as a hidden agenda, their intrusive surveillance
on Joe Citizen? This may well be, but there is also no denying that
money laundering is of a scale and frequency that can seriously
weaken national economies and the global economy as a whole. Throw
in the human factor, bearing in mind that governments are run by
humans, and not only do you have two of your major enemies facing
off with each other, but there are also great possibilities, that
from time to time (there have been documented allegations), members
of government and money launders (such as the drug lords) have worked
in cahoots with each other. Sometimes in the belief that they are
aiding and abetting the national interest, and sometimes not.
Yes, the whole thing stinks, but the fact remains that the more
you know about money laundering and the legislation that is set
up to curb it, the more likely are you to be able to avoid making
mistakes that could implicate you in serious criminal offences.
With this in mind, we offer you a level-headed view of money laundering,
and the legislation linked to it, by Paul Bauer and Rhoda Ullman.
They know their subject well. Well enough to clarify your perspective
sufficiently to give you food for thought, and perhaps bring clarity
to your sentiments and actions as you increasingly become involved
in a global lifestyle. Here they are not talking about what's fair
and what is not, they simply deal with the facts, perhaps providing
incentive for you to further your own investigations, should you
feel so inclined.
Understanding The Wash Cycle
Money laundering has gone on since the first crime was committed
for profit, but it has been explicitly illegal only since 1986.
Interest in this topic soars whenever a major "laundromat"
is uncovered. To meet this interest, this Economic Commentary describes
the money laundering process, summarises the evolving statutes,
and describes the Federal Reserve's role in assisting in their enforcement.
"Follow the money." -"Deep Throat,"
Bob Woodward's informant, in All the President's Men
Although the phrase "money laundering" did not even appear
in print until the Watergate scandal, criminal investigators have
long adhered to Deep Throat's sound advice. While not officially
outlawed until 1986, money laundering, or failure to do it well,
has figured in many prominent cases.
Two of the century's most notorious criminals were undone by failure
to cover their financial tracks. Al Capone was finally convicted
of tax evasion, not racketeering, and Bruno Richard Hauptmann, who
kidnapped Charles Lindbergh's son in 1932, was caught because he
failed to launder the ransom money successfully. As we saw recently,
when concerns arose about funds that may have been obtained illegally
in Russia, possibly entering the U.S. banking system, the problem
of dirty money has not gone away.
Because criminals have a strong incentive to disguise their activities,
the amount laundered is not known precisely, but the International
Monetary Fund has estimated that the annual total is equivalent
to around 3 to 5 percent of the world's output. Alternatively, the
Group of Seven (G7) nations' Financial Action Task Force puts the
figure at $300 billion to $500 billion world-wide. More than $2
trillion courses daily through the U.S. economy alone, so law enforcement
is necessarily a needle-in-a-haystack effort.
Wash Cycle Basics
Money laundering involves three steps, which sometimes overlap:
placement, layering, and integration. During the placement stage,
the form of the funds must be converted to hide their illicit origins.
For example, the proceeds of the illegal drug trade are mostly small-denomination
bills, bulkier and heavier than the drugs themselves. Converting
these bills to larger denominations, cashier's cheques, or other
negotiable monetary instruments, is often accomplished by using
cash-intensive businesses (like restaurants, hotels, vending-machine
companies, casinos, and car washes) as fronts.
In the layering stage, the launderer tries to obscure further the
trail linking the funds with the criminal activity by conducting
layers of complex financial transactions. For example, sophisticated
criminals with large sums to launder set up shell companies in countries
known either for strong bank-secrecy laws or for lax enforcement
of money laundering statutes. The tainted funds are then transferred
between these shells until they appear clean.
These transactions must be disguised to blend in with the trillions
of dollars of legitimate transactions that occur every day. Variations
of "loan-backs" and "double invoicing" are common
techniques. With a loan-back, the criminal puts the funds in an
offshore entity which he secretly controls and then "loans"
them back to himself. This technique works because in some nations
it is hard to determine who actually controls offshore accounts.
