I see that a Swiss private bank is having problems this week with a "colourful" customer of questionable background. That brings to mind the fact that this bank has been operating what I can only describe an a "underground" branch, meaning a covert facility, in a country where it has neither properly registered, nor pays taxes. An underground branch very quietly accepts deposits, and finds a way to spirit them into one of the bank's legitimate branches, or its headquarters, either through local banks, and also through some bulk cash smuggling. Its existence is a closely guarded secret.
The way that I personally verified its operation, after a number of senior Venezuelan military officers were seen repeatedly carrying briefcases into the company, an import-export firm, and taking nothing out, was to engage the services of a old friend. I supplied him with the name of a prominent narcotics trafficker as a "reference", and he called up the company. The general manager at first was uncooperative, but once the caller dropped the name I had given to him, the gentleman's tone changed, and he offered to meet the caller at the bank's Geneva headquarters to discuss a relationship of mutual benefit.
Since, by their very nature, such operations are illegal, it is generally difficult to ascertain their location, but a few helpful hints might assist you in identifying one banking with you:
(1) Does the customer, who obviously runs a cash-intensive business, now have a greatly increased volume of deposits, inconsistent with its historical background of deposits ?
(2) Are there new staff members making the deposits ?
(3) When you visit the client at its principal place of business, are there a large number of new staff
members not known to you ?
(4) Does the client now wire funds to known offshore financial centres, when that was not the case in the past, and are these payments inconsistent with the client's core business ?
Of course, these guidelines also could apply to any business conducting money laundering operations, as I am sure you must know.
~ Contributed & Written By Kenneth Rijock ~
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