Barclays will pay British regulators more than £72 million for poorly scrutinizing transactions made on behalf of high-value clients in a case that could lead to penalties for the bankers involved.
A recent regulatory penalty citing a Brown Brothers Harriman executive made a compliance director at Bank of America wonder about his future personal liability, attendees of a business forum heard Tuesday.
A European Parliamentary committee Thursday approved far-reaching changes to the EU's rules combating money laundering and terrorist financing, including an amendment that would require nations to publicize corporate owners.
Mexican officials will extend until February an upcoming deadline for nonbank companies to implement anti-money laundering controls, according to sources with knowledge of the matter.
British asset management firms are failing to adequately address their vulnerabilities to money laundering, bribery and corruption, the United Kingdom's chief financial regulator said Thursday.
Border banks are accepting potentially fraudulent copies of cash declaration forms to justify bulk cash deposits by individuals traveling from Mexico into the United States, say law enforcement officials.
Critics of a U.S. Treasury Department plan to strengthen beneficial ownership reporting by financial institutions aired their concerns to Obama administration officials at a rare public hearing Tuesday.
Calls for a survey of how U.S. banks monitor high-risk accounts are likely to be ignored even if such a review would expose anti-money laundering compliance gaps, say industry experts.
Less than two years after U.S. diplomats mentioned concerns that Qatar's terrorist financing problems may be "the worst in the region," the country has done little to effectively limit the crime, say experts.
A Miami-based bank is expected to agree to pay between $10 million and $15 million to the U.S. government in the next month for Bank Secrecy Act violations, according to individuals familiar with the matter.
An ousted Tunisian leader's transfer of suspect funds into Western bank accounts highlights the pitfalls financial institutions face when they maintain relationships for foreign political leaders, say analysts.
The release of hundreds of U.S. State Department cables as part of a massive leak of sensitive diplomatic communiqués is likely to prompt bank compliance departments to tweak risk rankings.
After 11 days of testimony and three days of deliberations, a Texas jury found former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay guilty on Wednesday of laundering nearly $200,000 in illicit corporate donations.
The trial of former U.S. lawmaker Tom DeLay for allegedly laundering campaign funds will likely hinge on whether Texas state prosecutors can prove he attempted to cover up corporate donors, say lawyers.
An intergovernmental group said Wednesday that it was considering asking countries to make tax evasion a predicate crime of money laundering and to issue tougher AML standards on political figures.
Two initiatives to recover assets embezzled by corrupt political leaders will result in banks receiving more subpoenas and data requests from law enforcement, say analysts.
An influential financial crime watchdog group released Thursday a much-anticipated list of nearly 30 countries with anti-money laundering and counter terrorism financing deficiencies.
Compliance officers at some of the world's largest financial institutions are concluding they need to create sanctions-specific programs to avoid regulatory penalties and tarnished reputations, according to a Deloitte survey released Monday.
The United Arab Emirates should immediately begin work on a national plan to better protect its economy from money launderers and terrorist financiers, an intergovernmental watchdog said Friday.
The United Arab Emirates, a key oil producer situated between Iraq and Iran, has failed to adopt a coherent national strategy against money laundering and terrorist financing, despite the country's rapid influx of foreign capital over the past decade, the IMF said Friday.