Money Laundering

Overview

Frequently associated with drug and human trafficking rings, money laundering is the process of disguising or concealing the criminal origins of illegally obtained or "dirty" money so it can be used without detection. Criminals engaged in illegal trade rely on money laundering to cover their tracks and make their profits usable without being caught.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • There's a myth that Al Capone coined the term 'money laundering'

    Al Capone owned multiple dry cleaning businesses in Chicago that were believed to be a front for his extensive bootlegging empire, but that's most likely not where the term "money laundering" actually came from. The word didn't appear in popular lexicon until the 1970s, and there aren't recorded references to Al Capone as a money launderer until much later.

  • More than $2.6B has been laundered through US real estate in the past 20 years

    All cash real estate transactions don't require extensive background and identity checks, creating a loophole for criminals who would otherwise be flagged for suspicious behavior to clean large amounts of money with one purchase. Real estate prices are easily manipulated and can be used to generate more income by renting the space, making it an attractive and common tool for money laundering.

  • Meet a government agent who laundered millions of dollars for Pablo Escobar

    Robert Mazur went undercover for years inside the Medellín cartel, which was sending more than 15 tons of cocaine into the United States every single day. Mazur created more than 30 jewelry stores to create business fronts before he finally got through to the cartel.

  • Anti-money laundering laws forcing banks to report data have become important foreign policy tools

    Since the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970, which required banks to report transactions exceeding $10K and keep records on customers, anti-money laundering laws have become an important proxy for American foreign policy initiatives. Increased regulation via financial institutions helps curb drug and human trafficking, as well as destabilize the financial infrastructure for terrorist organizations.

  • Money 'mules' don't always know they are laundering money

    Money mules are anyone who receives money in a laundering scheme and then sends it forward, either to another company or to a financial institution. While some money mules—often called smurfs—actually work with criminals laundering money, getting someone to receive and then send money has become a popular scam.

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