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Autor Tema: Blanqueo Internacional Suiza-Francia, Hachís, Políticos y Judíos de Marruecos  (Leído 25376 veces)

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Re:Blanqueo Internacional Suiza-Francia, Hachís, Políticos y Judíos de Marruecos
« Respuesta #16 en: Octubre 18, 2012, 18:41:48 pm »
Tráfico de drogas, blanqueo de dinero y evasión de impuestos, todo en uno:

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Bank secrecy targeted in money laundering case   Geneva - not just a city of tourist attractions. height=210  Geneva - not just a city of tourist attractions. (Reuters)    by Mathieu van Berchem in Paris, swissinfo.ch A spectacular case involving French and Swiss citizens and linking drug smuggling, money laundering and tax evasion is likely to further tarnish Switzerland’s image as a “tax haven”, only too ready to accept “dirty money”.
  At the heart of the scandal on the Swiss side are two bankers, while in France most attention has been focussed on a Green Party politician, Florence Lamblin, deputy mayor of one of the arrondissements - or districts - of Paris.
 
On October 10, after a discreet seven month investigation, the French police detained 17 people. One of them, known only as M, is suspected of conducting a huge cannabis smuggling operation between Morocco and France. Lamblin for her part, is being questioned over possible money laundering.
 
The police discovered €400,000 (SFr484,000) in low-value notes in Lamblin’s flat and in safes belonging to her. She is one of eight French citizens suspected, at best, of having had assets in a Swiss bank account in order to hide them from the taxman, or, at worst, of having knowingly laundered drugs money.
 
The same day, M’s two brothers were taken into custody in Geneva. One is the managing director of GPF SA a small wealth management business, while the other works for the Geneva branch of the HSBC bank. Both are Swiss citizens of Moroccan origin. They were allegedly involved in recycling the proceeds from M’s drug smuggling operation in France.
 
 100 million euros  In Switzerland the case is being handled by four examining magistrates from Geneva, headed by the chief cantonal prosecutor, Yves Bertossa.
 
The sums involved are huge: the French police say the sum involved in the money laundering is about €40 million, while French Interior Minister Manuel Valls says that the drug smuggling must have brought in about €100 million.
 
The deal allegedly went like this: when approached by clients wanting to transfer money discreetly from Switzerland to France, the M brothers would suggest a quick meeting in a Paris café, during which the client would be given bags containing low-value bank notes – in exchange for an eight per cent commission.
 
It is not clear if the clients knew what was going on. Lamblin’s lawyer, Jérôme Boursican, says she did not.
 
“If anything, my client may be guilty of tax fraud, over the transfer back to France of a sum of €350,000 from a family inheritance which was placed in a Swiss bank account in 1920,” he explained.
 
 Banks distance themselves  Bankers in Geneva are anxious to refute suspicions that they have been lax.
 
The HSBC bank has confirmed that its employee was involved in the affair, but says that it has been “cooperating actively with the authorities about this over the past few months”. The Swiss newspaper Le Temps reports that GPF SA is about to dismiss the other brother.
 
“We were surprised that it should still be possible to do this today. This is a practice that has been forbidden by law for more than 20 years,” said Bernard Droux, chairman of the Geneva Financial Center foundation, the umbrella group for independent banks and wealth managers in Geneva.
 
“You can never rule out the possibility of black sheep in any profession. No international centre is totally protected from this kind of thing,” he told journalists on Wednesday.
 
He described Switzerland as being at the “forefront” of the fight against drug money, and said France and Switzerland had worked together well over the affair.
 
 Switzerland in the firing line  In an interview with the French news magazine Le Nouvel Observateur,  the well-known investigating magistrate, Eva Joly, described drug smuggling and tax evasion as "two sides of the same coin".
 
“What’s most interesting about this affair is that it shows the public the connection between tax fraud and money laundering,” she said.
 
“It’s unusual to have a case that illustrates so clearly what I’ve been saying for 20 years: you find the same middlemen involved with money laundering, embezzlement, corruption and drugs.”
 
She regretted that Switzerland did not consider simple tax evasion to be a matter that warranted international cooperation.
 
The French government has not so far reacted to the affair, although Budget Minister Jérôme Cahuzac announced measures aimed at helping officials involved in fighting tax fraud and evasion.
 
But in a country where successive governments, of whatever political colour, have been fighting tax evasion, the latest case could play into the hands of the enemies of Swiss banking secrecy, providing them with a simple message: tax evasion leads (sometimes) to organised crime.
 
