Criminals disguising illicit earnings stay ahead of police efforts to crack down
Published:
28 March 2003 y., Friday
Chinese restaurants that stand empty day and night. Jewelry shops with no customers. Nightclubs without dancers. Travel agencies that don't organize travel.
These are all businesses known at times to launder money -- typically by disguising illicitly generated cash as legal earnings and passing the money through the mainstream banking system.
"There are businesses where it is easier to hide money. I know that Czechs like to travel, but you have a huge amount of travel agencies in Prague," said John Mottram, a European Union accession adviser working on money-laundering policy at the Interior Ministry. "There are also lots of restaurants and bars. I'm sure a number of those businesses are covers for criminal groups, even if the employees there don't realize it."
These days, however, such firms are at the low end of vehicles used to hide sources of ill-gotten gains, observers say. Financial authorities, forensic specialists and bank security officials said money launderers are increasingly using legal and accountancy services, modern computer and Internet technology, stock market transactions and shadowy shell companies in an effort to stay ahead of investigators. As a result, these observers say, authorities are having a harder time than ever finding and prosecuting offenders, even as lawmakers institute EU-compliant laws and banks become more watchful.
Šaltinis:
The Prague Post
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
New rules for the EU's single market will make it easier to live and do business anywhere in Europe.
more »
MEPs were disappointed that the Commission's EU budget review document had not sought the radical revision that the EU needs, they told Budgets Commissioner Janusz Lewandowski in a Policy Challenges Committee debate on Thursday.
more »
On 25 October, the Commission adopted the decision to financially support the 2011 electoral process in the Central African Republic.
more »
New EU framework for crisis management in the financial sector for managing problems before they spiral out of control.
more »
The financial crisis laid bare the limits of self-regulation, demonstrating the need for strong EU economic governance, surveillance and policy co-ordination, say two non-legislative resolutions voted by Parliament on Wednesday.
more »
The European Commission has approved an application from Germany for assistance from the European Globalisation adjustment Fund (EGF).
more »
Global and EU- level taxes on financial sector would help to fund international challenges such as development or climate change and fix the fallout from the global economic crisis.
more »
The European Investment Bank and African Development Bank today agreed to provide EUR 45m to design, build and operate onshore wind farms on four islands in the Cape Verde archipelago.
more »
MEPs want future EU budgets to accommodate new policy priorities as well as negotiations on new sources of financing.
more »
The European Parliament's Budgets Committee on Monday backed EU funding for 3,731 workers in Portugal, the Netherlands, Spain and Denmark who were made redundant due to the closure of their companies.
more »