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How does money laundering work? - Delena D. Spann

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    As one of the most notorious gangsters
    in history,
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    Al Capone presided over a vast
    and profitable empire of organized crime.
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    When he was finally put on trial,
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    the most he could be convicted of
    was tax evasion.
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    The nearly $100 million a year,
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    that's 1.4 billion in today's currency,
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    that Capone had earned from
    illegal gambling,
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    bootlegging,
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    brothels,
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    and extortion,
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    would have served as evidence
    of his crimes.
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    But the money was nowhere
    to be found.
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    Capone and his associates had hidden it
    through investments in various businesses
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    whose ultimate ownership
    couldn't be proven,
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    like cash-only laundromats.
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    In fact, those laundromats are part of
    the reason for the name of this activity,
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    money laundering.
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    Money laundering came
    to be the term for any process
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    that cleans illegally obtained funds
    of their dirty criminal origins,
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    allowing them to be used within
    the legal economy.
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    But Capone wasn't the first
    to launder money.
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    In fact, this practice is about
    as old as money itself.
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    Merchants hid their riches from
    tax collecters,
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    and pirates sought to sell their bounty
    without drawing attention
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    to how they got it.
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    With the recent arrival
    of virtual currencies,
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    offshore banking,
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    the darknet,
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    and global markets,
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    schemes have become much more complex.
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    Although modern money laundering
    methods vary greatly,
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    most share three basic steps:
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    placement,
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    layering,
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    and integration.
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    Placement is where illegally obtained
    money is converted into assets
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    that seem legitimate.
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    That's often done by depositing funds
    into a bank account
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    registered to an anonymous corporation
    or a professional middleman.
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    This step is where criminals are often
    most vulnerable to detection
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    since they introduce massive wealth
    into the financial system
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    seemingly out of nowhere.
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    The second step, layering, involves
    using multiple transactions
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    to further distance the funds
    from their origin.
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    This can take the form of transfers
    between multiple accounts,
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    or the purchase of tradable property,
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    like expensive cars,
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    artwork,
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    and real estate.
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    Casinos, where large sums of money
    change hands every second,
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    are also popular venues for layering.
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    A money launderer may have their
    gambling balance made available
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    at casino chain's locations
    in other countries,
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    or work with the employees
    to rig games.
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    The last step, integration, allows clean
    money to re-enter the mainstream economy
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    and to benefit the original criminal.
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    They might invest it into a legal business
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    claiming payment by producing
    fake invoices,
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    or even start a bogus charity,
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    placing themselves
    on the board of directors
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    with an exorbitant salary.
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    Money laundering itself
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    wasn't officially recognized as a federal
    crime in the United States until 1986.
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    Before that point, the government
    needed to prosecute a related crime,
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    like tax evasion.
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    From 1986 on, they could confiscate
    wealth simply by demonstrating
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    that concealment had occurred,
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    which had a positive effect on prosecuting
    major criminal operations,
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    like drug traffickers.
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    However, a legal shift has raised concerns
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    involving privacy
    and government surveillance.
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    Today, the United Nations,
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    national governments,
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    and various nonprofits
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    fight against money laundering,
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    yet the practice continues to play
    a major role in global crime.
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    And the most high-profile instances
    of money laundering
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    have involved
    not just private individuals,
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    but major financial institutions
    and government officials.
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    No one knows for sure the total
    amount of money
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    that's laundered on a yearly basis,
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    but some organizations estimate it to be
    in the hundreds of billions of dollars.
Title:
How does money laundering work? - Delena D. Spann
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:47

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