Showing posts with label New Zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Zealand. Show all posts
on Thursday, June 28, 2012
by MICHAEL FIELD

Criminals are using shell companies set up under New Zealand's lax company laws to launder money.

Companies created by an Auckland firm operating out of Queen St have been linked to Russian crime, a Mexican drug cartel and Romanian extortion.

A 16-month Fairfax Media investigation has also tied companies created by Geoffrey Taylor and his sons Ian and Michael, who work out of 363 Queen St, to a company that smuggled arms out of North Korea.

The government admits there is a problem but says it has had other priorities.

The Taylor operation is not illegal, but the companies they create are connected to serious crimes in a number of countries.

They set up a shell company, Bristoll Export Ltd, that helped move part of the proceeds of a $245 million Russian tax fraud out of Moscow and into Swiss bank accounts. London-based Hermitage Capital Management hired a lawyer to find out what happened, but he died in a Moscow jail.

Hermitage chief executive Bill Browder told the Sunday Star-Times he was "highly motivated to make sure all aspects of this story see the light of day", and that he had a "treasure trove of information" about New Zealand companies' ties to the scandal.

The Taylors set up complex webs of companies, and one of them, linked to Russians in Cyprus, is administered out of a home in Albany near Auckland.

A United States Justice Department investigation into the banking giant Wachovia, also tied Taylor-linked companies to the movement of drug money. Wachovia was fined more than $202m for helping disguise the illegal origins of up to $479 billion for Mexican drug lords, predominantly the murderous Sinaloa cartel. Four Taylor companies "filtered" $50m in drug money through banks in Latvia and on to Wachovia. Each of the companies had just one director – Stella Port-Louis, 32, of the Seychelles, until recently a director of around 300 New Zealand companies.

Canada's Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre, which assessed Wachovia, identified the "exploitation of New Zealand's weak company registration laws" as a problem.

International expert Martin Woods said shell companies were "ideal vehicles for money launderers, tax evaders and arms traffickers".

In 2009, a Georgia-registered cargo plane flew from North Korea to Bangkok and was found to have 35 tonnes of arms on it. The plane was chartered by SP Trading Ltd, a company set up by the Taylors.

The company's director was a Burger King cook named Lu Zhang, 29, who was later convicted of 75 breaches of the Companies Act for giving false addresses on registration forms, something she described in court as "one little mistake".

She is also a director of companies linked to Romanian Lorenzo Kiss, who is under arrest over an alleged $14.5m embezzlement.

Ian Taylor told the Sunday Star-Times media reports connected dots that weren't there.

PricewaterhouseCoopers Auckland's forensic services director Alex Tan said using company service providers had become common here.

"The money-laundering and even terrorist financing risks associated with them are high, particularly considering they can be set up over the internet."

on Saturday, June 16, 2012
A Wellington businessman was today sentenced to nine months' home detention for tax evasion, fraud and money-laundering using foreign students as a front and involving more than 350,000.

Walter Law, also known as Xu Liu, 45, had earlier pleaded guilty in Wellington District Court to five charges of tax evasion, six charges of providing false income tax returns, 21 charges of aiding a company to file false GST returns, one charge of aiding a company to file false income tax returns and five charges of aiding a company to evade tax.

Law also pleaded guilty to one charge of money laundering under the Crimes Act.

Tony Morris, Inland Revenue's assurance manager investigations, said Law conducted his activities using separate companies and unregistered entities which he owned or controlled.

"Our initial investigation into one of Mr Law's companies, Holiday KTV Entertainment Limited, revealed that significant amounts of cash were unaccounted for and the company had only reported its Eftpos transactions to Inland Revenue. Our subsequent analysis showed the company had evaded GST amounting to just over $68,000, PAYE of over $41,000 and Income Tax amounting to over $29,000," Mr Morris said in a statement.

Inland Revenue's investigation into Law's foreign exchange and travel businesses found he deposited $2.5 million into bank accounts in the name of two overseas home-stay students. The students said Law had control of these accounts and they had no knowledge that the funds were used to repay loans on properties owned or controlled by Law.

"Mr Law's foreign exchange and travel businesses made a surplus of $540,000 between 2004 and 2010," Mr Morris said.

"These entities not only failed to return around $170,000 in income tax to Inland Revenue but these funds were deposited into the students' bank accounts and recharacterised as loans from a private trust in China. This money was the undeclared income from the business transactions and this action amounted to money laundering," Mr Morris said.

Law's offending resulted in a loss to Inland Revenue of just over $350,000, which had since been recovered.

"Mr Laws deliberately tried to evade his tax obligations by not declaring his income and hiding cash in other people's bank accounts. This case is a further reminder that Inland Revenue is using increasingly sophisticated analysis to detect those trading in the hidden economy," Mr Morris said.

