Lawry,

You are being fair.

You'll have to stop that if you want to get into politics.

Harry

********************************
Henry George School of Social Science
of Los Angeles
Box 655  Tujunga  CA 91042
818 352-4141
********************************
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Lawrence de Bivort
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2005 8:57 AM
To: 'W.-Robert Needham'; [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Futurework] US Bank Money Laundering - by
James Petras

I think we should remember that 'laundered' money is not the
problem, but it
is the criminal activity that generated the money that is.
The 'launderers'
are banks. It is a social choice whether to say that these
banks are doing
something wrong. If we do make that choice we have to solve
a practical
problem, which is to devise means that would allow the banks
to distinguish
deposits from honest depositors from those being made by
criminals. 

My own view is that banks do not have this capability; it is
very hard to
tell where a depositor's money comes from.

I am not challenging Petras's numbers; I am challenging the
automatic notion
that bankers can be held responsible for the legal,
political, or moral
sources of the monies they accept.  It would seem to me that
law enforcement
should focus on where the crimes occur, and not on a
tertiary node in the
flow of criminally-derived money.

Nor should Petras's findings unnecessarily point the finger
at the US; I
would guess that the proportion of laundering that he finds
US institutions
involved in probably reflects the general proportion of
invested funds
world-wide.

Never imagined I would be defending banks or other financial
institutions!

Cheers,
Lawry

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
W.-Robert Needham
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2005 11:44 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Futurework] US Bank Money Laundering - by James
Petras

Rense.com

US Bank Money Laundering - 
Enormous By Any Measure
By James Petras
Professor of Sociology, Binghamton University
9-1-2

There is a consensus among U.S. Congressional Investigators,
former bankers
and 
international banking experts that U.S. and European banks
launder between
$500 
billion and $1 trillion of dirty money each year, half of
which is laundered
by 
U.S. banks alone. As Senator Carl Levin summarizes the
record: "Estimates
are 
that $500 billion to $1 trillion of international criminal
proceeds are
moved 
internationally and deposited into bank accounts annually.
It is estimated
that 
half of that money comes to the United States".
 
Over a decade then, between $2.5 and $5 trillion criminal
proceeds have been

laundered by U.S. banks and circulated in the U.S. financial
circuits.
Senator 
Levin's statement however, only covers criminal proceeds,
according to U.S. 
laws. It does not include illegal transfers and capital
flows from corrupt 
political leaders, or tax evasion by overseas businesses. A
leading U.S.
scholar 
who is an expert on international finance associated with
the prestigious 
Brookings Institute estimates "the flow of corrupt money out
of developing 
(Third World) and transitional (ex-Communist) economies into
Western coffers
at 
$20 to $40 billion a year and the flow stemming from
mis-priced trade at $80

billion a year or more. My lowest estimate is $100 billion
per year by these
two 
means by which we facilitated a trillion dollars in the
decade, at least
half to 
the United States. Including the other elements of illegal
flight capital
would 
produce much higher figures. The Brookings expert also did
not include
illegal 
shifts of real estate and securities titles, wire fraud,
etc.
 
In other words, an incomplete figure of dirty money
(laundered criminal and 
corrupt money) flowing into U.S. coffers during the 1990s
amounted to
$3-$5.5 
trillion. This is not the complete picture but it gives us a
basis to
estimate 
the significance of the "dirty money factor" in evaluating
the U.S. economy.
In 
the first place, it is clear that the combined laundered and
dirty money
flows 
cover part of the U.S. deficit in its balance of merchandise
trade which
ranges 
in the hundreds of billions annually. As it stands, the U.S.
trade deficit
is 
close to $300 billion. Without the "dirty money" the U.S.
economy external 
accounts would be totally unsustainable, living standards
would plummet, the

dollar would weaken, the available investment and loan
capital would shrink
and 
Washington would not be able to sustain its global empire.
And the
importance of 
laundered money is forecast to increase. Former private
banker Antonio
Geraldi, 
in testimony before the Senate Subcommittee projects
significant growth in
U.S. 
bank laundering. "The forecasters also predict the amounts
laundered in the 
trillions of dollars and growing disproportionately to
legitimate funds."
The 
$500 billion of criminal and dirty money flowing into and
through the major
U.S. 
banks far exceeds the net revenues of all the IT companies
in the U.S., not
to 
speak of their profits. These yearly inflows surpass all the
net transfers
by 
the major U.S. oil producers, military industries and
airplane
manufacturers. 
The biggest U.S. banks, particularly Citibank, derive a high
percentage of
their 
banking profits from serving these criminal and dirty money
accounts. The
big 
U.S. banks and key institutions sustain U.S. global power
via their money 
laundering and managing of illegally obtained overseas
funds.
 