In double invoicing, a scam for moving funds into or out of a country,
an offshore entity keeps the proverbial two sets of books. To move
"clean" funds into the United States, a U.S. entity overcharges
for some good or service. To move funds out (say to avoid taxes),
the U.S. entity is overcharged.
Other layering techniques involve buying big-ticket items, such
as securities, cars, planes, travel tickets, which are often registered
in a friend's name to further distance the criminal from the funds.
Casinos are sometimes used because they readily take cash. Once
converted into chips, the funds appear to be winnings, redeemable
by a cheque drawn on the casino's bank.
The integration stage is the big payoff for the criminal. At this
stage, he moves the funds into mainstream economic activities, which
typically includes business investments, real estate, or luxury
goods purchases.
Key U.S. Legislation
Law enforcement agencies are fond of money laundering legislation
because it may be more effective than a direct attack on criminal
activity. In the illicit drug trade, for example, profit rates can
reach 1,000 percent. This is tempting enough to ensure that a steady
supply of criminals will replace those carted off to jail. However,
if its rewards can be reduced through legislation and enforcement,
then so can its appeal. The foundation of U.S. money laundering
laws is the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) of 1970, which does not criminalise
the activity but does require financial institutions to create and
preserve a "paper trail" for various types of transactions.
The BSA has been challenged repeatedly. Some criticise the compliance
costs it imposes. Others claim it infringes on Fourth Amendment
protection against unreasonable search and seizure and Fifth Amendment
guarantees against self-incrimination.
Although it has been upheld repeatedly, the BSA remains controversial
in some quarters. In one case, that went all the way to the Supreme
Court, the forceful dissenting opinion written by Justice Douglas
said, "I am not yet ready to agree that America is so possessed
with evil that we must level all constitutional barriers to give
our civil authorities the tools to catch criminals."
As the drug trade grew, Congress became increasingly concerned with
money laundering and moved to outlaw it in 1984, by making BSA violations
predicate acts under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations
Act.
Finally, the Money Laundering Act (1986) made money laundering a
federal crime. It added three new offences to the criminal code:
knowingly helping to launder money from criminal activity; knowingly
engaging in a transaction of more than $10,000 involving property
from criminal activity; and structuring transactions to avoid BSA
reporting requirements.
This last element targeted "smurfs," people hired by launderers
to make multiple deposits or purchases of cashiers' cheques in amounts
just under the $10,000 threshold.
This legislation has been amended several times. The Anti-Drug Abuse
Act (1988) significantly increased the penalties, required strict
identification and record keeping for cash purchases of certain
monetary instruments. In addition, the legislation permitted the
Treasury to force financial institutions to file additional geographically
targeted currency transaction reports.
The Secretary of the Treasury can issue an order requiring financial
institutions in a specific geographic area to file currency transaction
reports for less than the $10,000 threshold. The act also directed
the Treasury to negotiate bilateral international agreements for
recording large transactions of U.S. currency, and sharing this
information.
Bigger And Better
The Annunzio-Wylie Anti-Money Laundering Act (1992) enlarged the
BSA's definition of "financial transactions," added a
conspiracy provision, and outlawed the operation of "illegal
money transmitting businesses." Annunzio-Wylie, best known
for the establishment of the "death penalty," provides
that if a bank is convicted of money laundering, the
appropriate federal bank supervisor must begin a proceeding to either
terminate its charter or revoke its insurance, depending on the
bank's primary supervisor.
Annunzio-Wylie also created the BSA Advisory Group (of which the
Federal Reserve is a founding member) to suggest methods for increasing
the effectiveness and efficiency of the Treasury's anti-laundering
programs.
The Money Laundering Suppression Act (1994) tinkered with the law's
conspiracy and structuring provisions, while the Terrorism Prevention
Act (1996) added terrorist crimes as predicate acts to money laundering
violations, and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (1996) made "federal health care offences" predicate
acts as well.
