1. Transparency International’s April 17th post “Who owns what? Trying to clean dirty money in the EU”,  highlights the importance of identifying the beneficial ownership of assets.  Among other things, it mentions Teodorin Nguema Obiang, who is a suspected kleptocrat.  A Wall Street Journal blog post meanwhile, describes the French arrest warrant

The criminal complaint filed in U.S.A. v. Brandon Lee Price, U.S. District Court, Western District of Pennsylvania, Case No. 12-152 M, essentially claims that Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen was the target of an identity theft.  As reported at “Identity Thief Targets Billionaire Allen”, suspected identity thief Brandon Lee Price of Pittsburgh supposedly

It is well known that corrupt politically exposed persons can conceal their illicit assets in money laundering circuits.  My recent comments regarding politically exposed persons are included at MoneyLaundering.com’s August 9th article:

International Groups Say Corrupt PEPs Can Often Loot With Impunity*

August 9, 2011
By Colby Adams and Brian Monroe

Three intergovernmental groups are questioning the effectiveness of anti-money laundering controls meant to curb abuses of corrupt political figures who steal from their countries.

The World Bank and United Nations said in a joint June 21 report that at least 74 of 124 jurisdictions examined have not complied with anti-money laundering (AML) recommendations to quash kleptocracy by political figures. The record indicates that financial institutions and the agencies that regulate them may be “deficient” in enforcing the controls, the report said.

In a separate report published July 29, the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF) warned banks and other companies that government officials, also known as politically exposed persons (PEPs), can exploit the “natural advantages” of their positions to launder ill-gotten funds through institutions, and then stymie investigations into the crimes.

The three organizations recommended requiring financial institutions to review their PEP accounts annually, sharing suspicious activity reports on the accounts of foreign politically-tied figures with their home country and eliminating the distinction between foreign and domestic PEPs.

“More specific guidance may be needed because there are specific challenges related to the persistent problem of PEPs that we don’t see with drug trafficking and organized crime,” said Vincent Schmoll, principal administrator with the FATF secretariat, in an interview. FATF plans to publish guidance in the next six months on how to identify such funds, he said.

Looting by the former Nigerian dictator Sani Abacha, who siphoned assets out of his country into banks in Switzerland, the United States and the United Kingdom, illustrates how difficult it can be to stop powerful figures from abusing their positions, said Schmoll.

“Even if all the receiving countries of Abacha’s funds had all their PEP laws up to par, and were able to identify the beneficial owners, his control of the country meant that there was no way for Swiss, U.K. and U.S. banks to return the money to his victims,” said Schmoll.

In cases when corrupt foreign officials exercise direct power over a bank, “the hardest part of money laundering, introducing the funds into the financial system, is already done,” said Fred Abrams, a New York-based attorney specializing in asset recovery. Pavlo Lazarenko of Ukraine and Zine El Abidene Ben Ali of Tunisia both used such means to launder funds they stole from state coffers, he said.Continue Reading MoneyLaundering.com Article About Looting With Impunity

Posts concerning asset searches and the recovery of more than 1000 antique coins, an Egyptian sarcophagus and other cultural artifacts.

  • A July

Common methods for concealing assets and Minneapolis money manager Christopher Pettengill-

  • The January 4, 2011 “Asset Search News Roundup” advised that assets are routinely hidden by utilizing portable valuable commodities like diamonds, bulk cash smuggling and checks & wire transfers.  Another common method for concealing assets is trade-based money laundering.  As p.19 of

To combat the secretion of money via laundering, the Isle of Man developed its own anti-money laundering handbook.  Just a few of the the Island’s anti-money laundering regulations are:

Agencies like the Isle of Man Constabulary Financial Crime Unit  and the Financial Supervision Commission generally administer such regulations.  Despite this comprehensive regulatory scheme, there is still cause for concern that Internet gambling on the Isle of Man especially creates a money laundering risk.  The pending U.S. prosecution against the principals of PokerStars perhaps highlights this laundering vulnerability.Continue Reading Secreting Money Via Internet Gambling On The Isle Of Man

Today’s “Asset Search News Roundup” is about politically exposed persons and a suspected laundering scheme.

  1. “FAQ” webpage focuses on the legal tools for freezing illicit assets dictators or other politically exposed persons might hide in Switzerland.  Via such tools, Swiss authorities recently froze $1 billion in assets believed to be connected to either Muhammad Hosni

This "Asset Search News Roundup" discusses a letter rogatory from Italian prosecutors and the recent U.S. fines issued in the case involving India’s Satyam Computer Services.

  • A letter rogatory filed April 1st in federal court by the U.S. Attorney, reveals that Italian prosecutors are investigating the Delaware office of a company called "BACKER & MCKENZIE". 

The following fact pattern has been changed for privacy reasons:

Robert received dunning letters and phone calls from debt collectors because he supposedly owed more than $50,000 dollars in credit card debt.  The debt collectors alleged that various financial institutions had issued Robert seven credit cards many years ago.  These debt collectors too claimed that