Showing posts with label FATF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FATF. Show all posts
Tuesday, 23 June 2015
Banks did not do enough to police FIFA transactions, says global agency
From Business Insider –
“A global group of government anti-money-laundering agencies said that financial institutions have not done enough to police suspicious financial activity by officials at soccer’s global governing body FIFA, and cautioned banks to step up scrutiny.
The warning from the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force came in the wake of last month’s indictment by the U.S. of nine current and former FIFA officials and five business executives on a series of corruption charges, including bribery, money laundering and wire fraud.
With the U.S. investigation continuing to widen, and a separate Swiss probe gearing up into whether there was corruption involved in FIFA’s awarding of the hosting rights to Russia and Qatar for the next soccer World Cups in 2018 and 2022, the warning will add to banks’ concern about handling certain soccer accounts for organizations and individuals.”
Read more>>
Labels:
banks,
bribery,
compliance,
corruption,
FATF,
FIFA,
financial industry,
money laundering,
Switzerland,
US
Thursday, 10 July 2014
Virtual money laundering
From Finextra
“The Financial Action Task Force presents research into the characteristics of virtual currencies and makes a preliminary assessment of the money laundering and terrorist financing risk associated with this payment method.
The report establishes a conceptual framework of key definitions, which could form the basis for further policy development.
Download the document now (PDF File) at http://www.finextra.com/finextra-downloads/featuredocs/Virtual-currency-key-definitions-and-potential-aml-cft-risks.pdf
Labels:
FATF,
money laundering,
payments,
virtual currency
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)