The Bank of England reportedly exerts "strong pressure" on Russia's second largest bank, an arrested Zetas leader's sons tweet incriminating photographs, and more, in this week's news roundup.
Large banks need to clearly delineate which senior executives are responsible for Bank Secrecy Act compliance violations, the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency said in a speech Monday.
An influential Senate subcommittee will hear testimony on tax evasion through offshore banks, Switzerland agrees to follow automatic data exchange standards and more, in this week's news roundup.
Last year, I told you not to believe any of that "best of years, worst of years" stuff à la Charles Dickens with regard to 2012. But if 2013 was less eventful than the prior year, every indication is that 2014 will be "challenging" for financial institutions and regulators.
The U.S. Justice Department seizes digital funds tied to an Internet black market, Republicans line up behind effort to fight FATCA and more, in this week's news roundup.
The United States should strengthen its efforts to fight money laundering and terrorist financing associated with Afghan opium ahead of a military withdrawal from the nation, U.S. officials said Wednesday.
Ahead of expected anti-money laundering regulations for investment advisers, some private equity firms may find themselves subject to such oversight for a reason few would have guessed: their fee structures.
Lawmakers should expand financial safe harbor protections to allow banks to better share their suspicions about money laundering and its predicate crimes, a top U.S. regulatory official said Sunday.
Amid all of the political rhetoric and bombast that accompanied television coverage of the 16-day government shutdown last month, one question never seemed to get any airtime: what did it all mean for the financial compliance industry?
A planned inquiry by a U.S. lawmaker into a tactic used by undercover investigators in money laundering cases may come to a surprising conclusion: the technique has been widely used for decades, say investigators.
New names of individuals and nations tied to a collapsed Pakistani bank could be published after a U.K. court ruled that redacted portions of an audit on the institution shouldn't be confidential.
The decision by a London-based global bank to end its foreign currency exchange business in Mexico has had no long-term impact on curtailing money laundering, according to a U.S. report.
U.S. Justice Department prosecutions involving narcotics are expected to remain flat for fiscal year 2008, as immigration violations will again be the most commonly charged federal offense, according to a report by a Syracuse University organization that tracks trends in law enforcement.
As the nexus between terrorist financing and drug trafficking widens, financial institutions will have to more closely scrutinize their correspondent banking relationships, say consultants.
Two Mexican exchange houses transferred money through U.S.-based banks that was used to buy aircraft for transporting more than $1 billion worth of cocaine, the Mexican government said this week.
Federal agents Wednesday captured one of the worlds most wanted kingpins, a Mexican drug lord whose organization allegedly transported tons of cocaine into the United States from Mexico each year, laundering millions of dollars in the process.
The husband and wife team would use automatic teller machines in the California branches of Bank of America and Wells Fargo to drop off loads of dirty cash carefully keeping each transaction below the $10,000 reporting threshold, say federal prosecutors
Top Colombian drug lord, Arcangel de Jesus Henao Montoya, who was arrested last weekend by the Panamanian police, has been extradited to the United States to face money laundering and drug trafficking charges.