http://www.globalresearch.ca/hsbc-caught-in-new-drug-money-laundering-scandal/5310397
While HSBC’s Canary
Wharf masters are back-peddling furiously over charges that they gave a leg up
to terrorist financiers and drug traffickers as a recent U.S. Senate report
charged, new evidence emerged that its business as usual for the multinational
banking giant founded by Hong Kong-based British opium merchants.
Earlier this month, The
Independent reported that French police had “intercepted one of the dozens
of ‘go-fast’ cars which transport cannabis at high speed from Spain to Paris.
The seizure–banal in itself–unravelled an extraordinary network of drug-trafficking,
money-laundering, fraud and tax evasion which sprawled over the invisible
barrier which separates Paris from the city’s poor, multiracial suburbs.”
The bank embroiled
in this latest scandal? Why HSBC, of course!
According to
reporter John Lichfield, “bank notes handed by clients to street drug dealers
in the suburbs were ending up, French and Swiss investigators discovered, in
the safes of seemingly law-abiding, well-heeled citizens in the French
capital.”
But that’s not the
only place where crisp bundles of cash were turning up.
“A trio of Moroccan
brothers, including a prominent fund manager in Geneva, are alleged to have
concocted an elaborate scheme to launder money by balancing two illegal flows
of cash,” The Independent averred.
At the center of
this multimillion euro money laundering spider’s web were: Meyer El-Maleh, the
managing director of the fund management firm GPF SA, and brothers Mardoché
El-Maleh, the alleged bagman of the cannabis-for-cash scheme and Nessim
El-Maleh, a fund management specialist with the Swiss private banking arm of
HSBC, HSBC Private Bank (Suisse) S.A.
The Independent reported
that the trio “are suspected of handling up to €12m (£9.6m) in cash in the past
seven months (and far more over the past four years). Assets seized by the
police include €2m in cash, gold ingots, art treasures and guns.”
“The HSBC bank has
confirmed that its employee was involved in the affair,” Swiss Info
disclosed, “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.”
Talk about closing
the barn door after the horses have escaped!
Among the
well-heeled perps arrested by authorities on charges of “conspiracy to launder
money and association with criminals” was Florence Lamblin, a prominent Green
Party politician and deputy mayor of the 13th arrondissement in Paris.
Her arrest was all
the more ironic considering that fake “left” Greens are currently in coalition
with François Hollande’s pro-austerity “Socialist” government. Lamblin and her
coalition partners had run on a platform demanding tougher action against (wait
for it) international money laundering!
When Lamblin’s home
was raided “police discovered €400,000 (SFr484,000) in low-value notes” in
safes belonging to the “progressive” politician, Swiss Info averred.
In the wake of her
arrest, Lamblin was forced to resign although she denied “any involvement” in
the drug smuggling scheme.
Her lawyer, Jérôme
Boursican told AFP “she had held 350,000 euros from a family legacy in a Swiss
account.”
“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,” Boursican explained.
The attorney told France
24 that he would ask a judge “to dismiss the case against his client ‘as soon
as possible’ and blamed her involvement on a ‘judicial error’.”
The “error” of getting
caught perhaps?
Despite Lamblin’s
professed innocence, Swiss Info reported that “the sums involved are
huge.” French police have charged that “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.”
As preliminary
reports suggest it appears that Lamblin was keen on keeping more than the
environment “green.”
A typical money
laundering “placement” scheme, “cannabis profits leaving France were ‘swapped’
for assets hidden in Switzerland which tax cheats or business fraudsters wished
to repatriate,” The Independent reported.
“The risky job of
smuggling drug-trafficking proceeds over the Franco-Swiss border was avoided,”
Lichfield wrote. “Instead, the drugs cash was handed over in plastic bags to
Parisians who had hidden Swiss accounts.”
“The same sums were
debited from their banks in Geneva and sent on a complex route through shell
companies in London and offshore tax havens to purchase assets for the drug
barons in Morocco, Dubai or Spain. A commission was allegedly paid on both
transactions,” The Independent averred.
