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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: 2011-03-22      浏览次数:1912次
Prosecutors say bank executives not easy to charge in criminal money laundering cases
关键字:money laundering

By Associated Press, Monday, March 21, 4:20 PM

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/prosecutors-say-bank-executives-not-easy-to-charge-in-criminal-money-laundering-cases/2011/03/21/ABm3377_story.html

 

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — Bank executives rarely face money laundering charges because investigators don’t usually uncover the kind of decisive evidence needed to convict them, prosecutors said Monday at an international conference in Florida.

 

“You don’t find the smoking gun email where an executive says, ‘I know it’s drug money, but go do it anyway,’” said Evan Weitz, a New York federal prosecutor, during a panel discussion at the annual anti-money laundering conference.

 

Instead, prosecutors usually target the bank or financial institution itself. Adam Kaufmann, chief of the investigative division of the Manhattan district attorney’s office, said even then the preferred practice is to work out a settlement — known as a deferred prosecution agreement — rather than indicting the institution.

 

“An indictment can be a death sentence for a financial institution,” said Kaufmann, adding that ruining large banks or other institutions can trigger unforeseen economic ripple effects.

 

Major banks investigated for doing business with countries facing U.S. economic sanctions have reached agreements four times since January 2009. In those settlements, the institutions pay large fines and agree to meet certain requirements, but no executives face jail time. Last year, U.S. District Judge Emmett Sullivan of Washington labeled one such settlement a “sweetheart deal.” In that settlement, Barclays Bank paid $298 million in penalties but faced no charges.

 

“Why isn’t the government getting rough with these banks?” Sullivan said at an August 2010 hearing.

 

In such cases, Kaufmann said, prosecutors could have indicted lower-level employees who are actually handling the illegal transactions on a day-to-day basis. But that wouldn’t get at the executives who made the decisions — and figuring out exactly who that is can be daunting.

 

“It becomes very difficult to sort of identify the person you want to prosecute,” he said.

 

Earlier Monday, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. told the more than 1,000 conference attendees that prosecutors and investigators increasingly work alongside bank regulators to spot money-laundering trends involving drug traffickers, corrupt foreign officials and even terrorist financiers. Attendees are part of a diverse group that includes prosecutors, financial officials and regulators from around the world.

 

Vance said the intent is not only to prosecute financial institutions.

 

“We want to help you detect criminal conduct,” Vance said. “It can’t just be about filing indictments.”

 

Toward that end, bank regulators told the conference that even in tough economic times, it’s unwise to scrimp on compliance with tough rules requiring reporting of suspicious activity or to turn a blind eye toward potentially risky customers.

 

“You don’t want to make the slide from witness to target” of a criminal probe, said Federal Reserve compliance official Suzanne Williams. “The answer can’t be that you did nothing.”