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唐朱昌
唐朱昌
教授,博士生导师。复旦大学中国反洗钱研究中心首任主任,复旦大学俄...
严立新
严立新
复旦大学国际金融学院教授,中国反洗钱研究中心执行主任,陆家嘴金...
陈浩然
陈浩然
复旦大学法学院教授、博士生导师;复旦大学国际刑法研究中心主任。...
何 萍
何 萍
华东政法大学刑法学教授,复旦大学中国反洗钱研究中心特聘研究员,荷...
李小杰
李小杰
安永金融服务风险管理、咨询总监,曾任蚂蚁金服反洗钱总监,复旦大学...
周锦贤
周锦贤
周锦贤先生,香港人,广州暨南大学法律学士,复旦大学中国反洗钱研究中...
童文俊
童文俊
高级经济师,复旦大学金融学博士,复旦大学经济学博士后。现供职于中...
汤 俊
汤 俊
武汉中南财经政法大学信息安全学院教授。长期专注于反洗钱/反恐...
李 刚
李 刚
生辰:1977.7.26 籍贯:辽宁抚顺 民族:汉 党派:九三学社 职称:教授 研究...
祝亚雄
祝亚雄
祝亚雄,1974年生,浙江衢州人。浙江师范大学经济与管理学院副教授,博...
顾卿华
顾卿华
复旦大学中国反洗钱研究中心特聘研究员;现任安永管理咨询服务合伙...
张平
张平
工作履历:曾在国家审计署从事审计工作,是国家第一批政府审计师;曾在...
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上传时间: 2024-05-18      浏览次数:643次
Flight Attendants Smuggled Millions of Dollars in Fentanyl Cash Proceeds to the Dominican Republic

 

https://insightcrime.org/news/flight-attendants-smuggled-millions-dollars-fentanyl-dominican-republic/

 

A case in which flight attendants working for passenger airlines used their privileged access to transport millions of dollars of fentanyl profits from the United States to the Dominican Republic highlights how money laundering networks continue to use old school, analog tactics.

 

Four flight attendants who were working commercial air routes between New York and the Dominican Republic — Charlie Hernandez, Sarah Valerio Pujols, Emmanuel Torres, and Jarol Fabio — were arrested on May 7. All four were regularly carrying cash in their bags, according to United States government investigators.

 

The investigation began after Homeland Security Investigators (HSI) officials got a tip from other co-conspirators involved in the smuggling scheme. They set up a sting in which the flight attendants were given cash that they were told was drug money to hand off to other members of the money laundering organization in the Dominican Republic.

 

They all had “known crew member” status with the Transportation Security Administration, which allowed them to pass through a special security lane at John F. Kennedy International Airport and other US airports, according to the allegations.

 

The scheme had been running since at least 2021, and worked smoothly because the defendants were “abusing their privileges as airline employees,” said US Attorney Damian Williams.

 

It is not clear how much the defendants made, but authorities say they helped launder at least $8 million.

 

InSight Crime Analysis

 

In today’s world, in which there is increasing scrutiny on digital means to launder money, this case is a reminder that things like bulk-cash smuggling remain a staple in the underworld.

 

The flight attendants detailed in the case above had been smuggling cash in their bags for the best part of three years before they were discovered.

 

And while bulk cash smuggling is a common and unsophisticated way of laundering drug proceeds, it is still effective. The recent New York case follows other similar past examples of cash smuggling by flight attendants operating out of Boston and Philadelphia. One woman even tried to get a bag filled with cocaine past security onto a flight she was working on leaving Los Angeles International Airport. 

 

Of course, this does not preclude criminal organizations from combining cash smuggling with other methods to move value accrued from their drug sales around the world. The use of China-based underground banking systems, for instance, is becoming the preferred method of Mexico’s cartels, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Trade-based money laundering schemes (when value is moved across borders in the form of goods), the construction of resorts, and timeshares, and cryptocurrency are some of the other methods that drug traffickers use to conceal the earnings from their criminal activities.

 

Cases against these networks are rare, despite the “follow-the-money” mantra often cited by the United States government as a means of bringing the world’s powerful criminal organizations to heel.

 

In a recent InSight Crime report on the challenges of dismantling the networks to conceal the finances of organized crime and specifically the synthetic drug industry, we reported that in 2022, the US Sentencing Commission said 1,001 individuals were prosecuted for money laundering in the US federal courts. Yet just 17% of them were charged for laundering proceeds earned from “controlled substances, violence, weapons, national security, or the sexual exploitation of a minor.”