News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Tracking Of Money Laundering Improving - Agency |
Title: | Canada: Tracking Of Money Laundering Improving - Agency |
Published On: | 2004-11-04 |
Source: | Toronto Star (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 19:45:56 |
TRACKING OF MONEY LAUNDERING IMPROVING - AGENCY
OTTAWA - The amount of dirty money that global terrorists and other
criminals tried to launder in Canada during the last year is
dramatically higher than reported in previous years, a federal agency
says.
Almost 200 cases involving $700 million in suspect financial
transactions were turned over to police in the last fiscal year - a
sizable jump over the $460 million tracked the year before, says
Fintrac, the federal agency monitoring money laundering.
But that doesn't necessarily mean Canada is becoming a haven for
international criminals cleaning the proceeds of their crimes, adds
the head of the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre.
Rather, the fledgling agency is doing a better job of tracking money
laundering, its director Horst Intscher said Thursday.
"I would tend to think we're getting better at discerning it, partly
because we have more information sources and partly because we have
more experience and we've sharpened our tools," said Intscher.
"There may be increases happening, but (more crime) is not the
conclusion I'd draw."
Canada is no more of a target than other industrialized countries with
financial systems that are hectic enough to hide criminals cleaning
dirty money, he said.
The amount of terror financing tracked in 2003-04 jumped to about $70
million from $22 million the year before - a serious concern and a
security threat, says the Fintrac report.
Terror financing accounted for 44 cases that Fintrac passed on to
police. Another four cases involved both suspected money laundering
and terrorist financing activity, Fintrac reported to Parliament.
Another 149 cases involved money laundering alone, about 60 per cent
of those likely coming out of illegal hydroponic marijuana grow operations.
That seems to be a rapidly growing export industry and a thorn in the
side of investigators.
"It's certainly becoming visibly prominent," although it's difficult
to gauge just how fast the sector is growing because Fintrac only
began tracking terrorist financing operations two years ago.
Since then, Fintrac has disclosed almost $1.2 billion in suspected
money laundering and terrorism financing.
Meanwhile, as Fintrac reported on its search for terrorists and their
funds, the country's privacy commissioner warned that personal
freedoms are becoming a casualty of the fight against terrorism.
As law enforcement and national security agencies collect more
information about more people, there are greater chances that
travellers and others will be treated unfairly, Jennifer Stoddart said
her annual report Thursday.
Fintrac was created by the federal government in 2000 to help uncover
illegal financial activities.
But it took a couple more years for Ottawa to finalize reporting
requirements that compel banks, brokerage firms, mutual funds, real
estate agents and casinos to all disclose large transactions or deals
involving more than $10,000 in cash.
OTTAWA - The amount of dirty money that global terrorists and other
criminals tried to launder in Canada during the last year is
dramatically higher than reported in previous years, a federal agency
says.
Almost 200 cases involving $700 million in suspect financial
transactions were turned over to police in the last fiscal year - a
sizable jump over the $460 million tracked the year before, says
Fintrac, the federal agency monitoring money laundering.
But that doesn't necessarily mean Canada is becoming a haven for
international criminals cleaning the proceeds of their crimes, adds
the head of the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre.
Rather, the fledgling agency is doing a better job of tracking money
laundering, its director Horst Intscher said Thursday.
"I would tend to think we're getting better at discerning it, partly
because we have more information sources and partly because we have
more experience and we've sharpened our tools," said Intscher.
"There may be increases happening, but (more crime) is not the
conclusion I'd draw."
Canada is no more of a target than other industrialized countries with
financial systems that are hectic enough to hide criminals cleaning
dirty money, he said.
The amount of terror financing tracked in 2003-04 jumped to about $70
million from $22 million the year before - a serious concern and a
security threat, says the Fintrac report.
Terror financing accounted for 44 cases that Fintrac passed on to
police. Another four cases involved both suspected money laundering
and terrorist financing activity, Fintrac reported to Parliament.
Another 149 cases involved money laundering alone, about 60 per cent
of those likely coming out of illegal hydroponic marijuana grow operations.
That seems to be a rapidly growing export industry and a thorn in the
side of investigators.
"It's certainly becoming visibly prominent," although it's difficult
to gauge just how fast the sector is growing because Fintrac only
began tracking terrorist financing operations two years ago.
Since then, Fintrac has disclosed almost $1.2 billion in suspected
money laundering and terrorism financing.
Meanwhile, as Fintrac reported on its search for terrorists and their
funds, the country's privacy commissioner warned that personal
freedoms are becoming a casualty of the fight against terrorism.
As law enforcement and national security agencies collect more
information about more people, there are greater chances that
travellers and others will be treated unfairly, Jennifer Stoddart said
her annual report Thursday.
Fintrac was created by the federal government in 2000 to help uncover
illegal financial activities.
But it took a couple more years for Ottawa to finalize reporting
requirements that compel banks, brokerage firms, mutual funds, real
estate agents and casinos to all disclose large transactions or deals
involving more than $10,000 in cash.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...