Key Points
- Drug traffickers need to convert the proceeds from their criminal activity into revenue with an apparently legal source.
- Drug profits moving through the U.S. financial system are estimated to be as high as $100 billion a year.
- Virtually all countries have criminalized money laundering and developed regulations to deter money laundering and facilitate the detection of criminal activity.
The trade in illicit drugs is estimated to be worth $400 billion a year, or 8% of all international trade. In order to invest the profits of their illicit activities and avoid having their assets seized by the government, drug traffickers must transform the monetary proceeds from their criminal activity into revenue from apparently legal sources. This is known as money laundering.
Though there are many ways to launder drug money, the process generally involves three basic stages. The first stage, placement, entails depositing the drug proceeds into domestic and foreign financial institutions. The second stage, layering, involves creating layers between the persons placing the proceeds and the persons involved in the intermediary stages, to hide their source and ownership and to disguise the audit trail. This can involve complex manipulations and the use of wire transfers, shell companies, bearer shares, and nominees in offshore financial centers (OFCs). In the third stage, integration, the proceeds have been washed, and a legitimate explanation for the funds is created. This can be done, for instance, via front companies, false invoicing, the purchase of financial instruments (stocks, bonds, and certificates of deposit), or investment in real estate, tourism, and other legitimate businesses.
Launderers have devised an infinite number of schemes to hide the large sums that are generated by illicit drug sales. One method, structuring, involves breaking up large amounts of cash into transactions that each amount to less than $10,000 to avoid currency reporting requirements. Other laundering schemes involve casinos, gems and precious metals, wire transfer companies, and smuggling currency out of the United States. The enormous profitability of drug trafficking enables criminals to take advantage of the balloon effect of transnational contraband trade. As soon as law enforcement officials identify and act to block one laundering method, criminals switch methods, industries, geographic routes, intermediaries, technologies, and so forth. These wealthy and powerful drug syndicates employ professionals and use the latest technology, intelligence, and methods, including buying influence in smaller countries, so that they are always a step or two ahead of law enforcement.
Since 1970, a series of U.S. laws, and directives have sought to scrutinize
suspicious financial activities and criminalize deceptive cash transactions.
The 1986 Money Laundering Control Act declared money laundering to be
a crime in its own right and made structuring to avoid currency reporting
a criminal offense. In 1995, President Clinton announced an initiative
and signed Presidential Decision Directive 42, which freezes U.S. assets
of Colombian drug trafficking organizations and bars U.S. companies from
doing business with the traffickers front companies. However, a
number of other countries have questioned this approach, and no other
country has yet agreed to adopt this U.S. initiative.
In 1999, the U.S. enacted the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation
Act, which extends the directive to cover kingpins of all nationalities
and requires U.S. banks and financial institutions to apply a complex
web of economic sanctions against kingpins and their associates. In practice,
U.S. financial institutions are required to install and monitor software
to detect names of individuals and entities on the kingpin list.
Various agencies (including the FBI, Customs, Drug Enforcement Administration,
IRS, Federal Reserve, and Treasury) are responsible for enforcing money
laundering laws. FinCEN, a U.S. Treasury division, uses artificial intelligence
technology to analyze all Currency Transaction Reports (CTRs), which persons
must file with the U.S. government when they receive cash payments over
$10,000, and Suspicious Activity Reports filed by banks, thrifts, credit
unions, and commercial and law enforcement databases.
Various national, regional, and global agreements and institutions (such
as the Inter-American Drug Abuse Control Commission of the Organization
of American States) seek to combat money laundering. Financial Intelligence
Units (FIUs), similar to FinCEN, have been formed in many countries to
obtain and process financial disclosure information and support anti-money
laundering efforts. The 1988 UN Drug Convention requires signatories to
criminalize drug-related money laundering and to enact asset forfeiture
laws.
In 1989, the G-7 countries formed the Financial Action Task Force (FATF),
which has issued 40 recommendations or standards to control money laundering.
In 2000, the U.S. prompted the FATF to issue a report that identified
15 non-cooperative countries and territories (NCCTs) and stated
that if they do not sufficiently comply within one year, they would be
subject to countermeasures. In fact, almost immediately, the U.S. and
other FATF members required financial institutions to increase scrutiny
of transactions from NCCTs, thereby inhibiting or in some cases practically
precluding most transactions from some of these jurisdictions.
Problems with Current U.S. Policy
Key Problems
- Despite numerous laws and treaties, large-scale drug trafficking and
money laundering continues to thrive.
- The U.S. may have reached the point where new anti-money laundering
impositions will adversely undercut civil liberties and normal commerce
in the U.S. and abroad.
