PBH / Colombia / Start   Forums (active)   Travelguide   Cheap hostels   Pictures

 

Three-country money-laundering ring busted

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Law enforcement agents broke up a Colombian money-laundering ring Wednesday, arresting 26 people in three countries and seizing more than $16.5 million in cash and drugs, drug enforcement officials said.

Arrests were made in Bogota and Cali, Colombia; New York, New Jersey, Florida and London, England, according to Drug Enforcement Administration officials. They requested anonymity because they were speaking in advance of the formal announcement later in New York.

More than $10 million in alleged drug profits and more than $6.5 million in cocaine, heroin and marijuana were seized in the operation conducted by DEA, the FBI, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Internal Revenue Service, New York city and state police and Suffolk County, New York, police.

The officials said the investigation targeted Colombian criminal organizations that laundered millions of dollars worth of illegal drug-smuggling profits through the sophisticated black market peso exchange, an illegal currency exchange system.

All transactions in this exchange are verbal, with no paper trail. It uses peso transactions in Colombia and dollar transactions in the United States with no visible connection between them. These attributes make this black market very hard for agents to detect and for that reason has become one of the primary methods that Colombian drug traffickers use to launder their illegal profits.

In the exchange, one or more "peso brokers" serve as middlemen between narcotics traffickers who control huge amounts of illegal drug profits in the United States and Colombian business people seeking to purchase cheap U.S. dollars outside the highly regulated Colombian banking system.

The process involves three steps:

First, the drug smugglers sell their U.S. drug profits to peso brokers in Colombia in exchange for Colombian pesos. Second, the peso brokers use criminals in the United States to collect the drug money and deposit it in U.S. banks. Finally, the peso brokers sell the drug dollars at less than the official exchange rate to executives of Colombian businesses who want to purchase goods abroad for import to Colombia.

In one scheme, the officials said, a peso broker in Colombia arranged to launder illegal drug money located in New York. He arranged for other defendants to collect the cash and turn it over to another defendant who used it to buy used truck parts from a scrap yard he controlled in Lindenhurst, New Jersey. The parts were shipped to Venezuela and Colombia and resold for pesos, the officials said.

U.S. agents obtained seizure warrants for bank accounts throughout the United States that they said had been used to aid the laundering. Colombian agents conducted 24 searches in Bogota and Cali.

The defendants include people from every level of the operations -- peso brokers in Colombia, their criminal confederates in the United States and Colombian business people who knowingly acquired the cheap drug dollars to buy imports, the officials said.

hope no one we know got caught up in this...
dan

By famsearch on Oct 18, 2006, 16:17 in Friendly Talkzone. AddThis Social Bookmark Button


tejasmarcos says on Oct 18, 2006, 17:21:

damn! there goes my black market exchange idea!

* of course there is no mention of reprocussions on the laxed banking regulation in the US that launders upwards of 80% of all drugs coming out of Colombia. that is alot of interest earned on the float. the banking lobby groups could never disallow this critical and key element of the exchange chain.

* however, let's really stick it to those evil peso brokers and otherwise ethical business people in Colombia!

* good article, but the system wreaks of hypocracy........

* politicks and big business always prevail when it comes to $$. save the bankers, but kill the coca crops!

trying to walk a straight line on sour mash and cheap wine...

0 funny, 0 helpful.

More posts by the same author:

i know its been bounced around a bit, but i need all the info about skype i can get.... 13

is elmo still alive?? 11

I-751 paperwork sent in on 8/18 2

venezuela turns off tap to exxon mobile 11

starting the I-751 paperwork 1

germany/austria venezuela/colombia 8

venezuelan anti semitism.... 12

our Hugo, hat in hand.... Venezuela swallows rhetoric, buys American food 16

what is it about colombians and coca cola?? 41

our 3rd anniversary 12

sharing the happiness... 31

illegal immigration by country of origin, or where they're all coming from... 67

after looking at the new fees for the 129f and 130... 25

what happenned to the elmo jr. post? 14

famsearch and wife update!!!! 4

colombian by accident... 7

my wife finally got to see snow... 72

still alive!! 15

one week now.... 2

6 3/4 hours out.... 11


Americas:

Mexico

Cuba

Colombia (travelguide)

Venezuela

Ecuador

Brazil

Bolivia

Peru

Chile

Argentina

Africa:

Kenya

Congo

Malawi

South Africa

Asia:

China

Japan

India

Nepal

Thailand

Laos

Cambodia

Vietnam

Malaysia

Indonesia

Philippines

 

Travel:

Travelguide writers

Travelicious

Travel with kids

Around the world trips

Learn travel Spanish

Off topic: your thing

Also:

All forums

Travelers

If you're not a part of this travelicious experiment just yet, just sign up here. It's free & easy.

 

About PBH | How PBH works | History | Community rules | Travelguides | RSS feeds

This site in other languages: (automatically translated)
Spanish | French | Catalan | Chinese | Filipino | Greek | German | Hebrew | Japanese | Korean | Polish | Portuguese | Russian

© 1998 - 2008 Peter Van Dijck, all rights reserved.