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Anti Money
Laundering
Exam
Study Guide
&
Practice Exam
[Link]
Study support materials that go along with this publication are available from
[Link]
The contents of this study guide are subject to copyright.
2 nd Edition © 2017
1st Edition © 2016
[Link].
Cover Photography © 2009 K H Rawlings:
[Link]
Licence: [Link]
Typeset in Lusitania by Ana Paula Megda.
Cover typeset in Fira Sans by Carrois Apostrophe, Principal design.
No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, including by photocopying or
electronic means.
ISBN-13: 978-1976172120
ISBN-10: 1976172128
ACAMS® is a registered trademark of the Association of Certified Anti Money Laundering
Specialists; this publication is not connected with the Association in any way.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
To Sarah
In Memoriam
3
Contents
Introduction to the Second Edition 11
Chapter 1: Learning to Learn 15
Getting Started 17
Structure Your Time 17
How To Revise 18
Exam Day 21
Question Strategies 22
Chapter 2: Introduction to Anti Money Laundering 27
Risks & Methods of Money Laundering
and Terrorist Financing 29
Classic Money Laundering Process 29
Effects of Money Laundering 31
Chapter 3: Techniques 33
Money Laundering Techniques 35
Electronic Transfers 35
Correspondent Banking 35
Payable Through Accounts (PTAs) 36
Concentration Accounts 37
Private Banking 38
Structuring/Smurfing 39
Microstructuring 39
Cuckoo Smurfing 40
Bank Complicity 40
Credit Unions/Building Societies 40
Credit Cards 41
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Money Remitters & Money Exchange Houses 41
Insurance Companies 42
Securities & Futures Broker-Dealers 42
Casinos & Gaming 43
Dealers in High Value Items 44
Travel Agencies 44
Vehicle Sellers 44
Gatekeepers: Accountants, Auditors, Lawyers,
Notaries, Company Formation Agents 45
Investment and Commodity Advisors 45
Trust & Company Service Providers 46
Real Estate Industry 47
Reverse Flip 47
Loan back 47
Manipulation of Import/Export Prices 48
Letters of Credit 48
Black Market Peso Exchange (BMPE) 48
Online/Internet Banking 49
Internet Casinos 49
Prepaid Cards and E-cash 49
Structures Designed to Hide Beneficial Ownership 52
Shell Companies 52
Front Companies 53
Buying A Company Already Owned By The Criminal 53
Double Invoicing 53
Trusts 53
Bearer Bonds, Securities & Checks 54
Terrorist Financing 54
Informal Value Transfer Systems 55
5
Charities & Not-For-Profits 55
Chapter 4: Regulatory Framework 57
Standards for AML and Combating Financing of Terrorism 59
40 Recommendations 61
Overview Of The 40 Recommendations 63
Key highlights Of The 40 Recommendations 66
Non-Cooperative Counties 68
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision 69
EU Directives on Money Laundering 72
First Directive 72
Second Directive 72
Third Directive 73
Regional FATF-Style Bodies and FATF
Associate Members 74
Other AML initiatives 77
Other International Organizations 78
Key US Legislation and Regulation Relevant To
International Transactions 80
USA Patriot Act 80
OFAC: Office of Foreign Assets Control 82
Key Groups 83
Chronological AML Developments 87
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Chapter 5: Compliance 93
Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Program 95
Assessing Risk and Developing a Risk Scoring Model 96
Levels of Risk 96
Geographical Location 97
Customer Type 98
Products and Services Risk 99
The Elements of an AML Program 100
Compliance Culture 104
Customer Due Diligence 104
Account Opening Guidelines From Basel 2003 105
Name Lists 106
Arabic Names 106
Know Your Employee 107
Suspicious/Unusual Transaction Monitoring
And Reporting 107
Red Flags 108
Electronic AML Solutions 113
Chapter 6: Investigations 115
Conducting And Responding To An Investigation 117
Law Enforcement Investigations 117
Decision To Prosecute The Institution 118
Responding To A Law Enforcement Investigation 118
Summonses And Subpoenas 118
Search Warrants 119
Orders To Restrain Or Freeze Accounts Or Assets 119
Dealing With Investigators And Prosecutors 120
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Obtaining Counsel For The Investigation 120
Notices to Employees 120
Media Relations 121
Internal Investigations 121
Closing the Account 121
Conducting the Investigation 122
Documents 122
Interviewing Employees 122
Attorney-Client Issues 123
Chapter 7: International Cooperation 125
International Money Laundering Information Network 127
Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties 127
Financial Intelligence Units 128
The Supervisory Channel 129
Chapter 8: Study Questions, Simplified Answer Format 131
Study Questions 134
Section 1 134
Section 2 143
Section 3 150
Section 4 159
Answer Sheet 164
Answers 165
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Chapter 9: Study Questions, Standard Answer Format 193
Study Questions 196
Section 1 196
Section 2 217
Section 3 231
Section 4 244
Answer Sheet 254
Answers 255
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Introduction To The Second Edition
I was deeply humbled by the reception to the first edition of this book.