"Businesses and individuals doing the right thing can be confident that Inland Revenue will detect those evading their obligations and those cheating on their taxes should be aware that we will take action when we detect deliberate non-compliance."

Law was also sentenced to 200 hours' community service.

Source: NZ HERALD
on Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Justice Minister Simon Power has released a consultation paper on proposed regulations to prevent money laundering and the financing of terrorism.

The proposals and codes of practice for financial institutions and casinos are integral to the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism Act 2009.

It was always intended that obligations for those institutions would be brought into force after the legislation was passed to allow regulations to be developed.

The consultation document seeks public feedback on the content of the regulations, and proposes that obligations in the Act come into force two years after regulations are published to give the industry time to prepare for the new system.

“This Act is an essential component of New Zealand’s fight against organised crime, allowing the enforcement authorities to follow the money trail through financial systems, and enabling Police to use the Criminal Proceeds (Recovery) Act to attack those profits,” Mr Power said.

“It engages the help of financial institutions and casinos to detect and deter money laundering and terrorist financing.

"Officials and the industry have worked together to develop regulations which strike the right balance between giving effect to the law and minimising red tape.”

Mr Power also confirmed arrangements are in place to help financial institutions if they feel they have been caught up unintentionally in the reforms as a result of the definition of financial institution being broadly defined.

“Some of those situations will be dealt with in regulations, and some I will consider on a case-by-case basis through a ministerial exemption process.”

The Ministry of Justice has published the exemptions policy, which sets out the process for making an application for exemption under the Act.

“The regime will affect a wide range of businesses and it’s important that all financial sector organisations take time to consider whether the Act will affect them.”

Information on the exemption process and the regulatory consultation document are available on the Ministry of Justice website.

Submissions on the consultation document close on 6 September.

Source: Scoop
on Tuesday, May 29, 2012
An Australian expatriate living in Vanuatu will face charges over a $A100 million ($NZ119.4 million) money laundering scheme that police say could involve up to 400 people after raids involving New Zealand.

Raids were carried out on Monday in Australia, New Zealand and Vanuatu and Australian police warned more arrests will follow, including from the "higher end of town".

Robert Francis Agius, 58, a former Sydney accountant, was on Monday ordered to be extradited from Perth to Sydney to face charges of conspiring to defraud the commonwealth, conspiracy to cause a loss and to laundering a total of more than $A1 million.

The Australian Federal Police (AFP) told Perth Magistrates Court it will be alleged the father of three evaded up to $A13 million in taxes on $A100 million of his customers' business profits.

They say he has received $A1.4 million in commissions, through foreign bank accounts, since 2000.

It's alleged Australian customers would transfer money to accounts in Vanuatu and New Zealand, claiming them as a business expense.

The money would then be returned to Australia less commission in the form of a loan, and a repayment would be treated as a tax reduction.

Agius told the court he had been arrested on Monday at the home of a Perth friend, in front of his friend's child.

Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) prosecutor Pauline Caust said since November 2000, Agius had set up more than 49 bank accounts in foreign company accounts, allegedly used to launder the money, before it was deposited back in his clients' accounts.

Agius had charged clients $A8,000, ad hoc fees of between 3% and 6% and annual US fees of $US1,350 ($A1,445), she said.

Agius allegedly used the companies of trusted friends, including the late Sydney accountant Owen T Daniel, to recruit clients.

Caust said 13 of 20 of Agius's clients had been audited so far.

She said Agius held at least five passports and had used false addresses on incoming passenger cards on flights to Australia because he did not want his Australian premises to be raided.

Company names incorporated in different jurisdictions, mainly the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Unites States, Vanuatu and New Zealand, were used by Agius to establish New Zealand bank accounts, Caust said.

Agius, who was not represented during Monday's hearing, admitted to having bank accounts in New Zealand but said he did not do business in Australia.

He described the charges he would face in New South Wales as "trumped up", facetious and "nebulous matters".

"The figures and the documentation just aren't correct," Agius said.

Agius told Magistrate Elizabeth Langdon he was not a resident of Australia and did not work in Australia or hold an Australian passport.

"Australia doesn't control New Zealand and it certainly doesn't control Vanuatu," Agius said.

But Langdon said given the seriousness of the allegations she would grant a warrant to extradite Agius so he could appear in court in Sydney on Wednesday.

The AFP said further arrests were expected, with up to 20 people being investigated.

A total of 400 people would be contacted by letter, asking them to come forward, because they had been identified as participants in the scheme.

"Those people we believe knowingly participated in not paying their share of tax and further, they were involved in this money laundering scheme. We expect to make quite a few more arrests," AFP economic operations commander Warren Gray said in Sydney.

