| | | Effective PR

World Money Laundering Report

First published in World Money Laundering Report Vol. 2 No. 1 on 22 January 2000

The individual brings with him or her a threat to the organisation. This threat arises from a number of factors: he or she might be careless, malicious or criminally inclined. Or just plain thick. Or vulnerable for some reason.

From World Money Laundering Report Volume 2 No.1 published 22 January 2000

In previous BASICS columns, we have examined terminology and the resistance felt by staff to new compliance measures. In this issue, we look at a legal topic: that if wilful blindness.

From World Money Laundering Report Volume 2 Number 1 Published January 2000

There is considerable debate, currently, about the use of the term "offshore". the argument is encapsulated by John Moscow, of the office of the District Attorney, New York County: "everywhere is offshore to everywhere else."

From World Money Laundering Report Vol 1 No 1
October 1999

A round-up of news stories from around the World plus some amusing bits.

From World Money Laundering Report Vol. 1 No. 1
Published October 1999

Prediction: within five years, compliance will be at the centre of all financial services businesses in highly regulated markets, taking over from sales and marketing and even audit as the most important area of management of those businesses.

World Money Laundering Report Vol. 1 No. 1 - October 1999

The Financial Action Task Force needs to wake up or break up.

From World Money Laundering Report Vol, 1 No. 1
October 1999

Offshore financial centres in the Caribbean have never been under any misapprehension about what onshore financial regulators think of them.

World Money Laundering Report Vol. 1 No. 1
October 1999

James F. Sloan, was appointed Director of The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network in April 1999. WMLR spoke to him in August in his first major face to face interview with a money laundering title.

From World Money Laundering Report Vol. 1, No. 1
October 1999

The Bank of New York story broke in the newspapers almost by accident, it seems. As the weeks have gone by, it appears that rivalry between various law enforcement agencies in the USA and elsewhere led to a lack of co-operation and information that would have helped one organisation being held back by others.

From World Money Laundering Report Vol. 1 No. 1
October 1999

Understanding Russian Banking.
Lapidus & van de Waal-Palms,
Mir House, USA. US$25.
Language: American English.

World Money Laundering Report Vol. 1 No. 1
Editorial: October 1999

We are now into the third wave of money laundering prevention across the world. The first was more of a ripple:

From World Money Laundering Report Vol 1 No 1 - October 1999

WMLR examines the proposed legislation and concludes that in some respects it will undermine the existing UK Law.

From World Money Laundering Report Vol 1 No 1

What can a government department do when even major newspapers can't get its name right? Jim Sloan, FinCEN's new director, has walked into a situation where the USA's FIU has an identity crisis as well as a range of other problems. And FinCEN is far more than an FIU simpliciter

From World Money Laundering Report Vol 1 No 1 October 1999

The key to understanding the detection and prevention of money laundering is to keep it simple. The BASICS column explains the terminology of laundering and the laws, why things are done and everything everyone needs to understand so that the hows and whys of money laundering prevention systems make sense.

Pages

hahagotcha