CommunityDispatch.com
Community News and Information

Contact Us | Submit News |About Us| Subscribe | Home Page
Custom Search


search
For More Current News, Click Here

Search








Real Estate Related News
RSS Feed RSS Feed
Last Updated: May 31, 2008 - 8:42:48 AM

                                                                                                                              

Money Laundering Methods and Trends in Residential Real Estate Industry: FICEN Warns


By Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN)


May 2, 2008 - 9:04:21 AM


 

 

 

Download PDF version


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 1, 2008
CONTACT: Steve Hudak
703-905-3770
 

FinCEN Report Warns of Money Laundering Methods and Trends in Residential Real Estate Industry

VIENNA, Va. - The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) today released the latest in a series of reports, which are based upon analysis of suspicious activity reports (SARs) provided by the financial industry. Today's report, Suspected Money Laundering in the Residential Real Estate Industry: An Assessment Based Upon Suspicious Activity Report Filing Analysis identifies several transactional typologies and associated illicit activities that may be perpetrated by individuals or groups seeking to launder funds via residential property transactions.

This study confirms an increase in the number of SARs indicating suspected money laundering in the industry which tracks closely with the past expansion of the real estate market, especially in the 2004-2005 period. Previous FinCEN studies concerning Mortgage Loan Fraud and Money Laundering in the Commercial Real Estate Industry confirmed similar trends. However, in contrast to criminals seeking to profit by committing mortgage fraud, those who seek to launder money through residential real estate generally intend to make timely payments and seek to make their transactions appear as unremarkable as possible in order to disguise the source of their funds.

Laundering money through residential real estate involves turning the proceeds of crime into the use or ownership of real property assets. For example, a criminal may use illicit funds to outright purchase or to make monthly rental payments on real property. Internationally, these laundering techniques are well known and have been described in the Egmont Group publication, FIU's [Financial Intelligence Units] in Action, 100 cases from the Egmont Group , and are often referred to in various reports on methods and typologies published by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) . FinCEN's report shows that U.S. financial institutions have been able to identify some possible instances of money laundering through residential real estate. The report is intended to help raise awareness of the vulnerability and assist financial institutions to better recognize risk and thus provide better information to law enforcement in order to combat criminal activity.

Significantly, as the report describes, more than 75 percent of reported suspects had no professional relationship with the residential real estate industry and any reported collusion with various real estate or construction professionals was somewhat rare. Money launderers were found to use many techniques, including: structuring large transactions into smaller amounts in order to evade detection; using "straw buyers" to front for the true purchaser; and fraudulent documentation. In some cases, laundering money through residential real estate was found to support tax evasion, fraud and identity theft.


###


T he mission of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network is to safeguard the financial system from the abuses of financial crime, including terrorist financing, money laundering, and other illicit activity. We achieve this mission by: administering the Bank Secrecy Act; supporting law enforcement, intelligence, and regulatory agencies through sharing and analysis of financial intelligence; building global cooperation with our counterpart financial intelligence units; and networking people, ideas, and information.

 



Real Estate Related News
Latest Headlines


Money Laundering Methods and Trends in Residential Real Estate Industry: FICEN Warns
Real Estate Appraiser Sought to Appraise 107 Parcels of State School Lands
Working with Borrowers: Residential Real Estate Loan Restructurings
Stewart Title and E-Title to Pay $1.5 Million to Settle Charges that the Firms Used Illegal Methods to Generate More Business
Update: Continuing Education Requirement Change Effective July 1, 2007
Real Estate Brokers: HUD's New Partnership With National Association Of Real Estate Brokers To Increase African American Homeownership
Real estate withholding law changes for 2007
Internet-Based Real Estate Brokers: Lawsuit Challenges NAR Rules that Obstruct Internet-Based Real Estate Brokers

money laundering, laundering