The U.S. gaming sector's string of recent compliance penalties have prompted many casinos to rethink how they implement anti-money laundering controls, according to Kim McCabe, founder of Henderson, NV-based consultancy KMC, LLC.
The U.K. Gambling Commission may have called on firms last month to improve their anti-money laundering controls, but the concerns over how best to do that are not new to the nation's gaming sector.
Caesars Entertainment Corp. will pay $8 million to the U.S. Treasury Department and $1.5 million to Nevada's gaming regulator for failing to police its wealthiest gamblers since February 2012.
Nevada state regulators will levy a monetary penalty and set conditions on Caesars Entertainment's gaming license as part of an anti-money laundering settlement, according to an individual with knowledge of the plan.
A Northern Mariana Islands casino will forfeit approximately $3 million to the U.S. Justice Department under the terms of a deal reached Thursday that will spare the gambling operation criminal charges.
The U.S. Treasury Department imposed a $75 million fine Wednesday against a casino in the Northern Mariana Islands, less than a year after banning its former VIP services manager over related infractions.
A bankruptcy court cleared the way Wednesday for a $10 million fine against Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort for poor compliance with recordkeeping and reporting rules, the U.S. Treasury Department said.
Ahead of the issuance of expected federal guidance, a top lobbying group for America's casinos Thursday outlined how the gaming industry should best shield itself from money launderers.
At the same time that the nation's financial intelligence unit is readying unprecedented fines against compliance officers, the agency is facing stark questions about its enforcement efforts, including its hiring practices.
At least two large U.S. banks have started asking their casino clients more questions in the wake of disclosures that federal officials are investigating alleged violations of anti-money laundering laws.
Las Vegas Sands Corp. will pay the U.S. Justice Department $47.4 million to settle allegations that it failed to identify $58 million in suspicious wire transactions and cashier's checks.
An agreement between a global online gaming company and an Atlantic City casino to offer Internet wagering in New Jersey faces an uphill battle to gain the necessary approval from state regulators, say analysts.
Several of the largest casinos in Nevada are strengthening their Patriot Act controls in the wake of an investigation into Las Vegas Sands Corp. for insufficiently vetting risky clients.
Federal examiners have found anti-money laundering compliance problems related to customer due diligence and regulatory reporting at two large casinos in Las Vegas, according to individuals familiar with the matter.
A plan by one of British Columbia's two casino regulators to improve anti-money laundering controls will do little to correct a conflict-of-interest in how the industry is overseen, say critics.
Poor compliance efforts by gambling operations are translating into regulatory risks for the financial institutions that bank them, according to anti-money laundering consultants.
A lack of clear regulatory oversight of how money services businesses and casinos comply with economic sanctions has left a gap in U.S. financial crime controls, say former IRS agents.
The expansion of the casino industry to new states throughout the U.S. increases the likelihood that gaming will grow as a vehicle for money laundering, particularly since the federal agency charged with its oversight is understaffed, according to law enforcement officials and former IRS auditors.
Casinos filed over a third fewer currency transaction reports in the year following a U.S. Treasury Department ruling lifting some regulatory compliance requirements, the department said Monday.
Two Chinese nationals face up to 65 years in prison after being convicted on 15 counts, including racketeering and money laundering. Their wives face nearly 20-year sentences. The four siphoned money from Bank of China, using shell companies to move it to U.S. and international banks and casinos.