"We're certainly concentrating on the higher end of town at the moment."

Police in Vanuatu said four businesses in the island nation were raided today but no arrests were made.

An AFP spokeswoman said 19 search warrants were expected to be executed in Vanuatu.

Three New Zealand premises were raided but no arrests were made, the spokeswoman said.

The New Zealand raids are believed to have been carried out at a bank, an accounting firm and a private residence.

The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) says it is also conducting 80 audits examining allegedly false tax deductions exceeding $A90 million.

"Anyone involved in these schemes is encouraged to come forward voluntarily and co-operate with the authorities," it said.

http://www.amlosphere.com/australia/aml/nz-raids-over-money-laundering.html
on Wednesday, May 16, 2012
By Peter Gosnell
June 17, 2008 12:00am

SOME of Australia's biggest companies have unwittingly enriched the man accused of running a $100 million money laundering scheme.

Telstra, Optus, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia and National Australia Bank are among a list of high-profile firms counted as clients of Pyrmont-based security and investigative software outfit Nuix Pty Ltd.

As revealed exclusively in The Daily Telegraph yesterday, company documents show that alleged money launderer Robert Francis Agius is the sole director of Ferodale Limited, a New Zealand-registered company which owns 243,600 shares in Nuix.

Ferodale is owned by New Zealand businessman Anthony Bowden, currently under investigation by New Zealand's Companies Office and Securities Commission following the $80 million collapse of Five Star Consumer Finance group in New Zealand late last year.

In a statement yesterday, Nuix said it stood by its position as a reputable leader in the provision of software for forensic email discovery.

However Nuix's directors, who include former Macquarie Bank adviser and LookSmart director Anthony Castagna, refused to say whether Nuix received any funds from Ferodale, Agius or Bowden, in exchange for the shares.

"Nuix Pty Ltd acknowledges that while Ferodale Limited is one of a number of shareholders of Nuix, Ferodale's associated entities and directors have no management or other involvement with Nuix," Nuix chief executive Eddie Sheehy said.

"The investment by Ferodale Limited is legal and was made and accepted in good faith."

Any such funds could potentially be subject to legal processes under proceeds of crime legislation brought by investigators from Project Wickenby, the multi-agency probe into tax evasion which is alleging Agius to be the mastermind of Australia's biggest money laundering scheme.

Spearheaded by the Australian Federal Police and codenamed Operation Starlifter, the investigation is examining whether up to 400 Australians are evading tax by shifting it through offshore tax structures in Vanuatu and New Zealand set up by Agius.

Source: The Daily Telegraph
on Sunday, May 13, 2012
Financial institutions are facing costs in the “hundreds of millions” to comply
with new money laundering legislation, but the effort will have little effect
and cost IT organisations dearly, according to Kiwibank CEO Sam Knowles.

The laws, aimed at preventing money-laundering and the financing of terrorism, and other regulations governing big-money transactions have yet to be finalised. It is proposed that the regime apply not just to financial institutions but to other big-money businesses such as real-estate and jewellery sales.

However, speaking at the government’s Managing Identity conference, held in Wellington last month, Knowles said that policing such transactions will cost hundreds of millions of dollars and will have “little result”.

The task of checking the provenance of large transactions is likely to rebound on bank ICT departments as well as on other business units.

The Ministry of Justice has commissioned a report from consultancy Deloitte on the financial impact of complying with the proposed regime, but this will likely lead to just minor tweaks to the regulations, according to the department’s spokesman, Gregor Allen.

The ministry has consulted fully with industry over more than a year so any
amendment to the core legislation is unlikely, he says.

“The banks understand that a lot of this is mandated by international agreement,” says Allen. And for a New Zealand bank to decline to “follow in the slipstream” would be to risk being cast adrift from vital international banking links.

The anti-laundering push is being coordinated by an inter-governmental body called the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).

Most New Zealand based banks are already coming under pressure from their Australian owners to quickly put in place policies that the Australians have implemented since about 2005, says Allen.

Kiwibank is, of course, New Zealand-owned and, coincidentally, is running an advertising campaign depicting the bank as part of a resistance movement against foreign domination.

Deloitte’s report is expected to be completed in a week or two, says Allen.

This will then set in motion the time-frame for policy to be approved by Cabinet around mid-year and legislation to be passed before the end of the year.

http://computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/scrt/7A7BB9A1918F0357CC257447006E1546
on Saturday, May 12, 2012
New Zealand First MP Ron Mark today released an email alleging that gangs were highly valued corporate customers of big banks, getting preferential treatment and good interest rates with no questions asked about where the money came from.

Mr Mark gave details in Parliament of the allegations. Cabinet Minister Phil Goff responded he would be willing to investigate the claims.

