DRUG traffickers, like everyone else, only want
money because they want what money can buy.
But turning dirty cash from drug
sales into clean, usable currency has become harder for Mexican drug gangs as a
result of tighter banking regulations at home and in the United States, their
main market.
The criminals are responding by piggy-backing on
cross-border trade to launder their gains.
On September 10th roughly 1,000 law-enforcement
officials raided the Garment District of Los Angeles, seizing at least $65m in
cash and arresting nine people. According to court documents, several garment
businesses allegedly helped drug traffickers ferry proceeds from sales back
into Mexico.
The scheme is relatively simple. Black-market
peso brokers contact Mexican importers who want to buy goods from a business in
Los Angeles. The broker then finds a gang associate in the United States to pay
the bill on behalf of the Mexican importer, using dollars from drug sales.
The
importer pays the broker in pesos; the broker takes a cut and passes along the
remainder to the gang in Mexico.
Such schemes are not new, but they have become more
popular as it has become harder to use the banking system to move money. In
2010 Mexico set restrictions on deposits of dollars. It later imposed reporting
requirements on cash payments above a certain threshold for items like homes,
cars and so forth.
The United States has also ramped up its scrutiny of
large cash transactions and taken a much firmer line against banks. In 2012
HSBC paid $1.9 billion to regulators in the United States to settle accusations
that, among other things, it had failed to monitor transactions involving
Mexican drug gangs.
That helps explain why drug kingpins are targeting
businesses in Los Angeles, from clothing to toy , manufacturers as
ways to send money back home.
Such firms--some of which are legitimate, some of
which are purely fronts--provide convenient cover because of their frequent
export of goods to Mexico.
Claude Arnold, who is in charge of US Immigration
and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations unit in Los Angeles,
says the dealings have reached unprecedented levels in LA: "We've never
seen it on such a grand scale before."
In 2013 banks in the United States
filed 1,510 "suspicious activity reports" related to possible
trade-based money-laundering; over half came from California.
Keeping up with the traffickers will always be a
huge task. Estimates vary widely but the Department of Homeland Security
reckons that traffickers send as much as $29 billion back to Mexico every year
from the United States.
Drug dealers are sending back that money ($29 billion) because Americans are buying that many illegal drugs...
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