• A welcome HC ruling
  • No let-up in price spiral
  • No Pakistanis, no problem
  • Tamim shines in New Year
  • Food grain production and self-sufficiency
  • Improved governance necessary to address anti-minority sentiment
  • Film industry hopes for a better future
  • Piracy must be controlled to revive music industry: musicians, producers
  • Fire mars first day of DITF
  • No reflection on essential commodity prices
  • Youths want January 1st as ‘World Ethics Day’
  • Airport in Aleppo closed due to rebel attacks
  • Delhi gang rape triggers big rush to acquire arms
  • BB launches online monitoring
  • CJ reshuffles 25 benches, no bench given to Justice Nizamul
  • BSMMU expands evening specialised service
  • Govt, ACC in question over big scams
  • ACC sues 18 executives of 5 more cos, 17 bank officials
  • No informal talks take place with govt: Khaleda
  • Govt schools fail to make their mark
HOME  BUSINESS
  
Print Friendly and PDF

Colombian drug traffickers used HSBC to launder money

Business Desk

A file photo shows a man using a mobile phone in a branch of HSBC in St Helier, Jersey recently. — Reuters photo A file photo shows a man using a mobile phone in a branch of HSBC in St Helier, Jersey recently. — Reuters photo

When several Colombian men were indicted in January 2010 on money-laundering charges, the case in Brooklyn federal court drew little attention, reports Reuters.
It looked like a bust of another nexus of drug traffickers and money launderers, with mainly small-time operatives paying the price for their crimes.
One of the men was Julio Chaparro, a 48-year-old father of four who owned three factories that made children’s clothing in Colombia.
But to US authorities the case was anything but ordinary. Chaparro, prosecutors alleged, helped run a money-laundering ring for drug traffickers that took advantage of lax controls at UK-based international banking group HSBC Holdings Plc. It was one of the most important leads for US investigators pursuing a case against the bank that eventually led to a $1.9 billion settlement on December 11.
Chaparro was ‘basically putting the orchestra together’ and investigators saw ‘him as a major player in terms of cleaning a lot of money,’ said James Hayes, special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations at US Immigration and Customs Enforcement in New York. Known as ICE, the agency and its task force led the probe.
The Colombian’s lawyer, Ephraim Savitt, said Chaparro was a middleman in the operation, but disputed the extent of his client’s role, saying he was the ‘page turner of sheet music for the conductor.’
Chaparro, who was arrested in Colombia in 2010 and extradited to the United States in 2011, pleaded guilty to a money-laundering conspiracy count in May and is awaiting sentencing in 2013.
An HSBC spokesman declined comment.
Much about the trail that drug traffickers used to move US dollars - the proceeds from drug sales - through HSBC and other banks remains unclear. By design, the process is layered to evade detection.
But a review of confidential investigative records that originate from two US Attorney office probes and federal court filings in New York and California, as well as interviews with senior law-enforcement officials, shows how investigators tracing the activities of people who allegedly worked with Chaparro were able to expose large-scale money laundering at one of the world’s biggest banks.
The federal law-enforcement task force — named after El Dorado, the mythical city of gold in South America — used wire taps, email and computer searches, information from at least one inside source, and old-fashioned surveillance, to piece together the ring’s operations.
Drug cartels sold narcotics in the United States and routed the cash to Mexico, often using couriers to smuggle it across the border. That cash would then be put into bank accounts at HSBC’s Mexico unit, where large deposits could be made without arousing suspicion, according to US Department of Justice documents.
In one filing, US prosecutors said, Chaparro and others allegedly utilized accounts at HSBC Mexico to deposit ‘drug dollars and then wire those funds to ... businesses located in the United States and elsewhere. The funds were then used to purchase consumer goods, which were exported to South America and resold to generate ‘clean’ cash.’
In a typical transaction, a middleman in a drug cartel would offer to deliver consumer goods, such as computers or washing machines, to Colombian businesses on favourable terms. Another person in the United States would buy the goods from firms using funds from drug trafficking, and fulfil those orders.
Money launderers exploited the laxness of HSBC in policing shadowy money flows, the Department of Justice said earlier this month. Failures included not conducting due diligence on customers, not adequately monitoring wire transfers or cash shipments and not having enough employees to run anti-money laundering systems. US Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer called the lapses ‘stunning failures of oversight.’
The situation was so bad, according to the Department of Justice, that in 2008, the head of HSBC’s Mexican operations was told by Mexican regulators that a local drug lord described the bank as ‘the place to launder money.’
The Chaparro probe, led by ICE and the Justice Department, converged over the past two years with two other investigations - led by federal prosecutors and investigators in West Virginia and by the Manhattan district attorney - resulting in this month’s settlement with HSBC.
HSBC and its employees avoided criminal indictments, as the bank agreed instead to a deferred-prosecution deal that forces it to strengthen controls and accept a compliance monitor.

Today, Chaparro sits in a federal detention centre in Brooklyn, reading the Bible and awaiting sentencing, said Savitt, a former US prosecutor in Brooklyn, who submitted a list of questions to Chaparro for Reuters.
‘He is contrite, regretful and ashamed about his crimes,’ Savitt said. ‘He wants to serve his time and rejoin his family. He understands that a prison term could prevent that from happening for many years.’
Under federal guidelines, he could face 15 to 18 years in prison.
The El Dorado federal task force, based in a building on the west side of Manhattan near Chelsea Piers, serves as an umbrella organization for some 250 law-enforcement officials from state, local and federal agencies.



Reader’s Comment

comments powered by Disqus
   
    Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Online Poll


Do you agree with the opposition camp that the government’s decision to impose a one-month ban on political meetings and processions is an ‘attack on democracy’?

  • Yes
  • No
  • No comment
Ajax Loader

Archives

Select MonthYear

May 2013

SunMonTueWedThuFri Sat
01020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031