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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Report: Criminals Smuggle Up To $39 Billion In Drug Money
Title:US: Report: Criminals Smuggle Up To $39 Billion In Drug Money
Published On:2010-12-01
Source:El Paso Times (TX)
Fetched On:2010-12-04 15:01:22
REPORT: CRIMINALS SMUGGLE UP TO $39 BILLION IN DRUG MONEY, US STOPS $41
MILLION

The Government Accountability Office is calling for urgent action to
stop cross-border currency smuggling after federal officials seized
$41 million in cash in a little more than a year.

U.S. Sens. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., and Max Baucus, D-Mont., asked the
GAO last year to examine the transportation of bulk cash proceeds from
drug sales in the United States to Mexico or Canada. After finishing
its investigation, the GAO produced its findings in the report,
"Moving Illegal Proceeds."

According to the report, the National Drug Intelligence Center
estimates that criminals smuggle between $18 billion and $39 billion
each year across the Southwest border alone.

Between March 2009 and June 2010, after Customs and Border Protection
was asked to step up efforts to stem the flow of bulk cash, U.S.
agents seized about $41 million in illicit bulk cash leaving the
United States at border crossings.

Because Customs and Border Protection does not conduct full-time
inspections of outbound traffic, and because other measures are
lacking, only a fraction of the illicit cash flow is seized.

The GAO report said technology is creating new money laundering
concerns. One of the examples cited is stored value cards. These are
prepaid cards loaded with value or currency that are used to move
illegal proceeds across the border and around the world.

Unlike with cash, there are no laws in place that require
border-crossers to declare the value of prepaid cards they may be
transporting.

Mobile phones are also being used with greater frequency to conduct
money transactions that may be difficult to detect.

Roger Maier, spokesman for Customs and Border Protection in El Paso,
said that as of August of this year, CBP had seized $40.9 million in
illicit southbound cash along the Southwest border, a 16.1-percent
increase over the same period during the previous year.

"We do not typically comment on the number, frequency or duration of
outbound operations, although they have increased," Maier said.

The Mexican government has complained that cash and weapons that flow
south of the border enable drug cartels to conduct the kind of bloody
battles that have killed thousands of people in Mexico.

The GAO report said arms as well as cash are being seized at the
border.

"In June 2010, officers conducting outbound operations at the San
Luis, Arizona, port of entry seized a large sport utility vehicle, 114
grenades, and over 2,500 rounds of various types of ammunition," the
report said.

Sen. Bingaman of New Mexico said "this report makes clear that we
can't solve this problem unless we improve our border infrastructure
and technological capabilities. Doing so would make it possible for us
to seize billions of dollars per year and deprive drug traffickers of
the proceeds that finance their deadly operations."

El Paso Times staff writer Daniel Borunda contributed to this story.
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