 
 
U.S. Banks and The Dirty Money Empire
 
Washington and the mass media have portrayed the U.S. as
being in the
forefront 
of the struggle against narco trafficking, drug laundering
and political 
corruption: the image is of clean white hands fighting dirty
money. The
truth is 
exactly the opposite. U.S. banks have developed a highly
elaborate set of 
policies for transferring illicit funds to the U.S.,
investing those funds
in 
legitimate businesses or U.S. government bonds and
legitimating them. The
U.S. 
Congress has held numerous hearings, provided detailed
exposés of the
illicit 
practices of the banks, passed several laws and called for
stiffer
enforcement 
by any number of public regulators and private bankers. Yet
the biggest
banks 
continue their practices, the sum of dirty money grows
exponentially,
because 
both the State and the banks have neither the will nor the
interest to put
an 
end to the practices that provide high profits and buttress
an otherwise
fragile 
empire.
 
First thing to note about the money laundering business,
whether criminal or

corrupt, is that it is carried out by the most important
banks in the USA. 
Secondly, the practices of bank officials involved in money
laundering have
the 
backing and encouragement of the highest levels of the
banking institutions
- 
these are not isolated cases by loose cannons. This is clear
in the case of 
Citibank's laundering of Raul Salinas (brother of Mexico's
ex-President)
$200 
million account. When Salinas was arrested and his large
scale theft of 
government funds was exposed, his private bank manager at
Citibank, Amy
Elliott 
told her colleagues that "this goes in the very, very top of
the
corporation, 
this was known...on the very top. We are little pawns in
this whole thing"
(p.
35).
 
Citibank, the biggest money launderer, is the biggest bank
in the U.S., with

180,000 employees world-wide operating in 100 countries,
with $700 billion
in 
known assets and over $100 billion in client assets in
private bank (secret 
accounts) operating private banking offices in 30 countries,
which is the 
largest global presence of any U.S. private bank. It is
important to clarify

what is meant by "private bank."
 
Private Banking is a sector of a bank which caters to
extremely wealthy
clients 
($1 million deposits and up). The big banks charge customers
a fee for
managing 
their assets and for providing the specialized services of
the private
banks. 
Private Bank services go beyond the routine banking services
and include 
investment guidance, estate planning, tax assistance,
off-shore accounts,
and 
complicated schemes designed to secure the confidentiality
of financial 
transactions. The attractiveness of the "Private Banks" (PB)
for money 
laundering is that they sell secrecy to the dirty money
clients. There are
two 
methods that big Banks use to launder money: via private
banks and via 
correspondent banking. PB routinely use code names for
accounts,
concentration 
accounts (concentration accounts co-mingles bank funds with
client funds
which 
cut off paper trails for billions of dollars of wire
transfers) that
disguise 
the movement of client funds, and offshore private
investment corporations
(PIC) 
located in countries with strict secrecy laws (Cayman
Island, Bahamas, etc.)
 
For example, in the case of Raul Salinas, PB personnel at
Citibank helped 
Salinas transfer $90 to $100 million out of Mexico in a
manner that
effectively 
disguised the funds' sources and destination thus breaking
the funds' paper 
trail. In routine fashion, Citibank set up a dummy offshore
corporation, 
provided Salinas with a secret code name, provided an alias
for a third
party 
intermediary who deposited the money in a Citibank account
in Mexico and 
transferred the money in a concentration account to New York
where it was
then 
moved to Switzerland and London. The PICs are designed by
the big banks for
the 
purpose of holding and hiding a person's assets. The nominal
officers,
trustees 
and shareholder of these shell corporations are themselves
shell
corporations 
controlled by the PB. The PIC then becomes the holder of the
various bank
and 
investment accounts and the ownership of the private bank
clients is buried
in 
the records of so-called jurisdiction such as the Cayman
Islands. Private 
bankers of the big banks like Citibank keep pre-packaged
PICs on the shelf 
awaiting activation when a private bank client wants one.
The system works
like 
Russian Matryoshka dolls, shells within shells within
shells, which in the
end 
can be impenetrable to a legal process.
 
