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Operational alert: Professional money laundering through trade and money services businesses

Reference number: 18/19-SIDEL-025
July 18, 2018

Professional money launderers are sophisticated actors who engage in large-scale money laundering on behalf of transnational organized crime groups such as drug cartels, motorcycle gangs and traditional organized crime organizations. Professional money launderers sell their services to these groups and are involved in the majority of sophisticated money laundering schemes; they are not members nor are they involved in the predicate offences that generate illicit proceeds. As such, they present unique identification challenges.

While professional money launderers may be accountants, bankers or lawyers, current financial intelligence suggests that they often are owners of, or associated with, trading companies or money-services businesses. Professional money launderers use their occupation and knowledge, as well as the infrastructure associated with their line of work and their networks, to facilitate money laundering, providing a veneer of legitimacy to criminals and criminal organizations.

This operational alert provides indicators for money laundering carried out through trade and money services businesses. Entities required to report to FINTRAC should use these indicators on their own and in combination to identify potential professional money laundering activities. Reporting entities should also use these indicators in conjunction with a risk-based approach and other money laundering indicators. Financial institutions are especially well positioned to recognize and report on suspicious financial transactions that may be connected to professional money laundering. FINTRAC uses these indicators, along with other sources of information, to assess reporting entities' compliance with their reporting obligations.

Trade-based money laundering

Professional money launderers use trade transactions to legitimize proceeds of crime and move them between jurisdictions and between currencies. FINTRAC has observed two main schemes of this type.

There are many variations on the Black Market Peso Exchange—which is essentially a form of unregistered foreign currency exchange—involving locations other than Latin America, other criminal groups and other world currencies (although the U.S. dollar is the most common). The two versions FINTRAC observes most often are the following:

Indicators of trade-based money laundering by professional money laundering networks

Money services businesses

Money services businesses provide a wide range of unique and valuable financial services to Canadians and international customers; however, the sector has unique challenges and risks with respect to money laundering. Most money services businesses engage in legitimate activities but some allow professional money launderers to exploit their services with their full cooperation. Others turn a blind eye to the fact that they are serving criminals. Professional money launderers who own or are connected to money services businesses use these entities to place and transfer illicit funds.

Indicators of professional money laundering through money services businesses

Reporting to FINTRAC

To facilitate FINTRAC's disclosure process, please include the term #pml in Part G—Description of suspicious activity on the Suspicious Transaction Report. (See also STR guidance.)

Contact FINTRAC

© Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, 2018.
Cat. No. FD4-16/2018E-PDF
ISBN 978-0-660-27307-5

FINTRAC Operational Alerts provide up-to-date indicators of suspicious financial transactions and high-risk factors related to new, re-emerging or particularly topical methods of money laundering and terrorist activity financing.

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