Laid end-to-end the sold copies of the first edition reached 74 stories
high.
In writing the second edition, I wanted to update the text to reflect new
AML developments, include even more of the study material that helped
me pass, and add new relevant content.
We have also taken the opportunity to listen to readers of the first
edition and address some of their comments. This edition has been
typeset in American English – the British English of the first edition
prompted many complaints of typographical errors from readers.
The exam has been checked and rechecked, in both formats, and no
significant errors have been noted. A number of comments to the
contrary that have appeared publicly appear to be mischievous in nature.
I also wanted to take a moment to share a little of the reason why this
book exists.
When I started to study for my ACAMS® exam I quite frankly struggled.
I was overwhelmed by the terminology and complexity of the subject. I
felt that much of what I studied simply didn’t match my style of
learning.
So I set out to re-write everything I learned, piece by piece, in a way that
made sense to me. I simplified the complex. I removed all jargon. I
stripped the concepts to their bare bones.
Once I had the raw materials I then wrote my own exam questions
covering the material section by section. I tried to think of every
question you could ask about the material and set it down.
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I even found the exam style confusing, so I simplified that as well.
For the first time in this second edition, I include the exam in two
formats – the simplified version and a version that more completely
approximates the style of the actual exam.
I was nervous on the day of the exam, but I knew that I had studied the
material in a way that made sense for me. As a result, the knowledge was
easy to access. I came away with a score of over 90%, which for someone
who struggled their way though all of the material was quite an
achievement.
I have also included guidance in this new edition about learning styles,
and have shared some insight into what worked well for me.
It is my overwhelming hope that this guide will help you pass first time,
and I am confident that this new edition will live up to the high promises
of the first.
Thank you, and I wish you the very best of luck with your studies.
AML Expert, 2017
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Chapter 1
Learning to
Learn
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Getting Started
For many, studying for this exam is the first formal test of this
complexity and importance since school, college or university. Maybe
your current job or future promotion prospects depend on your results.
It is important to realize that you might find yourself experiencing
emotional pressures, such as anxiety and stress. It’s important to accept
that these feelings are perfectly normal and that everyone sitting the
exam will feel similarly.
This study guide, and your own tenacity, are quite sufficient to excel.
If you haven’t studied in a while, this section aims to help you form
some good study habits.
Structure Your Time
Firstly, give yourself enough time. It’s best to set up a routine where you
dedicate time to learning. I personally spent half an hour each day over
lunch working through my materials. It’s never too early to start your
studying, so don’ t leave it until the end thinking you can cram.
Work together with colleagues who are also sitting the exam. Consider
organizing a once weekly study hour as you get closer to the exam. It’s
best to set some expectations as to what these study hours should
contain.