- Very few U.S. money laundering cases are actually prosecuted.
Law enforcement, national security, and military agencies have lobbied
vociferously and successfully for antinarcotics enforcement appropriations
to offset reduced, post-cold war budgets. In May 1998, President Clinton
announced a comprehensive international crime control strategy for
America in which he pledged to seek new authority to fight
money laundering and freeze the U.S. assets of people arrested abroad.
Yet despite numerous laws, treaties, multilateral agreements, and public
pronouncements, large-scale trafficking and money laundering continues,
because the demand for drugs is high, profits are enormous, and detection
is difficult. The average Colombian trafficking organization earns approximately
$300 million annually, according to a 1994 State Department report.
The globalization of trade, finance, and communications has made it
easier to transport illicit drugs, persons, and commodities of all kinds
and to launder the proceeds. Many criminals invest simultaneously in ships
and planes in order to facilitate their trade in humans, drugs, art, automobiles,
endangered species, and money. The sheer volume of financial transactions,
many via wire transfers or electronic messages between banks, is staggering.
Within the U.S., more than 465,000 wire transfersvalued at more
than $2 trillionare handled daily. Another 220,000 transfer messages
are carried in and out of the United States by an international messaging
system known as SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication).
The large number of transactions precludes effective policing without
sacrificing normal commerce.
In 1995, the Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) estimated that within
the U.S. approximately 0.05% of transfers (or roughly 250 transactions
a day) involve money laundering. Although a wire transfer initially contains
information about the sender or originator of the transfer, as the transfer
passes through several banks before reaching the beneficiarys account,
the identification of the originator is often dropped. Under regulations
issued in 1996, U.S. banks are required to identify the originator and
the beneficiary of wire transfers, and such information must travel with
the message throughout the transfer. But foreign banks are not required
to supply this information.
Launderers utilize diverse services offered by international banks,
financial institutions, and a host of intermediaries and professions.
Private banks, correspondent banks, off-shore banks, internet banking
and gaming, international business companies, international trusts, wire
transfers, concentration accounts, automated teller machines, pass-through
accounts, mortgages, and brokerage accounts provide a rich source of tools
by which criminals and their agents can launder money.
OFCsthrough which large sums of money are shifted from one country
to anotherinvolve intricate networks of accounts used to purchase
homes, businesses, and investments with laundered funds. The Cayman Islands,
for instance, is now the worlds sixth largest financial center,
according to investigative reporter Ken Silverstein. Concentration accounts
permit funds from various individuals to be commingled without divulging
their origins. Private banks, little known subdivisions of every major
U.S. financial institution, offer regulatory deference to wealthy clients.
For instance, Citibank established private banking services for Raul Salinas,
brother of former Mexican President Carlos Salinas, without following
its own internal rules on due diligence for starting such accounts. Raul
Salinas then laundered tens of millions of dollars in drug money.
Although the U.S. is one of the leading money laundering centers, very
few U.S. money laundering cases are actually prosecutedan indication
that this crime is difficult to detect and that inadequate resources are
being devoted to enforcement. In 1995, only 62 criminal money laundering
cases were filed with U.S. attorneys; of the 138 defendants, 52 were convicted.
In May 1998, however, the Justice and Treasury departments announced
the successful culmination of Operation Casablanca, hailed
as the largest, most comprehensive drug money laundering case in
the history of U.S. law enforcement. The three-year sting operation
led to the arrest of 26 Mexican bank officials, the seizure of an estimated
$150 million, and the freezing of over 100 bank accounts in the United
States and Europe.
The case resulted in fierce diplomatic protests by Mexico, because the
U.S. violated its sovereignty by conducting undercover operations in Mexican
territory without Mexicos knowledge, approval, or participation,
as required by various international and bilateral agreements. In April
2001, however, the Mexican government of Vicente Fox shifted course and
signaled its willingness to allow U.S. intelligence and law enforcement
officials unprecedented access to share intelligence.
The detection of money laundering is impeded by various national and
international laws that protect individual rights to financial, communication,
and data privacy. In the United States, the Right to Financial Privacy
Act of 1978 provides many of the procedural protections for financial
records guaranteed more broadly by the Fourth Amendment. The Electronic
Communications Privacy Act of 1986 essentially prohibits the monitoring
of wire transfers while in transit or in storage without a court order,
warrant, or administrative subpoena.
