KUALA LUMPUR, May 29 ― Unlicensed money exchangers in Malaysia had aided
the operators of a global currency exchange that ran a US$6 billion
(RM18.33 billion) money-laundering operation online, a hub for criminals
peddling in everything from stolen identities to child pornography, The
New York Times (NYT) reported.
Source from (The Malaysian Insider): http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/malaysia-linked-to-worlds-largest-money-laundering-scheme-nyt-reports/
Published: May 29, 2013
Asian currency notes are seen in this photo illustration in Singapore January 17, 2013. — Reuters pic
The currency exchange called Liberty Reserve is believed to be the
world’s largest cyber money-laundering case and was based in the United
States but operated well beyond the country’s borders as well as
traditional international banking regulations, providing easy and
anonymous cover increasingly sought by criminals to fund their
activities, the widely-read daily reported, citing American law
enforcement officers.
Liberty Reserve was responsible for laundering billions of dollars
over the past seven years, conducting 55 million transactions that
involved millions of customers around the world, including about 200,000
in the United States, according to US federal prosecutors who were
reported to have announced the charges against the currency exchange in
Manhattan yesterday.
According to NYT which cited the charges, Liberty Reserve’s system was designed to let people move sums large and small around the world just by setting up an email address, which did not require the user’s identity to even be validated.
Liberty Reserve also did not take or make cash payments directly but used “third-party ‘exchangers’” that “tended to be unlicensed money-transmitting businesses without significant government oversight or regulation, concentrated in Malaysia, Russia, Nigeria and Vietnam”.
Still citing from the charge sheet, the NYT reported that the
“third-party exchangers” would take and make payments, and then credit
or debit the Liberty Reserve account, allowing the latter to avoid
collecting any banking information on its clients and not leave a
“centralized financial paper trail.”
The people who accepted Liberty Reserve’s currency were
“overwhelmingly criminal in nature,” according to the indictment as
reported by the NYT.
“They included, for example: traffickers of stolen credit card data
and personal identity information; peddlers of various types of online
Ponzi and get-rich-quick schemes; computer hackers for hire; unregulated
gambling enterprises; and underground drug-dealing Web sites,” the
daily cited the charges as reading.
“As alleged, the only liberty that Liberty Reserve gave many of its
users was the freedom to commit crimes — the coin of its realm was
anonymity, and it became a popular hub for fraudsters, hackers and
traffickers,” Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan was
quoted saying at the news conference in Manhattan yesterday.
No comments:
Post a Comment