"I would be very concerned if the information contained in that email is correct; that corporate people are facilitating the laundering and banking of money by gang members."

The email released to NZPA was written by a man who said he used to be a corporate banker.

"It's not common knowledge but most of the major gangs are corporate customers (the biggest and best) of the trading banks, with their own managers, exchange and money market dealers, enjoying risk grade A (the best) interest rates. And their key staff enjoy preferential services and interest rates too."

The man said that in the late 1980s and early 1990s when only major companies could afford financial information services such as Reuters, which gives up to the minute foreign exchange and shares information, "the Mongrel Mob was so equipped".

"Of course gangs run legitimate operations, which presumably are fantastic ways to launder money."

He said far tougher measures were needed to get at the money behind organised crime.

Mr Mark said life should be made difficult for gangs by outlawing them and have high level investigations into the money side of organised crime.

Mr Goff said the Government was watching closely how effective the serious and organised crime legislation that had just come into effect in Australia was.

He said the Government had tightened controls on financial institutions to clamp down on money laundering and taken other measures.

The email writer said he had had to move his business because of a Headhunters gang pad next door.

Source: Stuff
on Friday, May 4, 2012
By DENISE MCNABB - The Independent | Friday, 05 September 2008

Government plans to introduce anti-money laundering legislation to combat terrorist financing have been put back six months while ministers consider a framework for costs.

The legislation was supposed to have gone to parliament this month but will now not be tabled until April, the same month the OECD's Financial Action Task Force (FATF) arrives to check compliance with the international standards New Zealand signed up to as a member country.

The delay means by the time New Zealand puts the legislation through parliament probably not until next October it will be among the stragglers of the 132 developed countries pledging compliance. More than half have already met their obligations, including Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom.

When former Justice Minister Phil Goff announced in February 2005 the new laws would be introduced to combat money laundering and terrorist financing, he said there was no specific evidence New Zealand was being exploited by international crime or terrorist groups.

But New Zealand's largely deregulated financial system ``results in potential loopholes ... that require closing in order to meet strict international requirements''.

He said a comprehensive monitoring framework would be put in place to ensure all financial institutions met standards for countering laundering.

People providing money transfer or currency change services would be subject to a registration regime. Detailed obligations would be set out in an enforceable code of practice.

Associate Minister of Justice Clayton Cosgrove said this week he made no apologies for the delays, which he said had been made in full consultation with FATF.

He said huge costs surrounding compliance had been foreshadowed for some years for transactions by individuals.

He decided in May that a framework could not be put together without some cost modelling. Accounting firm Deloitte had been contracted to do the model and its findings were expected in the next week or so.

The introduction of legislation will apply first to banks and institutions, then later to businesses.

Cosgrove said there were early indications compliance wouldn't be anywhere near as costly as originally envisaged for banks and institutions. Figures in the hundreds of millions have been touted but he believed the annual figure would be about $104m across the banking and financial institution sector.

In doing the cost analysis there had been competitive pressures because banks did not want to reveal the minutiae of their procedures.

Cosgrove said this was exacerbated by the difficulty of costing something when institutions did not know what the framework was.

``We have to do it to meet our international obligations but I didn't want to come out and say, right boys, this is what we are doing and to hell with the cost,'' he said.

``If the government had produced a draft framework without context business would have said, `you are not taking any notice of us'.''

Cosgrove said the new legislation was not the only thing in the pot to combat terrorism.

Financial institutions will be required under the new regime to comply with amendments to the Financial Transaction Reporting Act (1996) requiring verification and retaining information about the identity of the originator or wire transfers. Other legislation includes the Terrorism Suppression Amendment Bill.

Source: Business Day
on Thursday, May 3, 2012
Nzherald- A Christchurch accountant and author who wrote a best-selling book on tax saving has been jailed on fraud and money-laundering charges.

NZPA- Christchurch District Court Judge Michael Crosbie yesterday jailed Peter Fergus Sibbald, 47, for three years after he pleaded guilty to five charges of dishonestly using documents and one count of money-laundering.

Sibbald netted some $560,000 from his swindling which he blew on gambling and personal debts, The Press newspaper reported.

Judge Crosbie said Sibbald worked part-time as an accountant for a charitable organisation, which has been granted name suppression, and had authority to sign cheques.

Sibbald used $435,000 of the organisation's money for his own purposes, including settling personal debts.

Ultimately the organisation did not lose because it was insured against employee theft, but it was a significant breach of trust, the judge said.

Sibbald disguised $143,200 by laundering it through his partner's account.

He also held tax agencies for eight companies, and between 2002 and 2005 filed GST returns leading to an inflated payout. The IRD paid out $118,000, which was $107,000 too much, the judge said.