In a significant number of countries, bank secrecy laws buffer the release
of comprehensive data about financial transactions by prohibiting banking
officials from divulging customer information to persons outside the financial
institution or by blocking access by foreign law enforcement agencies
on the grounds of national sovereignty. Additionally, under data protection
laws such as the European Unions (EU) Data Protection Directive,
information may be prohibited from leaving a signatory country if it is
being sent to a country with less stringent data protection laws. The
EU privacy rights require that records of suspicious transactions and
intelligence information be destroyed after a period of years, unless
prosecutors have taken enforcement action; the U.S. policy is to keep
such information indefinitely.
Toward a New Foreign Policy
Key Recommendations
- Strengthen anti-money laundering cooperation and regulations, reduce
unilateral extraterritorial enforcement actions, and safeguard the rule
of law and fundamental rights under both the Constitution and international
human rights statutes.
- Increase funding for addiction treatment and economic development
programs in both the U.S. and source countries to reduce drug production,
sales, consumption, and trafficking.
- Revise U.S. and international policies and laws to permit governments
to experiment in the regulated distribution of currently illicit drugs.
Although various international standards have been written to guide governments
in adopting anti-money laundering policies, not all jurisdictions have
implemented regulations. Soft law standards, in the form of
recommendations, should be transformed into hard law through international
conventions with effective enforcement provisions.
Regulations and procedures for banks and other financial institutions
need to be evenhanded and in close conformity with those of other countries.
Washington should reconsider the advisability of unilateral extraterritorial
sanctions and operations, unless the U.S. has exhausted all means of cooperative
approaches to kingpin and related sanctions. The Bush administration should,
for instance, respond to the Vicente Fox governments new openness
in sharing intelligence not by unilaterally operating inside Mexico but
by building collaborative procedures for detecting and prosecuting international
money laundering, corruption, and drug trafficking. And the White House
should follow the recommendations of the congressionally created Judicial
Review Commission on Foreign Asset Control, whose January 2001 report,
based on the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act (Kingpin Act),
recommended that the Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) adopt greater
openness and responsiveness and submit to more formal administrative review
of its final actions.
Washington should realize the limitations of harsh enforcement policies,
such as anti-money laundering measures and economic sanctions, on illicit
drug trafficking. These regulations can only have a minor effect on curtailing
money laundering. In 1995, the OTA found that anti-money laundering regulations
do not work, because the number of money laundering transactions is believed
to be relatively small, insufficient information is contained in wire
transfers, and it is difficult to characterize a typical money laundering
transaction, rendering identification and profiling very problematic.
In addition, a tougher system would, as noted by the Judicial Review Commission,
also pose a serious threat to privacy and constitutional protections.
The illicit drug trade funds powerful criminal organizations, resulting
in widespread corruption, violence, and an undermining of the rule of
law. This, in turn, impedes the prosecution of these organizations, weakens
the judicial system, and prevents the effective implementation of anti-money
laundering controls in the banking system. Weak legal structures and social
instability also thwart legal commercial development. The allocation of
enforcement resources to combat international drug money laundering and
drug trafficking is disproportionate to the harm from the trade and restricts
the ability of law enforcement bodies to focus on violent forms of crime,
such as terrorism, weapons trafficking, and trafficking in human beings.
Rather than simply increasing the enforcement regime against money laundering
and drug trafficking, greater emphasis should be placed on actions and
resources that address the fundamental causes of the problemnamely,
the demand for drugs and the lack of economic opportunities in both developing
countries and U.S. urban centers. In the U.S., more emphasis should be
placed on addiction treatment and urban development in an effort to curb
drug demand and sales. This would, in turn, reduce the proceeds to drug
traffickers. Although drug trafficking and money laundering will be reduced
if the demand for illicit drugs is reduced in consumer countries and if
alternative forms of development are implemented in source and transit
countries, drug consumption will continue to exist. The artificially high
profits from supplying drug consumers serve to impede alternative forms
of development.
Ultimately, the UN Conventions on Illicit Drugs (1961, 1971, 1988) must
be revised to allow for signatory parties to experiment in regulating
the distribution and sale of certain illicit drugs. Unfortunately, recent
actions by the UN make it clear that such experiments will not be considered.
A UN counterdrug plan proposed to the 1998 General Assembly Special Session
on Illicit Drugs is useful in promoting crop substitution programs, but
it sets the wholly unrealistic goal of eradicating the worlds entire
production of heroin, cocaine, and marijuana by the year 2008.
There are a variety of regulation schemes that could be implemented
to control access to drugs while removing the profits from criminal enterprises.
Ideally, the aim should be to minimize the harm that drugs cause to users
and society at large, to shrink the size of the black market, and to obviate
the need to launder illicit funds.
Bruce Zagaris is a partner with the law firm of Berliner, Corcoran & Rowe, a founder and editor of International Enforcement Law Reporter. Scott Ehlers is the director of research with the Campaign for New Drug Policies.