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Featured 44 Indian Banks involved in money laundering - FinCEN Reveals

ASKardar

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AT least 44 Indian banks have been flagged in connection with transactions by Indian entities and individuals in a set of Suspicious Activity Reports filed by US banks with the watchdog agency, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).


As per one set of records where addresses linked to parties are in India, Indian banks figure in SARs linked to over 2,000 transactions valued at over $1billion between 2011 and 2017. Significantly, there are thousands of transactions linked to Indian entities and businessmen where the Indian senders or beneficiaries have addresses in foreign jurisdictions.

Records investigated show that Indian banks mentioned in the SARs include: state-owned Punjab National Bank (290 transactions); State Bank of India (102); Bank of Baroda (93); Union Bank of India (99) and Canara Bank (190), among others.

Among private banks who figure in the SARs are HDFC Bank (253 transactions); ICICI Bank (57); Kotak Mahindra Bank (268); Axis Bank (41) and IndusInd Bank (117) among others.

The foreign banks that have filed these SARs include Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas (DBTCA), BNY Mellon, Citibank, Standard Chartered and JP Morgan Chase among others.

Indian banks figure in the SARs primarily because they are “correspondent banks” to the foreign banks which have filed these SARs and figure in the network through which these transactions have been effected.

There are cases, records show, where “suspicious transactions” have been carried out through the international payment gateway of foreign banks. In others, foreign branches of Indian banks such as a State Bank of India account in Canada and an account of Union Bank of India in UK have been used by clients for carrying out part of the transactions in question.

Key to this is the correspondent banking relationship — an arrangement over which there has been growing concern as regulators crack down on secrecy of offshore transactions.

Under this, one bank (correspondent) holds deposits owned by other banks (respondents) and provides payment and other services to those respondent banks. Through correspondent banking relationships, banks can access financial services in different jurisdictions and provide cross-border payment services to their customers.

In these SARs, the foreign banks have cited a slew of reasons to red-flag these transactions: “high-risk jurisdiction for money laundering or other financial crimes,” adverse media/public information on the client, “unidentified” parties, and the fact that “source of funds and purpose of transaction could not be ascertained.”

Meanwhile, there has been growing concern among banks over the idea of correspondent banking. According to a report by Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) of the Bank for International Settlements, on correspondent Banking, prepared in 2016, banks providing these services are reducing their relationships.

The report states that rising costs and uncertainty about how far customer due diligence should be done in order to ensure regulatory compliance have been some of the key reasons for banks to cut back their correspondent relationships.

The report made several recommendations including standardisation of KYC norms and using legal entity identifiers in correspondent banking, It also recommended that global watchdogs like Financial Action task Force and Anti Money laundering task force should explore ways to tackle obstacles to information-sharing, with the aim of identifying potential best practices.

While mails sent to 10 banks for their comments on the SARs did not elicit any response, an SBI spokesperson in his response, said: “The information sought herewith is not available with the Bank due to the SAR confidentiality regulations.

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) has issued an advisory that any unauthorized disclosure of a SAR is a violation of US federal law…Both civil and criminal penalties may be imposed for SAR disclosure violations.

“This obligation applies not only to the SAR itself, but also to information that would reveal the existence (or non-existence) of the SAR. All the foreign branches of State Bank of India follow all the process as per the applicable local regulations to flag any suspicious transaction. SBI has been working with the highest level of compliance to legal and regulatory requirements not only in the India but also overseas. Bank at the same time follows a zero tolerance policy towards any violation of compliance.”


https://indianexpress.com/article/e...-of-1-billion-flagged-to-us-regulator-6608181
 
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Compared to mere almost $2m for 6 Pakistani banks on the list.

Too many big fish in FinCEN leaks either FATF will go cold on everyone or at the least heat would be off of Pakistan since it's complying on it's reform commitments.

Silver lining for Pakistan in this FATF episode is that Pakistan is building up a terror financing case against India since they are very open about it and a string of successes against this network of foreign terror financing uncovered via FATF compliance efforts.
 
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FATF is nothing but a politically motivated/backed organisation, designed to limit and curb the financial institutions from emerging markets/Enemy states.

But these SARs are questionable, most often then not submitted by incompetent kyc staff of banks who rather send it to someone else then spend time investigating.

As far as India is concerned its a major market for correspondant banks , mainly because of the overseas indian population. RAW funding of countries like Afghanistan is through private individuals using correspondant banks , they bribe the officials and pay them in Euros and dollars, having worked in the financial crime and compliance market in the UK, I was amazed by the funds originating from India towards NGOs and charities in the UK.(lots of these charities /NGOs operate in Pakistan).

Officials know this , all of these get reported but nothing happens. :(
 
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AT least 44 Indian banks have been flagged in connection with transactions by Indian entities and individuals in a set of Suspicious Activity Reports filed by US banks with the watchdog agency, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).


As per one set of records where addresses linked to parties are in India, Indian banks figure in SARs linked to over 2,000 transactions valued at over $1billion between 2011 and 2017. Significantly, there are thousands of transactions linked to Indian entities and businessmen where the Indian senders or beneficiaries have addresses in foreign jurisdictions.

Records investigated show that Indian banks mentioned in the SARs include: state-owned Punjab National Bank (290 transactions); State Bank of India (102); Bank of Baroda (93); Union Bank of India (99) and Canara Bank (190), among others.