The court was told Sibbald took steps to conceal his misappropriations from the organisation and the offending was only discovered by his successor. A total of $560,000 was fraudulently obtained, spent on maintaining a lifestyle and repaying debt.

Lawyer James Rapley said Sibbald had already paid reparation of $144,000. He had shown remorse, had confessed when interviewed by the Serious Fraud Office, and pleaded guilty.

Sibbald's first book - Slash Your Taxes Now - made the bestseller list in 2004, proving a hit with people trying to find legitimate ways to save money on their taxes. It was written in consultation with the IRD.

http://www.amlosphere.com/australia/aml/tax-saving-author-jailed-on-fraud-money-laundering-charges.html
on Tuesday, March 27, 2012
They talked in code. Cash was "gemoras." Money-laundering contacts were "washing machines." They met in cars, on a Brooklyn street corner, inside a bakery, and in a synagogue.

Tens of thousands of dollars in cash was transported in plastic bags, in boxes of Apple Jacks and Cinnabon Crunch cereal, and even a box decorated with Power Rangers stickers.

The men the FBI arrested July 23 and charged with being part of a massive international money-laundering scheme were, for all intent and purpose, "crime bosses," acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra Jr. said.

But at least several of them were, in fact, religious leaders in the tight-knit Syrian Jewish communities of Deal and Brooklyn, N.Y. They stand accused of using Jewish charities they controlled to launder millions of dollars in cash.

Court papers indicate that five rabbis and several other men were laundering money for an FBI cooperating witness who told them he needed to hide profits of his counterfeit handbag company, which produced knock-off versions of Prada, Gucci and Canali bags, which the witness said were sold for hundreds of dollars.

Sources have identified the witness as Solomon Dwek, 36, of Ocean Township, a disgraced real estate mogul who was arrested in May 2006 and charged with bank fraud. Dwek is accused of cashing a bad check for $25.2 million at a drive-in lane at PNC Bank branch in Eatontown. The bank spotted him the money, most of which he moved to other accounts. The bank was left with a $21 million loss when the check bounced, according to the FBI.

Brad Simon, a former federal prosecutor and assistant U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said he is surprised the government's case appears to rely so heavily on the testimony of one key witness with a checkered past.

"This guy, at least from a defense attorney's point of view, seems like a treasure trove for defense purposes," said Simon, who is now a criminal defense attorney who represents clients accused of white collar crimes. "I would love to have the opportunity to cross-examine this guy."

Speaking to Brooklyn Rabbis Lavel Schwartz and Mordchai Fish in his car parked on a borough street in September 2008, the FBI's witness told them that a $50,000 check he was giving them to launder was "from the profits from the bags and the PNC," according to criminal complaints.

Fish, 56, and Schwartz, 57, both have been charged with money laundering.

The witness first infiltrated the money-laundering network, and then, in July 2007, began representing himself as a developer and the owner of a tile business to public officials in Hudson County, according to U.S. Attorney Marra.

The witness was eventually introduced to a web of public officials, council and mayoral candidates, and their associates, who took bribes in return for pledging their assistance in getting the witness's projects approved, or in steering contracts to him, Marra said.

When speaking to the targets of the money-laundering operation, Dwek openly discussed his bankruptcy problems, as well as the fact that he was involved in illegal businesses and bank frauds, according to sources and court records.

Dwek told the targets that his ongoing bankruptcy proceedings meant he had to conceal cash and assets, and that some of the money he needed to launder came from his "bank schnookie deals," a reference to bank fraud.

Prosecutors said they have hundreds of hours of video and audio recordings documenting much of the money laundering and bribes.

Marra called the money-laundering case "unprecedented" in the "number and prominence of the individuals involved."

The rabbis and their associates continued working with the witness even though they sometimes expressed concern about the possibility of getting caught.

In March, the witness was driving Fish to a Brooklyn meeting with Levi Deutsch, an Israeli who supplied cash for Fish's money-laundering operations. When the witness mentioned cross streets to which they were headed, Fish became nervous, according to court records.

"Don't even say the street. . . . in this car," Fish said, according to the complaints. The witness reassured Fish that "there's nothing. I had (the car) swept. Don't worry about it," to which Fish replied, "swept, shmept."

Latest corruption probe

The arrests marked the third phase of the "Operation Bid Rig," investigation by the FBI, the IRS Criminal Investigation Division and the U.S. Attorney's Office that began in Monmouth and Ocean counties 10 years ago.

The initial investigation became public in 2002 with the guilty plea of Ocean Township Mayor Terrence Weldon, who admitted extorting cash from several developers to influence approval of projects.

Forty-eight public officials have been convicted since the Operation Bid Rig investigation started in 1999.

