Sunday, 7 June 2015

Money Laundering and Corruption in plain sight.

Two pieces of news last week caught my attention: 


- the second about an internal investigation at Deutsche Bank targeting Russian trades.

Both items are ‘news’ and yet nobody is surprised. If at all there is curiosity it’s about “why did it take so long to come out”. In the case of the FIFA scandal one old-style reporter (Andrew Jennings) has been digging for close to 15 years to unveil the bribery, corruption and other mal practices at the FIFA. Publishing several books and many articles about the topic along the way.

I understand there’s a difference between common belief, pub talk and hard facts. Proving money laundering or corruption is usually no mean feat, certainly not in an international context and if hard evidence is needed to pursue (criminal) investigations and prosecution.
But all these FIFA transactions were executed via (mostly) reputable banks. And the Russian clients subject of the internal investigations have likely been banking for years with Deutsche. Apparently the banks involved didn’t have their AML/CFT act completely together. If onboarding processes, transaction monitoring and periodic client reviews are done properly and management is acutely aware of the risk profile of clients and transactions this could have been detected early.
The work that i-KYC does, is exactly what could prevent these findings: ensuring that staff have a thorough AML/CFT awareness, ensure that the institution follows the right procedures and implementing an escalation and management framework around the whole KYC program.
Have a good week.   


rolf@i-kyc.com

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