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Top secret world documents leaked


7-9 minutes

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Some of the world's largest banks have allowed criminals to transfer dirty 
money in the amount of about two billion dollars, leaked documents show 

Source: Tanjug Monday, September 21, 2020 | 09:24 

EPA-EFE KOEN VAN WEEL/Ilustracija

According to the BBC, the documents show how the Russian oligarchs used the 
banks to avoid sanctions, which were supposed to prevent them from transferring 
money to the West. 

It is the latest in a series of leaks over the past five years, which have 
exposed secret deals, money laundering and financial crime. 

The so-called FinCEN (The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) files consist 
of more than 2.500 documents, most of which are files sent by banks to US 
authorities between 2000 and 2017. 

The documents contain some of the most closely kept secrets of the 
international banking system. 

They show that the largest British bank HSBC allowed fraudsters to transfer 
millions of dollars of stolen money around the world, even after they learned 
from American investigators that it was a fraud. 

The American "JP Morgan" enabled one company to transfer more than a billion 
dollars through a London account, without knowing who the owner is. The bank 
later revealed that it is possible that the company was owned by the mobsters 
from the FBI list who present the ten most wanted mobsters. 

The leaked documents claim and there is evidence that one of the close 
associates of the Russian President Vladimir Putin used the Barclays Bank in 
London to avoid sanctions that were supposed to prevent him from using 
financial services in the West. As it is stated, a part of the money was used 
for purchasing works of art. 

According to FinCEN's intelligence department, the United Kingdom is called a 
"higher risk jurisdiction" like Cyprus. This is due to the number of companies 
registered in the United Kingdom that appear in suspicious activity reports 
(SARs). More than 3.000 companies from the UK are named in FinCEN files, more 
than from any other country. 

The documents also show that the central bank of the United Arab Emirates did 
not react to the warnings about the local company that is helping Iran to avoid 
sanctions. 

Also, as it is stated, Deutsche Bank moved dirty money acquired from organized 
crime, from terrorists and drug traffickers. 

The files also show that the British "Standard Charter" transferred cash to the 
Arab Bank for more than ten years, after the accounts of the clients in the 
Jordanian bank were used to finance terrorism. 

Today, the FinCEN Files — thousands of “suspicious activity reports” and other 
US government documents — offer an unprecedented view of global financial 
corruption, the banks enabling it, and the government agencies that watch as it 
flourishes. BuzzFeed News has shared these reports with the International 
Consortium of Investigative Journalists and 108 news organizations in 88 
countries. 

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, is the agency within the 
Treasury Department charged with combating money laundering, terrorist 
financing, and other financial crimes. Suspicions regarding transactions made 
in US dollars must be sent to FinCEN, even if they take place outside the US. 

Suspicious activity reports (known as SARs) are an example of how these 
suspicions are recorded. 

A bank must complete one of these reports if it suspects that some of its 
clients are doing business illegally, and then the report is sent to the 
authorities. 

As it is stated, banks should ensure that they do not help clients to launder 
money or move it in ways that violate the rules. 

Western banks could have blocked almost any of them, but in most cases they 
kept the money moving and kept collecting their fees. 

The FinCEN Files expose an underlying truth of the modern era: The networks 
through which dirty money traverse the world have become vital arteries of the 
global economy. 

By law, they must know who their clients are. It is not enough to submit SARs 
and take dirty money from clients, expecting the authorities to address the 
problem. 

If they have evidence of criminal activity, they should stop transferring money.

 

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