Maybe it’s just quiet time in a conference room where you can all learn a
set topic. Maybe you each prepare some quiz questions from the last
week’s topic. Or maybe you split the topics up, learn them separately,
and then do a show and tell session where you explain your topic to
other people.
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The best way to learn something is to teach someone else. After all, you
can’t teach what you don’t know. It doesn’t have to be one of your co-
workers. You could explain the topic to a friend or even a pet and still get
the same benefit.
Don’t underestimate the usefulness of being able to ask questions to
clarify your understanding – others will also have questions, and you can
learn from their questions and the answers they receive.
How To Revise
Start by reading through all of your preparation material. At this point,
do not try to make notes and do not try to memorize anything.
Your aim here is to get a grasp of the layout of the material. Your brain
needs a structure onto which to hang important information. By reading
through you materials first, your brain will create a map of the material
for you.
Next break the study material down into topics using the table of
contents. Assign sections to study times so you know what you need to
revise and by when.
Tackle each topic by reading and understanding the material. This is the
time to take your own notes. Reading aloud or explaining a topic to
someone else can really help facts stick.
In your notes, use diagrams and flow charts to help you visually
remember information.
Mind maps are another visual tool that allows you to link information.
Forming these connections and being able to visualize them is the key to
learning.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
If you are struggling to memorize a particular list of set of features of a
topic, visualize it. Start by remembering how many items there are.
Name each item using a mnemonic. For example, a list of seven items
could be remembered using the days of the week. Think of a heading for
each of the items that matches the first letter of the day of the week – so
item one should be a word beginning with M, the second with T and so
on.
This creates an index in your mind that can be used to retrieve
information by following the logic.
Use flash cards if you are struggling to remember something. The best
way to overcome this problem is simple repetition. Look at the flash
cards whenever you have a spare moment. Do this over and over again
and the information will stick in your memory.
Scents can also help with your memory. Try using a few drops of
essential oil while you study, and again on exam day. Your brain is very
good at associating smells with memories so this will help your brain
work with the specific set of information related to the exam.
Your frame of mind is an important asset to your studies. If you
approach each study session with dread, feeling as if you can’t learn,
then you are preconditioning your brain to achieve your expectations.
A positive frame of mind, knowing that you can succeed if you put in
the effort, primes your mind to achieve. Don’t let set-backs put you off.
If you don’t understand something, come back to it later.
If the concept still doesn’t make sense, no matter how much you study
or look it up online, then ask someone else.
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Finally, if you simply can’t grasp a topic, realize that it’s not such a big
deal. You don’t need to get every question right to pass the exam. Even if
you get one in ten questions completely wrong, you will still have a pass
grade of 90%.
Meditation can be a great way to relax, put worries in perspective and
also improve your mental clarity and focus.
There are many ways to approach meditation, but if this is new to you,
look for guided meditations that last about 10 minutes. There are lots of
apps and downloadable audio files that can help you pick up this useful
habit.
Using test questions is an excellent way to help you prepare for the exam
itself.
Firstly, this will help you understand areas where your knowledge could
be improved so you can use test questions to check the areas where you
should study more.
Secondly, it will give you confidence with the format of the exam itself.
Sometimes the structure of the questions can be sufficient to throw you
completely in the exam.
Having the knowledge is one thing, being able to translate this into the
format required by the exam, is another.
In this book there are two exams, designed to help you learn both the
material in the book, and also the exam format itself.
Take the first exam to assess your level of competence with the study
material, and fill in any gaps you identify.
Once you are confident with the material, you can use the second exam
to practice the exam technique you will be using on exam day.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Any differences in your scores will be down to weaknesses in exam
technique; this will allow you to correctly focus on the right aspects to
ensure success on the day.
Exam Day
Make sure you are organized well in advance of the day. Plan your route
and check parking arrangements. Leave plenty of time for your journey
so that any delays will not impact you.
Check the regulations for the exam, and prepare a checklist of the items
you need to bring with you, including an acceptable form of ID.