Referred to as
“layering,” the transfer of funds took place through a series of opaque
financial transactions that camouflaged their illegal origins. In the case of
our well-heeled Parisians, drug profits were swapped through bank-to-bank and
bulk cash transfers via private banks in Geneva, one of which was owned by
HSBC.
As Senate
investigators disclosed, “Bulk cash shipments typically use common carriers …
to ship U.S. dollars by air, land, or sea. Shipments have gone via airplanes,
armored trucks, ships, and railroads.”
“Shippers,” Senate
staff averred, “may be ‘currency originators,’ such as businesses that generate
cash from sales of goods or services; or ‘intermediaries’ that gather currency
from originators or other intermediaries to form large shipments. Intermediaries
are typically central banks, commercial banks, money service businesses, or
their agents.”
Eschewing armored
cars, airplanes or ships, the “originators” of these illegal cash flows
preferred ubiquitous black plastic trash bags and “go-fast” limousines as the
method of choice for bulk cash transfers. It would certainly cut down on
shipping costs as the loot moved “offshore” and entered the shadow world of
private banking!
As financial
researcher James S. Henry pointed out in The Price of Offshore Revisited:
“The term ‘offshore’ refers not so much to the actual physical location of
private assets or liabilities, but to nominal, hyper-portable, multi-jurisdictional,
often quite temporary locations of networks of legal and quasi-legal entities
and arrangements that manage and control private wealth–always in the interests
of those who manage it, supposedly in the interests of its beneficial owners,
and often in indifference or outright defiance of the interests and laws of
multiple nation states.”
“A painting or a
bank account may be located inside Switzerland’s borders,” Henry wrote, “but
the all-important legal structure that owns it–typically that asset would be
owned by an anonymous offshore company in one jurisdiction, which is in turn
owned by a trust in another jurisdiction, whose trustees are in yet another
jurisdiction (and that is one of the simplest offshore structures)–is likely to
be fragmented in many pieces around the globe.”
Given Switzerland’s
strict bank secrecy laws, we do not know, and Senate investigators did not
disclose, how many billions of dollars were hidden for HSBC’s private banking
clients in Geneva, where it originated or whether or not occult wealth shielded
from scrutiny was derived from organized criminal activities.
In July however,
when the Senate pointed a finger directly at HSBC over anti-money laundering
“lapses,” The Bureau of Investigative Journalism revealed that “British
clients of an HSBC-owned private Swiss bank that is the focus of a major HM
Revenue & Customs investigation are alleged to have evaded tax by an amount
likely to exceed £200m.”
Lord Stephen Green,
Baron of Hurstpierpoint and current Minister of Trade and Investment in David
Cameron’s Conservative government, was previously HSBC’s chief executive and
the chairman and director of HSBC Private Banking Holdings (Suisse) N.A. for
ten years.
During Green’s
tenure, journalist Nick Mathiason disclosed that “the sums allegedly evaded by
Britons using HSBC’s Swiss bank are massive. HMRC told the Bureau ‘the
early indications are that the amounts are significant’.”
According to
Mathiason, in 2010 the HMRC “received data smuggled out of HSBC by a former
bank IT worker, now under arrest in Spain and facing possible extradition to
Switzerland, that contained details of 6,000 UK-linked individuals, companies
and trusts. Two senior tax investigators who both worked at HMRC told the Bureau
the average amount evaded in the 6,000 accounts is likely to range between
£33,000 and £50,000.”
While the sums
involved in the Parisian money laundering and drugs scandal may be chump change
in comparison to the trillions of dollars in illicit drug money that
enters the system each year as a result of “normal business relations” between
global drug cartels and the international financial system as the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) revealed last year, it does demonstrate
the utterly corrupt nature of the system as a whole.
Indeed, seeming
ideological foes are joined at the hip when it comes to fleecing the working
class and imposing austerity and privatization schemes that profit their real
constituents–the global class of financial parasites who “win” regardless of
which party of hucksters gain power.
As Henry observed,
“private elites … had accumulated $7.3 to $9.3 trillion of unrecorded offshore
wealth in 2010, conservatively estimated, even while many of their public
sectors were borrowing themselves into bankruptcy, enduring agonizing
‘structural adjustment’ and low growth, and holding fire sales of public
assets.”