Crime And Punishment
Criminal penalties include prison terms as long as 20 years, and
fines up to $500,000, or twice the value of the monetary instruments
involved, whichever is greater. On top of the criminal penalties,
violators may face civil penalties up to the value of the property,
funds, or monetary interests involved in a transaction.
Congress intended these punishments to be harsh. Before the Money
Laundering Act (1986), defendants had to be prosecuted under other
statutes related to the underlying unlawful activities that had
induced the money laundering (such as tax evasion, conspiracy, BSA,
bribery, and fraud). Generally, these statutes have penalties that
are considerably less severe.
From a monetary perspective, life for accused violators gets really
nasty, when the forfeiture laws kick in. Forfeiture is intended
to prevent criminals from keeping either the fruits of their crimes
or the tools used to commit them. Under the Civil Asset Forfeiture
Reform Act of 2000, the government must now clear a slightly higher
hurdle to seize and forfeit assets.
To seize assets, it must show probable cause that the property is
from criminal activity. To win civil forfeiture, it must prove its
case by a preponderance of the evidence. To win criminal forfeiture,
it must prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. Forfeited assets
may be shared with all law enforcement agencies involved in obtaining
a conviction; a policy that has been particularly effective in obtaining
co-operation from some foreign law-enforcement agencies.
Legally, money laundering is defined as any attempt to engage in
a monetary transaction that involves criminally derived property.
To convict, prosecutors must show that the defendant engaged in
financial transactions, or international transportation, that involved
funds derived from a "specified unlawful activity."
The list of such activities is extremely long and includes bribery,
counterfeiting, drug trafficking, espionage, extortion, fraud, murder,
kidnapping, racketeering, and certain banking practices.
The Paper Trail
Prosecutors consider the paper trail, mandated by the BSA and its
amendments, to be a crucial tool in the investigation and prosecution
of money laundering offences. They use five kinds of reports to
track financial transactions:
Currency transaction report:
Filed when a financial institution receives or dispenses more than
$10,000 in currency, it reports the name and address of the person
who presents the transaction and the identity, account number, and
Social Security number of anyone for whom a transaction is made.
Suspicious activity report:
Filed when any bank employee has reason to suspect a person of money
laundering, regardless of the transaction size.
IRS Form 8300:
Filed by any person involved in a business that receives cash payments
in exchange for goods or services, exceeding $10,000 in a single
transaction, or a series of related ones.
Currency and monetary instruments report:
Filed by anyone entering or leaving the country with currency or
monetary instruments in excess of $10,000. Carrying more than this
amount is perfectly legal, but failure to file the report can lead
to fines, up to five years in prison, or forfeiture.
Foreign bank account form:
Filed by anyone controlling more than $10,000 in a foreign account
during the year.
All these reports help investigators "follow the money."
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which was created
by Treasury order in 1990 to give law enforcement agencies analytical
support, is now charged with maintaining these reports as well.
On occasion, the reporting requirements have been adjusted so that
useful information is gathered without generating a flood of unnecessary
reports. By filing these forms, financial institutions aid law enforcement
authorities in the fight against money laundering. The forms also
impose real costs on these institutions and on legitimate customers.
FinCEN estimated that reporting and record-keeping costs associated
with BSA compliance in 1999 totalled $109 million, which does not
include the costs of training and monitoring personnel, modifying
computer programs to enable compliance, or inconveniencing legitimate
customers. There is also concern that a disproportionate share of
these costs may fall on smaller institutions.
In addition, the forms' effectiveness has been questioned. Former
Federal Reserve Governor Larry Lindsey observed that between 1987
and 1996, banks filed 77 million currency transaction reports; these
led to only 3,000 money laundering cases, in which 7,300 defendants
were charged but only 580 were convicted. To be fair, in addition
to 580 guilty verdicts, the Department of Justice obtained 2,295
guilty pleas, for a 40 percent sentencing rate. Bank regulators
and law enforcement representatives defend the BSA applications,
countering that currency transaction reports were never designed
to generate prosecutions, and the Federal Reserve Board continues
to support them.
The Global Spin Cycle
In the evolving global financial system, funds can be zapped from
one country to another, making international co-operation even more
important in combating money laundering.
In 1989, the G7 nations established a Financial Action Task Force
(FATF) to develop anti-laundering strategies. The next year, the
task force drafted its "Forty Recommendations," which
require member countries to assist each other in money laundering
investigations, avoid enacting secrecy laws that hamper such investigations,
criminalise money laundering, and report suspicious transactions.
Although the task force involves the major financial centres in
North America, Europe, and Asia, many countries are not yet FATF
participants. In June 2000, the task force released a list of 15
countries with "serious systemic problems." In July, finance
ministers from the G7 nations followed up with a plan to persuade
these countries to co-operate by threatening to cut off their access
to the international banking system, as well as International Monetary
Fund and World Bank loans, unless they combat money laundering more
aggressively.
In addition, private financial institutions in G7 countries will
be warned that transactions with target countries will draw intense
scrutiny.
The Federal Reserve's Role
Although the Federal Reserve is not a law enforcement agency, it
works actively to deter the use of financial institutions for laundering.
The Fed's activities include conducting BSA exams, developing anti-laundering
guidelines, and providing expertise to U.S. law enforcement officers
and various foreign central banks and government agencies.
Financial organisations and their employees are considered to be
the strongest defence against money laundering, and the Federal
Reserve emphasises the banks' importance in establishing controls
to protect themselves and their customers from illicit activities.
In every examination the Fed supervises, it verifies the bank's
BSA compliance. Any indication of deficiencies, such as inadequate
internal controls or training, results in a second-stage examination
that is even more rigorous.
The Federal Reserve has been promoting the concept of "enhanced
due diligence." Under this policy, banks that have experienced
problems will be required to enter agreements to ensure future compliance.
These agreements are designed to reasonably ensure the identification
and timely, accurate, and complete reporting of known or suspected
criminal activity, against or involving the bank, to law enforcement
and supervisory authorities.
Future Considerations
Two developments warrant close monitoring. First, Internet-based
payment systems are being developed to facilitate electronic transactions.
Some of these systems seek to give users as much anonymity as currency
provides. The speed of electronic transfers, combined with the anonymity
of cash, would appeal strongly to launderers. While this is a potential
law-enforcement concern, today's e-money lacks the large volume
of legitimate transactions essential to provide cover for criminal
ones. Moreover, launderers are not drawn to most current electronic
purse schemes, in which balance limits are low and transactions
can be audited.
Second, proposed legislation would grant the Treasury sweeping new
powers to fight money laundering, the centrepiece being an ability
to ban financial transactions between offshore financial centres
and U.S. banks or brokerage houses.
The Treasury currently has no power to prevent U.S. financial entities
from transacting business in countries that allegedly tolerate money
laundering, short of asking Congress to declare emergency sanctions
against nations deemed as security threats.
The Treasury issues advisories warning banks against money from
foreign institutions that repeatedly violate accepted standards,
but these advisories lack the force of law.
Conclusion
Over the last 30 years, lawmakers have enacted a broad array of
domestic legislation, striving to forge the enforcement tools they
need to combat launderers' ingenious and continuously evolving techniques
for circumventing the previous piece of legislation.
As a bank regulator, the Federal Reserve has an important supporting
role in the struggle against money laundering. Because launderers'
operations are global, the recent increase in international co-operation
is a promising development.
Of course, in our zeal to catch criminals, we must weigh the benefits
of legislation and regulation against the costs they impose on financial
institutions and their customers.
Quotes
"I am not yet ready to agree that America is
so possessed with evil that we must level all constitutional barriers
to give our civil authorities the tools to catch criminals."
Justice Douglas; Supreme Court |