If there is a choice of times for the exam, consider whether you are a
morning or afternoon person. Most people feel drowsy just after lunch,
so avoid this time if possible.
Don’t stay up all night revising for the exam. Your brain processes
information while you sleep, so a good night’ s rest will be more
beneficial that a night of last minute studying.
Just prior to the exam, go for a 20 minute walk. Not only will this help
your circulation it will also take your mind off any last-minute nerves.
There is also some evidence that light exercise can improve brain
performance.
Eat a small nutritious snack like a banana or some nuts, this will provide
your brain with food. Do not be tempted to snack on sugary junk food as
you will have a crash within an hour.
Check the regulations to see if you are allowed water, if so bring in a
bottle to stay hydrated. If not, check how to access water once inside.
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When you are taking the exam, make sure you answer every question. If
you are unsure about a question, you can come back to it. If you really
don’t know the answer, or feel that two answers are equally correct, then
make sure you make a selection.
Question Strategies
The way that the exam questions are phrased and organised, means that
you can often apply one of several useful strategies to help you answer
correctly. We look at a number of these here.
In the exam, you will often be presented by a list of items, and asked
which are correct in the context of the question.
You will then be offered a set of possible combinations of those items.
Sometimes you might have various levels of confidence about whether
the items are correct or not.
Let’s say you are very confident that one of the items is correct. Look for
the answer combinations that list this item. Usually this will allow you to
discount several of the answer options, leaving you with one or two to
evaluate.
Look at the list of items again and see if you are very confident that one
of the items is wrong. You can then discount any of the answers that list
this item as a correct choice.
In this way you can usually reduce the answer space significantly,
preventing you from having to fully evaluate every answer.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Be careful with answers that include the phrases “all of the above” or
“none of the above”. Sometimes these are trick questions and there
might be a single word in the question that is misleading. For example,
the question might state which of the following must you do, and then
list some very plausible options of things that you can do.
However, unless the law or regulation requires you, it’s unlikely that you
must do everything. Check the question again and look for words like
“can” and “must” to ensure that you are correctly answering the right
question.
Another common mistake is to not carefully consider the best way to do
something. Often a question may ask which of the following answers is
the best way to achieve a specific objective. The list may contain several
very good ways to do this. Your task is to work out which way is the best
way.
In order to check this, take all the plausible answers, and ask yourself, if
this answer was all that was done, would there be any need to add in any
further methods to improve it, or would that just lead to duplication of
effort?
If you have two answers that both seem to tackle the issue, but in
different ways, ask yourself which one is more reliable, less prone to
human error or dishonesty?
Always remember that a preventative control – one that prevents
something unwanted from occurring, is always better from a control
effectiveness perspective, than a detective control, which is one that
notices that something unwanted has already occurred.
After you have answered all the questions, you should use any
remaining time to check your answers.
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Make sure you haven’t made any silly mistakes such as confusing
questions that ask for opposites: for example, many questions ask which
of the following are features of something, whereas some questions ask
which of the following are not features of something.
It’s extremely easy to confuse your answer to these questions, so take
time both when answering and also when reviewing to make sure you
are answering the correct question.
Multiple choice questions, where you have to select several items can
sometimes be reversed so that the question is the opposite.
This is often the simpler way to ask, and thus answer, the question.
Take this example question:
What are the three objectives of FATF?
i. Monitoring implementation of recommendations by
members
ii. Promoting AML messages worldwide
iii. Encouraging the use of risk-based methods
iv. Monitoring money laundering trends and
countermeasures
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
We can reverse this question by changing the question into the opposite
statement, and changing the answer selections to include only the item
that was missing.