On Thursday, another 44 people, including three mayors, two assemblymen, a Lakewood housing inspector and five rabbis were charged as part of a two-pronged investigation into political corruption and money laundering. Local Assemblyman Daniel M. Van Pelt, R-Ocean, was arrested on a charge of accepting $10,000 in a bribe.
Israeli cash

To start the money laundering, Dwek handed over checks — often made out to charities run by the religious leaders — and said they were proceeds of his illegal activities, sources and court papers indicate.

Three of the rabbis had connections to cash sources in Israel, and for a fee, those men in Israel made money available through "cash houses" run out of Brooklyn homes, offices and a bakery, according to court documents.

The men who ran those cash houses obtained the money at the direction of the co-conspirators in Israel, then gave the funds to the rabbis in Deal and Brooklyn, according to court papers.

The religious leaders took their cut, generally 10 percent, then turned over the remainder to the FBI witness, according to court papers.

During one meeting in Brooklyn, Eliahu Ben Haim, 58, of Long Branch, the principal rabbi of Congregation Ohel Yaacob in Deal who is accused of laundering $1.5 million, spoke with the witness about his cash source in Israel.

Ben Haim said he talked to the man every day or every other day, and said in the past four years, the Israeli man had the rabbi send out wires, under different names, all over the world, from Australia to New Zealand to Uganda, according to the FBI's complaint.

"It's unbelievable. I never saw anything like it," Ben Haim said, according to court documents. "I mean every country imaginable. Turkey, you can't believe it. . . . All different names. It's never the same name. . . . Switzerland, everywhere, France, everywhere, Spain . . . China, Japan."

In another method, the witness would bring a check to two other rabbis, Saul Kassin, 87, and Edmond Nahum, 56, principal rabbi at the Synagogue of Deal, according to prosecutors. Kassin is the spiritual leader of 75,000 Syrian Jews in Brooklyn.

Prosecutors said the rabbis would write the witness checks from a charity bank account for a slightly smaller amount, payable to the entity of his choice.

The witness then cashed the Kassin checks through Ben Haim, authorities said.

Criminal complaints say Kassin laundered more than $200,000 and Nahum laundered about $185,000.

Lawyers for the two men said they are innocent.

Nahum's attorney, Justin P. Walder, said the rabbi looks forward to clearing his name at trial. The rabbi has headed the Deal synagogue for many years, is well-established in the community and is married with four children, he said.

Walder did not mention Dwek by name, but said his client had been taken advantage of by a man who had known the rabbi for a long time.

"We intend to establish that his goodness was utilized by a person who was seeking to be absolved for his immense wrongful conduct by implicating another," Walder said. "Obviously, this man, under the system that exists in the federal court, the way he can get the best deal for himself is to implicate another, and obviously he took advantage of the rabbi."

Source: APP.COM
on Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Two Australian entrepreneurs who laundered millions of dollars through New Zealand banks are to pay the Australian Tax Office over $NZ40 million in tax and penalties.

A former director of Murchison Metals and backer of the Sydney Swans, Phillip Grimaldi, will pay more than $A36m in tax and penalties, and Sydney property developer Garry Bonaccorso has agreed to pay $A3.5 million after the pair funnelled millions of dollars through a series of New Zealand bank accounts.

The money was disguised as consultancy and management fees when it left Australia, and was then sent back disguised as a loan, the Sydney Morning Herald reported today.

Eight ANZ accounts and two at Bank of New Zealand were used as part of the scheme.

Mr Grimaldi had $A14.3 million in these New Zealand accounts, while Mr Bonaccorso had $A220,000 in them.

More than $A1.25 million in an ANZ account in Auckland in the name of International Finance Trust Company was from the sale of 300,000 shares in Murchison Metals in June 2007.

Mr Grimaldi used the proceeds of the scheme to buy a $A300,000 Bentley, a $A645,000 boat and to fund a shopping spree at British retailer Harrods.

A separate court action has been brought by the New South Wales Crime Commission in the NSW Supreme Court, alleging that the funds are the proceeds of crime.

If they are found to have committed fraud the two men face up to five years in jail.

Both invested in the alleged money-laundering scheme, which was promoted by the Australian accountant Robert Agius, 59, based in Vanuatu.

The tax avoidance and money-laundering scheme was exposed by a joint taskforce of the federal police and the Tax Office, which has been tapping phones and raiding offices.

The pair are the largest clients of Mr Agius so far to face court orders to pay unpaid taxes.

According to a statement filed by a federal police investigator, Arthur Moerman, in the criminal case against Mr Agius, the scheme was a "round robin scheme".

An "initial analysis of all foreign company bank accounts operated by Mr Agius" indicated that more than $A100 million had been moved through them on behalf of hundreds of clients since November 2000.