Public sector thefts
that enrich the shareholders and officers of corrupt institutions like HSBC.
Although settlement
talks between U.S. regulatory agencies and HSBC has forced the bank to set
aside at least $700m (£441m) to meet the cost of any fines, it is highly
unlikely that officials at the bank will be criminally charged.
Currently
negotiating with the Justice Department, the Federal Reserve and the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency over serious allegations that the bank
conducted a multiyear, multibillion dollar business with terrorist financiers
and global drug cartels, the price tag may balloon even higher.
“HSBC’s $700 million
set-aside, if paid, would constitute the largest U.S. settlement reached over
such allegations, topping the $619 million in penalties and forfeitures paid in
June by ING Groep NV, the biggest Dutch financial-services company,” Bloomberg
News reported.
According to The
New York Times, “federal authorities think HSBC could end up paying at
least $1 billion. The bank itself said ‘it is possible that the amounts when
finally determined could be higher, possibly significantly higher’.”
A spokesperson for
HSBC however, told the Times this “case is not about HSBC complicity in
money laundering. Rather, it’s about lax compliance standards that fell short
of regulators’ expectations and our expectations, and we are absolutely
committed to remedying what went wrong and learning from it’.”
But as Rowan
Bosworth-Davies, a former financial crimes specialist with London’s
Metropolitan Police observed: “You don’t launder this volume of money by
accident, because somewhere along the line, your systems and controls for
preventing money laundering just ‘broke down’! You do it because you work in a
bank which is willing to flout every rule in the book and engage in layer upon
layer of criminal conduct if the money is right! You do it because your
management structure is defined by a criminogenic determination to amplify the
anomic environment within which you operate and in which you expect your staff
to co-operate.”
For their part,
Swiss bankers are scrambling to put as much daylight as possible between
themselves, the Paris money laundering scandal and HSBC.
Bernard Droux, the
chairman of the Geneva Financial Center foundation, an umbrella group of
independent banks and wealth managers told Swiss Info: “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.”
But as with other
recent examples of financial skullduggery, Droux reverted to form and claimed “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 hastened to add
that Switzerland was at the “forefront” of the international fight against drug
money.
However, Droux’s
“black sheep” brush-off was undercut by a recent Bloomberg Businessweek
report. We were informed that “Swiss private banks are looking for footholds in
Latin America as the lower fees and higher interest rates offered by local
wealth managers deter the region’s super-rich from traveling to Geneva and
Zurich.”
This “changing
relationship,” Bloomberg reported, began “in the 19th century when Swiss
banks guarded the fortunes of plantation owners and mining magnates. UBS AG
(UBSN), Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN) and other Swiss banks are being forced to
seek acquisitions as Latin America’s $3.5 trillion wealth management market is
set to grow by more than half by 2016, according to Boston Consulting Group.”
“‘People are
becoming richer and richer,’ said Gustavo Raitzin, head of Latin America for
Julius Baer Group Ltd. (BAER). ‘An emerging consumer class wants to make liquid
investments and they need private banks and wealth managers’.”
It is worth
recalling in this context that Julius Baer’s Cayman Islands division, as the
whistleblowing web site WikiLeaks revealed, was instrumental in squirreling
away “several million dollars” of funds controlled by late Mexican Army General
Mario Acosta Chaparro and his wife, Silvia, through a shell company known as
Symac Investments.
Acosta, who served
time in prison for his ties to the late drug trafficking kingpin Amado Carrillo
Fuentes, the self-styled “Lord of the Heavens” who ran the Juárez Cartel, was
killed in May when an assassin fired three rounds from a a 9mm revolver into
his head.
The secret-spilling
web site averred: “With the assistance of Julius Baer, Mr Chaparro was able to
invest several millions of USD in Symac with all the secrecy which the Caymans
allowed and to draw out some $12,000 a month.”
Who else might be in
need of “private banks and wealth managers” employed by the likes of HSBC and
Julius Baer to make such “liquid investments” possible with no questions asked?
Paging Chapo Guzmán, white courtesy telephone!
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario