Huge Drug Euro Laundering Scheme Found; LE's Can't Touch It

phr

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Huge Drug Euro Laundering Scheme Found
CURT ANDERSON
The Associated Press
2.15.08



MIAMI - Every day, American Airlines Flight 914 takes off from Bogota, Colombia, at 8:20 a.m. and touches down at the Miami airport at noon. In the jet's cargo hold are usually bags and bags of euros that investigators say are part of a huge $1.4 billion cocaine money-laundering scheme.

Crime is happening right on schedule in Miami, almost every day, federal prosecutors say. But so far, despite nearly four years of investigation, they have apparently been unable to build a strong enough case to stop it.

Instead, they are attacking the problem piecemeal. The U.S. Justice Department this week went to federal court in Miami seeking forfeiture of nearly $11 million seized last June and July by federal agents, who used drug-sniffing dogs to find cocaine residue on some of the cash.

The money represents only a tiny fraction of a huge scheme to launder euros from the sale of Colombian cocaine in Europe, Justice Department attorney Lea Carlisle said in the document. She said the total coming through U.S. airports could reach 1 billion euros a year, or about $1.4 billion at current exchange rates.

"This seizure represents a small but telling snapshot," Carlisle said. She declined to comment beyond the court document filed Tuesday.

The complex arrangement involves money exchange businesses in Colombia, commercial jetliners from the U.S. and Britain and financial firms in Miami and London. When the circle is complete, Colombian drug cartels cloak the true source of millions of dollars.

Vast quantities of cocaine are smuggled each year from Colombia to Spain and then sold throughout Europe, where use is growing dramatically. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration says cocaine sells in Europe for twice what it brings in this country, generating large amounts of cash.

"All of this means they have a new problem , laundering their euros," said Bruce Bagley, an expert on drug trafficking and chairman of international studies at the University of Miami. "This new problem has led them to these complex daisy-chain money laundering activities."

Huge amounts of cash are moved around the globe all the time, most of it legitimate. But the DEA, Justice Department and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement began investigating in 2004 after agents noticed astronomical amounts of euro notes coming into Miami from Bogota.

Still, no business or person has been charged with a crime. Convicting someone requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt, a tougher legal standard than the one for confiscating suspected drug money.

Moreover, to search a bulk cash shipment, U.S. investigators need a warrant. And they cannot get one unless they can show probable cause to believe it's dirty money.

Bagley said the lack of criminal charges is a sign that investigators have yet to build enough evidence against any conspirators, something that often depends on inside informants or drug defendants looking to make deals for lighter sentences.

"The U.S. government is behind the curve on this," Bagley said. "This is a test case to see how far they can get."

According to the U.S. government, here is how the laundering scheme works:

Euro notes generated by cocaine sales in Europe are first smuggled illegally into Colombia. Then, low-level couriers known as "smurfs" bring the cash in small amounts at various times to a number of different Colombian money exchanges known as "casas de cambio," or "houses of exchange."

The Colombian exchanges then fly the euros to the U.S., often after falsifying the paperwork. A good chunk of the money arrives aboard American Flight 914 each day under an arrangement with a Miami-based exchange business, InterTransfers Inc.

Once in Miami, the euros are transferred by armored car, counted, repackaged and put on a flight to London, where they are converted into dollars and eventually transferred back through Miami and on to Colombia. Ultimately, they become "clean" pesos for the cocaine traffickers, according to the court filing.

The Colombian Embassy in Washington did not return a phone call seeking comment.

Neither InterTransfers nor American, nor any of their employees, have been accused of any wrongdoing. American spokesman Tim Smith said the airline has "distinct security procedures" for currency shipments but declined to discuss them.

"American Airlines assists law enforcement authorities in any way possible any time we are asked to in cases such as this," Smith said.

Ramiro Miqueli, InterTransfers president and chief executive, said his company has been assured in writing by the Justice Department that it is not a target of the investigation. He said about $1.5 million of the firm's money seized last summer is being returned without fine or penalty.

"InterTransfers has been found not to have violated any U.S. law," Miqueli said.

A major red flag is the frequent appearance of the 500-euro note, which allows a lot of money to be shipped without taking up a lot of space. The 500-euro note , equal to about $700 , is rare in legitimate transactions and often turns up in suspicious real estate and financial deals in Spain.

Colombian regulators recently concluded that 90 percent of the 500-euro notes in circulation outside Europe are being smuggled into Colombia.

As the U.S. investigation progressed, federal agents last year used their dogs Frankie and Sox to detect cocaine residue on euro shipments seized at the Miami airport. One seizure alone involved seven bags. One of the shipments contained 12,224 of the telltale 500-euro notes. The money is shipped in sealed, tamper-resistant plastic bags the size of duffel bags.

Those seizures are now the subject of the U.S. forfeiture action, a civil action that requires the government only show that it's more likely than not that the money is ill-gotten.

The Justice Department has received claims for the cash from casas de cambio in Colombia that say the money is legitimate. A judge will sort out those claims.

Link!
 
yeah I thought something like 99% of all money has cocaine residue on it. Extremely small but there nonetheless.

Wait, wouldn't this make American currency ILLEGAL in Dubai???
 
qwe said:
if you can forfeit money for that, we're all technically poor... including teetotalers

Yea, as soon as I read this as their proponant for a case, I raised quite a few eyebrows. Highly dubious, they may know whats up by other means, but this is just typical American ignorance to latch on to an unattainable theorum for speculative prosecution. Like you've said qwe, we'd all be indicted for drug trafficking. DEA running short of options as of late, no?
 
^
They're just trying to use whatever is possible to confiscate the money. I think I read that their funding got slightly cut this year. Nothing big, but they're used to decent increases every year.

I'm sure they've been told to look out for forfeiture possibilities...
 
^Agreed. I guess busting highschool kids not acclimated to their constitutional rights would take a bit more time and hustling.

God this is depressing conversation (no fault of OURS, mind you).
 
I don't see how they are cleaning the money. The euros go to columbia then to miami, then to London where they are changed to dollars and sent back to miami. Then they are sent to colombia and changed to pesos, is what the article says. So how does that clean the money? All that did was change it from euros to pesos the long way, it didn't make it seem legit.

I guess I should go hang out with the guys from office space. Do we know any coke dealers?
 
bulldog8b said:
So how does that clean the money? All that did was change it from euros to pesos the long way, it didn't make it seem legit.

All that money laundering involves is moving the money through a number of legitimate financial transactions making it harder for law enforcement agencies to tell that it is money from illegal activities when it is eventually banked by it's owner. Exchanging currency is a simple way of moving the money through these transactions without having to set up front companies at a cost.
 
Cleaning the money is probably one of the harder tasks when your doing so much business. I know people like the IRA (who robbed the Northern Bank) had 26.6 million pounds to dispose of. All I know is that they built a shopping mall somewhere in Eastern Europe and paid all the workers cash. Now, via front companies and so on, they take rent on all the shops...
 
haribo1 said:
Cleaning the money is probably one of the harder tasks when your doing so much business. I know people like the IRA (who robbed the Northern Bank) had 26.6 million pounds to dispose of. All I know is that they built a shopping mall somewhere in Eastern Europe and paid all the workers cash. Now, via front companies and so on, they take rent on all the shops...
^^^^ Not so hard after all, is it? ;)
 
omen_owen mk2 said:
All that money laundering involves is moving the money through a number of legitimate financial transactions making it harder for law enforcement agencies to tell that it is money from illegal activities when it is eventually banked by it's owner. Exchanging currency is a simple way of moving the money through these transactions without having to set up front companies at a cost.


Right, but if all they are doing is what the article says they would get caught in no time. They would have to have a front company or something. Then that company could write down that it charged $5 for every $1 of product they sold. Just changing the money into different foreign currencies doesn't do anything to hide it's origin.
 
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