Mr Grimaldi is alleged to have used Vanuatu companies, including RLB Investments, Iron Investments, Iron International and International Finance Trust Company to evade tax. RLB Investments was a big shareholder in Murchison Metals.

International Finance Trust Company made more than $10 million in payments to Mr Grimaldi in the two years to 2008.

A fortnight ago Justice Minister Simon Power told Parliament that New Zealand had been used to launder millions of dollars of criminal proceeds, as the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism Bill passed its first reading on a unanimous vote.

"Last year, I am advised, New Zealand was used by an offender to launder almost $120 million from Australia through New Zealand and into Vanuatu," he said.

Source: guide2.co.nz
on Saturday, March 3, 2012
New Zealand has been used to launder millions of dollars of criminal proceeds, Justice Minister Simon Power has told parliament.

He has introduced a bill that tightens the laws around money laundering and told MPs the international Financial Action Taskforce had set standards and was demanding compliance from all countries.

"New Zealand stands in real danger of being publicly criticised for its lack of progress to date," he said during the first reading debate on the bill.

"This bill will demonstrate New Zealand's dedication to global anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing efforts."

Power said some might argue it was not a problem in New Zealand.

"Unfortunately, this is not the case," he said.

"Last year, I am advised, New Zealand was used by an offender to launder almost $120 million from Australia through New Zealand and into Vanuatu."

Power said the bill's new powers would enable law enforcement agencies to tackle trans-national organised crime head on and worked alongside the recently passed Criminal Proceeds Recovery Act.

"Conservative estimates put the proceeds of domestic crime at between $500 million and $1 billion every year," he said.

"Organised criminal groups in New Zealand use sophisticated commercial and financial tools as part of their criminal offending."

Power said the bill's provisions would help the fight against illegal drugs, particularly methamphetamine.

The bill works by requiring businesses that deal with the public to put in place systems which prevent or detect transactions made by criminals trying to launder money.

It sets out "know your customer" requirements and puts record keeping obligations on financial institutions and casinos.

It also obliges the financial sector to report all suspicious activity to the Financial Intelligence Unit.

"The government recognises that the bill will place additional costs on New Zealand businesses at a time when many are coming under strain," Power said.

"However, without this bill we could face increased cost for crown borrowing, higher thresholds for New Zealand businesses trying to access international capital as well as the higher interest rates that may follow such increased scrutiny."

The Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism Bill passed its first reading on a unanimous vote on Tuesday night.

It has been sent to the foreign affairs and defence select committee for scrutiny and public submissions.

Source: TVNZ
on Wednesday, February 15, 2012
A bill that boosts measures to counter money laundering by criminal gangs and organised crime was passed into law today.

Justice Minister Simon Power said the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism Act would help tackle financial and drug-related crime by helping police detect and trace the profits of organised crime groups.

Among its provisions is a customer check and reporting regime that banks, finance companies and casinos will have to follow.

"The Act enhances our ability to investigate organised crime by following the illegal money trail through financial systems and goes hand-in-hand with the Criminal Proceeds (Recovery) Act passed in April," he said.

"The Act will also ensure that New Zealand's financial sector continues to be attractive to legitimate international investors and is not seen as a safe haven for organised criminals and tax evaders."

The legislation implements measures established by the FATF, the body that sets international standards for combating money laundering and terrorist financing.

Source: Guide
on Monday, January 29, 2007
Ministry of Justice (MOJ) officials met yesterday with five members of the Asia-Pacific Group on Money Laundering (APG).

The group was in Taiwan to investigate government agencies and private institutes involved in prosecution, investigation and finance, in order to assess their enforcement of internationally accepted standards on money laundering and the financing of terrorism.

Vice Justice Minister Wang Tien-sheng said that although Taiwan is shut out of most international organizations because it is not a member of the UN, it knows the importance of combating money laundering.

Wang noted that the business of the APG is closely related to several UN international conventions and that the MOJ has sent officials to APG annual conferences since it was established in 1997.

He said it was the first time Taiwan had undergone an assessment by the APG.

The MOJ has convened meetings with the Central Bank, the Judicial Yuan, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Financial Supervisory Commission since June 2005 in anticipation of the assessment, he said.

The MOJ has also convened inter-agency meetings to regularly examine Taiwan's domestic policies as well as their implementation, in line with UN conventions and recommendations.

He noted that the MOJ formulated a draft bill on amendments to a money-laundering prevention law that was sent to the Cabinet for screening last October. The draft bill, as well as an anti-terrorism action law, are expected to be legislated soon.

Wang said that to assist the APG in its assessment, the ministry had arranged for the group to call on related government agencies as well as private organizations so that they can have a comprehensive understanding of Taiwan's related policies and their implementation.