  Mathieu van Berchem in Paris, swissinfo.ch
(adapted from French by Julia Slater)
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   The "compensation system" According to the Geneva prosecutor’s office, quoted by Le Matin newspaper, the three brothers who have now been arrested used the so-called “compensation” system to transfer money from France to Switzerland.
 
This is a way to transfer undeclared assets without leaving traces.
 
The organisation was based in Paris, where one brother was allegedly in contact with drug pushers in the suburbs. He was the one who collected the money.
 
It was then put in envelopes or bags and passed by agents to bank clients who wanted to get their money out of Switzerland without declaring it. Under this arrangement, neither side had to carry cash between Geneva and Paris.
 
After the handover, the sum would be deducted from their account in Switzerland. This money was then passed on to the drug traffickers via shell companies in the Bahamas and Panama.
 
The first brother, M, is resident in Paris. The other two were arrested in Geneva, along with a woman who was later released, but warned she could be required for further questioning.
 
The lawyer of the second brother, who worked at the GPF SA, says the cash handed over to bank customers in Paris was collected by his brother from Jewish communities in France who wanted to make donations to various individuals or religious schools.
 
She told the newspaper Le Temps that her client knew nothing about any cannabis smuggling.
 


http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/politics/foreign_affairs/Bank_secrecy_targeted_in_money_laundering_case.html?cid=33750772
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Re:Blanqueo Internacional Suiza-Francia, Hachís, Políticos y Judíos de Marruecos
« Respuesta #17 en: Noviembre 19, 2012, 13:57:15 pm »
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/nils-pratley-on-finance/2012/jul/17/hsbc-money-laundering-barclays

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HSBC money-laundering scandal almost puts Barclays in shade

Being accused by Senate of operating money-laundering conduit for 'drug kingpins and rogue nations' is as bad as it gets
It would be useful to hear from trade minister Lord Greeen - former HSBC chief executive and executive chairman. Photograph: Michael Caronna/Reuters

An alternative view of the great Libor scandal says it's a storm in a teacup and that everybody knew, or ought to have known, that banks will fiddle the rules when the game is refereed by their own ineffectual trade body.

This line is nonsense, of course, since we're talking about ugly deceit at the heart of financial system. Even so, the revelations about HSBC almost put Barclays in the shade.

Being accused by a US Senate committee of operating a money-laundering conduit for "drug kingpins and rogue nations" is as bad as it gets. What happened to the HSBC of legend, the dull bank led by upright conservative types who ensured they employed only similarly good chaps?

It seems that, in the period 2004-2010, HSBC's famous federation structure actually meant a management free-for-all. If you were the boss of, say, HSBC's unit in Mexico you were a mini-emperor, answerable to almost nobody. You were even in charge of your own compliance department.

The man at head office with the title "head of group compliance" was not allowed to barge into your office to ask what checks you had conducted to discover the true source of the very large dollar deposits coming into the bank.

The numbers are extraordinary. According to the Senate committee, HSBC accepted more than $15bn (£9.6bn) in bulk cash transactions from subsidiaries in Mexico, Russia and other countries at high risk of money laundering between mid-2006 and mid-2009 but failed to conduct proper checks.

To his credit, David Bagley, the head of group compliance in question, offered his resignation to the committee on Monday. He had been in his post since 2002 so one can understand why.

But it also appears that HSBC didn't give Bagley the powers to live up to his job title, reducing his status to one of adviser. "We have sometimes failed to meet the standards that regulators and customers expect," admits HSBC. You bet – a hefty fine, rumoured to be $1bn, is on the way.

If HSBC's boardroom had not been in constant turnover in the past few years, heads would have to roll. As it is, chief executive Stuart Gulliver, in the post since December 2010, can paint himself as a zealous reformer. A list of his recent disposals tells a tale not just of a man seeking to simplify HSBC and so make it easier to manage, but also to clean up the bank's act. Disposals have included units in Colombia, Peru, Uruguay, Paraguay, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Honduras.

Everybody happy then? Should we consign the affair to history and move on? Well, no. HSBC's top executives of the 2004-2010 era are gone but not forgotten. It would be useful to hear from, say, Lord Green, chief executive from 2003 to 2006 and then executive chairman to 2010, about how money-laundering controls at HSBC could have become so lax on his watch. He is currently a trade minister and is also an adviser to George Osborne on banking, so is ideally placed to preach to UK plc about how good intentions are not enough.
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