The complicity of the state in big bank money laundering is
evident when one

reviews the historic record. Big bank money laundering has
been
investigated, 
audited, criticized and subject to legislation; the banks
have written 
procedures to comply. Yet banks like Citibank and the other
big ten banks
ignore 
the procedures and laws and the government ignores the
non-compliance. Over
the 
last 20 years, big bank laundering of criminal funds and
looted funds has 
increased geometrically, dwarfing in size and rates of
profit the activities
in 
the formal economy. Estimates by experts place the rate of
return in the PB 
market between 20-25% annually. Congressional investigations
revealed that 
Citibank provided "services" for 4 political swindlers
moving $380 million:
Raul 
Salinas - $80-$100 million, Asif Ali Zardari (husband of
former Prime
Minister 
of Pakistan) in excess of $40 million, El Hadj Omar Bongo
(dictator of Gabon

since 1967) in excess of $130 million, the Abacha sons of
General Abacha ex-
dictator of Nigeria - in excess of $110 million. In all
cases Citibank
violated 
all of its own procedures and government guidelines: there
was no client
profile 
(review of client background), determination of the source
of the funds, nor
of 
any violations of country laws from which the money accrued.
On the
contrary, 
the bank facilitated the outflow in its prepackaged format:
shell
corporations 
were established, code names were provided, funds were moved
through 
concentration accounts, the funds were invested in
legitimate businesses or
in 
U.S. bonds, etc. In none of these cases - or thousands of
others - was due 
diligence practiced by the banks (under due diligence a
private bank is 
obligated by law to take steps to ensure that it does not
facilitate money 
laundering). In none of these cases were the top banking
officials brought
to 
court and tried. Even after arrest of their clients,
Citibank continued to 
provide services, including the movement of funds to secret
accounts and the

provision of loans.
 
 
 
Correspondent Banks: The Second Track
 
The second and related route which the big banks use to
launder hundreds of 
billions of dirty money is through "correspondent banking"
(CB). CB is the 
provision of banking services by one bank to another bank.
It is a highly 
profitable and significant sector of big banking. It enables
overseas banks
to 
conduct business and provide services for their customers -
including drug 
dealers and others engaged in criminal activity - in
jurisdictions like the
U.S. 
where the banks have no physical presence. A bank that is
licensed in a
foreign 
country and has no office in the United States for its
customers attracts
and 
retains wealthy criminal clients interested in laundering
money in the U.S. 
Instead of exposing itself to U.S. controls and incurring
the high costs of 
locating in the U.S., the bank will open a correspondent
account with an 
existing U.S. bank. By establishing such a relationship, the
foreign bank 
(called a respondent) and through it, its criminal
customers, receive many
or 
all of the services offered by the U.S. big banks called the
correspondent.
 
Today, all the big U.S. banks have established multiple
correspondent 
relationships throughout the world so they may engage in
international
financial 
transactions for themselves and their clients in places
where they do have a

physical presence. Many of the largest U.S. and European
banks located in
the 
financial centers of the world serve as correspondents for
thousands of
other 
banks. Most of the offshore banks laundering billions for
criminal clients
have 
accounts in the U.S. All the big banks specializing in
international fund 
transfer are called money center banks, some of the biggest
process up to $1

trillion in wire transfers a day. For the billionaire
criminals an important

feature of correspondent relationships is that they provide
access to 
international transfer systems - that facilitate the rapid
transfer of funds

across international boundaries and within countries. The
most recent
estimates 
(1998) are that 60 offshore jurisdictions around the world
licensed about
4,000 
offshore banks which control approximately $5 trillion in
assets.
 
One of the major sources of impoverishment and crises in
Africa, Asia, Latin

America, Russia and the other countries of the ex-U.S.S.R.
and Eastern
Europe, 
is the pillage of the economy and the hundreds of billions
of dollars which
are 
transferred out of the country via the corresponding banking
system and the 
Private Banking system linked to the biggest banks in the
U.S. and Europe. 
Russia alone has seen over $200 billion illegally
transferred in the course
of 
the 1990s. The massive shift of capital from these countries
to the U.S. and

European banks has generated mass impoverishment and
economic instability
and 
crises. This in turn has created increased vulnerability to
pressure from
the 
IMF and World Bank to liberalize their banking and financial
systems leading
to 
further flight and deregulation which spawns greater
corruption and overseas

transfers via private banks as the Senate reports
demonstrate.
 
The increasing polarization of the world is embedded in this
organized
system of 
criminal and corrupt financial transactions. While
speculation and foreign
debt 
payments play a role in undermining living standards in the
crisis regions,
the 
multi-trillion dollar money laundering and bank servicing of
corrupt
officials 
is a much more significant factor, sustaining Western
prosperity, U.S.
empire 
building and financial stability. The scale, scope and time
frame of
transfers 
and money laundering, the centrality of the biggest banking
enterprises and
the 
complicity of the governments, strongly suggests that the
dynamics of growth
and 
stagnation, empire and re-colonization are intimately
related to a new form
of 
capitalism built around pillage, criminality, corruption and
complicity.
 
James Petras is a Professor of Sociology at Binghamton
University in
Binghamton, 
New York. He is the author of 57 books. His latest,
Globalization Unmasked: 
Imperialism in the New Millenium
 
The URL of this article is:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/PET108A

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