Premier Su Tseng-chang will also meet with the group, which is comprised of legal and financial experts from Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, Fiji and the Cook Islands, to highlight Taiwan's determination in monitoring its financial state, he said.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2007/01/30/2003346913
on Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Kiwibank chief executive Sam Knowles is concerned proposed money laundering laws will stifle competition among New Zealand's banks.

The Ministry of Justice is considering submissions on proposals to toughen up legislation dealing with identification requirements and reporting of transactions.

The proposals are intended to bring New Zealand law into line with 40 recommendations from the international Financial Action Task Force which aim to tackle money laundering and the financing of international terrorism.

Mr Knowles said the Government's proposed regime would favour the established banking heavyweights, who were defending their market share against challengers such as Kiwibank, The New Zealand Herald reported today.

"Our concern is that, certainly in some of the money laundering areas, that will push up the identification requirements, making it harder to do transactions and open accounts and over time that increases the barriers to switching," Mr Knowles said.

He estimated the type of payments the Government was trying to capture was a tiny percentage of the total, and did not merit the "highly expensive processes" being suggested.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/3903730a13.html
on Friday, December 15, 2006
December 15, 2006

A federal judge set bail at $5 million yesterday for a West Windsor businessman who, authorities allege, defrauded the government by diverting $13.4 million of payroll taxes and worker compensation premiums into his own bank account.

Allen Hilly, 44, a native of Iraq who is living legally in the U.S., operated a number of companies hired by small- to mid-sized businesses looking to outsource human resource and administrative functions, federal authorities said.

Between February and November of this year, Hilly allegedly collected employment taxes weekly from more than 100 clients, but ordered the money transferred to his own account rather than to the Internal Revenue Service, according to a criminal complaint filed by the FBI in U.S. District Court in Newark. He is charged with money laundering and wire fraud.

The complaint identifies Hilly as managing partner of Professional Employer's Holding LLC, which operates a number of subsidiaries in various states. According to the complaint, Hily told employees he intended to "blow up" the subsidiaries and restructure or close them by the end of the year.

The complaint also states Hilly is the sole signatory on the Bank of America account found to contain the $13.4 million. It was held in the name of Leading Edge Holdings Corp., a company described as a "shell company that is the alter ego for Allen Hilly."

Hilly was arrested at his Mercer County home late Wednesday. The FBI learned he was preparing to leave the country after being advised by his bank that authorities had seized his money, a law enforcement source said.

Yesterday, Hilly made a first appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Claire Cecchi in Newark. A meek-looking figure in business attire, he sat quietly at a table as his attorney and the government's attorney sparred over everything from his citizenship status to his character.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Marion Percell termed Hilly a serious flight risk because he is facing a maximum prison term of 20 years on each of the 158 counts with which he is charged.

She told the judge Hilly had been evasive and untruthful in interviews, claiming vaguely to have been born in the "Mideast," to be earning an annual salary of $60,000 and to be possessing only $15,000 in assets.

Hilly drives a 2006 Porsche Cayenne which, "I'm told costs more than his alleged salary," Percell said. He is also a permanent resident of the U.S., not a citizen, she said.

The government has "very powerful" evidence that Hilly had committed "an extremely large fraud," Percell said. The evidence includes copies of e-mails Hilly sent employees in which he "repeatedly ordered" them not to channel money to the government, she said.

"By Jan. 31, every employee of these companies will receive a W2 saying 'zero dollars' were withheld," she said. "So it's not surprising ... that, yesterday morning, he told his employees this was it, fire all the employees, we're shutting down."

Percell also told the judge Hilly had "talked about" investing the seized money in businesses in England, New Zealand and the Cayman Islands.

Kevin Marino, the attorney representing Hilly, attacked Percell for painting his client as a "notorious, horrible flight risk."

Hilly is a law-abiding, naturalized U.S. citizen who has lived with his wife in the same house for 13 years and has an 8-year-old son who attends the Far Hills Country Day School.

"Allen Hilly is an entrepreneur," Marino said. "Does he represent a flight risk? He does not."

Marino told the court he has known Hilly personally for 18 months, as he represented him in "commercial litigation." Later, outside court, he declined to characterize the nature of the litigation.

"It may seem strange he doesn't know exactly where he was born. He told them 'Mideast,'" Marino said. But in reality, many children of emigrant parents are not sure of their birthplace, he said.

"This is an offensive proceeding, because it's cavalier," Marino said. "He's never been in trouble before. He should be set free."

But the judge approved the request, calling Hilly a serious flight risk. She also ordered Hilly and his wife, Rosa, to surrender their passports.

A preliminary hearing in the case has not yet been scheduled.

http://www.nj.com/news/ledger/jersey/index.ssf?/base/news-5/1166161964211060.xml&coll=1&thispage=2