Among private banks who figure in the SARs are HDFC Bank (253 transactions); ICICI Bank (57); Kotak Mahindra Bank (268); Axis Bank (41) and IndusInd Bank (117) among others.

The foreign banks that have filed these SARs include Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas (DBTCA), BNY Mellon, Citibank, Standard Chartered and JP Morgan Chase among others.

Indian banks figure in the SARs primarily because they are “correspondent banks” to the foreign banks which have filed these SARs and figure in the network through which these transactions have been effected.

There are cases, records show, where “suspicious transactions” have been carried out through the international payment gateway of foreign banks. In others, foreign branches of Indian banks such as a State Bank of India account in Canada and an account of Union Bank of India in UK have been used by clients for carrying out part of the transactions in question.

Key to this is the correspondent banking relationship — an arrangement over which there has been growing concern as regulators crack down on secrecy of offshore transactions.

Under this, one bank (correspondent) holds deposits owned by other banks (respondents) and provides payment and other services to those respondent banks. Through correspondent banking relationships, banks can access financial services in different jurisdictions and provide cross-border payment services to their customers.

In these SARs, the foreign banks have cited a slew of reasons to red-flag these transactions: “high-risk jurisdiction for money laundering or other financial crimes,” adverse media/public information on the client, “unidentified” parties, and the fact that “source of funds and purpose of transaction could not be ascertained.”

Meanwhile, there has been growing concern among banks over the idea of correspondent banking. According to a report by Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) of the Bank for International Settlements, on correspondent Banking, prepared in 2016, banks providing these services are reducing their relationships.

The report states that rising costs and uncertainty about how far customer due diligence should be done in order to ensure regulatory compliance have been some of the key reasons for banks to cut back their correspondent relationships.

The report made several recommendations including standardisation of KYC norms and using legal entity identifiers in correspondent banking, It also recommended that global watchdogs like Financial Action task Force and Anti Money laundering task force should explore ways to tackle obstacles to information-sharing, with the aim of identifying potential best practices.

While mails sent to 10 banks for their comments on the SARs did not elicit any response, an SBI spokesperson in his response, said: “The information sought herewith is not available with the Bank due to the SAR confidentiality regulations.

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) has issued an advisory that any unauthorized disclosure of a SAR is a violation of US federal law…Both civil and criminal penalties may be imposed for SAR disclosure violations.

“This obligation applies not only to the SAR itself, but also to information that would reveal the existence (or non-existence) of the SAR. All the foreign branches of State Bank of India follow all the process as per the applicable local regulations to flag any suspicious transaction. SBI has been working with the highest level of compliance to legal and regulatory requirements not only in the India but also overseas. Bank at the same time follows a zero tolerance policy towards any violation of compliance.”


https://indianexpress.com/article/e...-of-1-billion-flagged-to-us-regulator-6608181

No wonder Indians like nawaz....
 
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these transactions are reported as suspicious, No one knows the intended purpose or motives of these, could very well be linked directly to terror financing
Yeah, suspicious transactions can be many things. But given India has no organized terror groups running or we are not known for sponsoring terrorists, it's safe to say these transactions are not for terrorism.
 
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Yeah, suspicious transactions can be many things. But given India has no organized terror groups running or we are not known for sponsoring terrorists, it's safe to say these transactions are not for terrorism.
Just recently a string of Hawala Hundi and money changers caught financing RAW activities. Pakistan has also sent a dosier of handlers in Afghanistan.
https://*****************/threads/indian-raw-activities-in-pakistan.7716/

Then you have people like Major Gaurav openly saying we pay Rs5lac per kill to target killers to kill Pakistani Army officers.

List goes on and on...

Bottom line India is not a saint. Additional scrutiny into Hawala and Hundi businesses everywhere will put a dent in terror financing everywhere. Win-Win for peace.
 
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Pakistan should use any such evidence to pound India publically on all forums and platforms. Information warfare is just one domain where we need to do this, we are truly in a war and it is existential until at least the Kashmir issue is settled, except in settings and environments that we wouldn't have thought of, merely a few years back.
 
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Soft-Warning
44 Indian banks involved in money laundering
Published On 26 September,2020 11:40 am
565728_76682240.jpg

Indian banks were involved 3,201 illegal transactions valued at over $1.53 billion
NEW DELHI (Dunya News) - Forty-four Indian banks have been flagged in connection with transactions by Indian entities and individuals in a set of Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) filed by US banks with the watchdog agency, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).
Report of FinCEN reveals that 44 Indian banks - public, private and foreign - were flagged for transactions that allowed criminals to move "dirty money" around the globe. These could relate to activities such as money laundering, terrorism and drugs.
Records investigated show that Indian banks mentioned in the SARs include: state-owned Punjab National Bank (290 transactions); State Bank of India (102); Bank of Baroda (93); Union Bank of India (99) and Canara Bank (190), among others.
Documents show that Indian banks were involved 3,201 illegal transactions valued at over $1.53 billion. These include several hundred transactions related to Indian entities and businessmen where the Indian shippers or recipients have addresses in foreign jurisdictions.
 
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The more of money laundering from India the better for Pak....

Even the poor Indian farmers are now officially permitted to be exploited by the Marwaris/Parsis/Jains etc. (mostly from Gujrat) in collusion with the "East India Companies" - what a repeat of History......

As for Pak, Modi (or any top leader from Gujrat) is the panacea...
 
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