So the question could be rephrased as:
Which is NOT an objective of FATF?
i. Monitoring implementation of recommendations by
members
ii. Promoting AML messages worldwide
iii. Encouraging the use of risk-based methods
iv. Monitoring money laundering trends and
countermeasures
A) i, iii, iv ii
B) ii, iii, iv i
C) i, ii, iv iii
D) i, ii, iii iv
Both of these questions are the same. Having two ways to look at a single
question, including one that is more straight-forward, can be very useful
to you in the exam.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Chapter 2
Introduction to
Anti Money
Laundering
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Risks & Methods of Money Laundering and
Terrorist Financing
Definition
The process of making dirty money (derived from criminal activity) look
clean by disguising the link to the source of the funds. This can be by
moving the money or changing its form.
Laundering is not just about cash; almost any medium can be used
including financial and non-financial instruments.
Money laundering requires knowledge that the money is the proceeds of
crime; however, knowledge could also be inferred from willful
blindness (deliberate avoidance of the facts).
Classic Money Laundering Process
Money laundering has three distinct stages that transform the dirty
money into clean money. These are outlined in the following table.
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Placement Taking dirty money and physically depositing it
with a financial institution or using it to purchase
P
an asset. This is the highest risk area for the
criminal, and most policing efforts are focused
here. Examples: depositing cash in a financial
institution, purchasing high value assets such as
art, precious metals or stones, which can then be
sold with payment made by bank transfer or
check.
Layering This distances the dirty money from its source by
a series of transactions designed to help
anonymity and disguise the audit trail. In this way
L the source, ownership, and location of the funds is
disguised. Examples: wiring funds from one
account to another, converting cash into
depositary instruments (money orders, travelers
cheques etc.), buying and reselling high value
goods or prepaid access or stored value items (like
gift cards), investing in property or legitimate
businesses, investing in stocks bonds or life
insurance, using shell companies which disguise
the beneficial owner.
Integration Placing clean money into the economy using an
apparently normal business or personal
I
transaction, so that criminals can add it to their
wealth. By this stage separating illegal and legal
wealth is very difficult.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Effects of Money Laundering
Increased crime and corruption
Undermine the legitimate private sector by undercutting their prices
Weakening financial institutions, possibly to the point of collapse
(BCCI and, Barings Bank for example). Reputational risk of dealing
with criminals, costs of investigations and fines
Loss of control over monetary policy in smaller countries, as the size
of money laundering transactions causes measurement errors. This
can cause currency exchange rate and interest rate fluctuations
Economic distortion, because money launderers are not interested
in the economics of a transaction, they will put their money into
schemes that offers privacy rather than economic benefit
Loss of tax revenue, as the funds are disguised, so the collection of
taxes is more difficult. This increases the burden of taxation on
normal tax payers
Risks to privatization, as criminals can outbid legitimate purchasers,
so key assets come under criminal control
Reputation risk for the country
Social costs e.g. treating drug addicts
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Chapter 3
Techniques
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Money laundering techniques
Electronic transfers
Wires, ACH, ATMs and credit/debit cards. Indicators of money
laundering include:
Transactions to secrecy havens or high risk areas without
justification
Many small incoming transactions that are then sent out of the
account in one bulk payment
Funds activity that is repetitive, unexplained, or with unusual
patterns
Correspondent banking
This is where one bank (the correspondent) provides services to
another bank (the respondent).
Banks set up these correspondent relationships across the globe to
provide services in jurisdictions where they have no physical
presence.
Large international banks have many thousands of correspondent
banking relationships.
The respondents obtain services such as: cash management (e.g.
interest bearing accounts in a range of currencies), international
wires, check clearing, payable through accounts, foreign exchange.
Credit worthy banks can be offered credit products such as letters of
credit or credit card account services.
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Correspondent banking is vulnerable for two reasons:
The financial institution carries out transactions for the
customers of another institution. This indirect relationship
means the customers identity hasn’t been verified by first-
hand knowledge
The volumes of transactions mean that it’s not possible to
know which transactions represent legitimate business and
which are suspicious
Additional risks:
Although the regulatory regime may be understood, the
effectiveness over a specific respondent bank may be
difficult to ascertain
The level of AML controls at the respondent can be assessed
using standard questionnaires, however the effectiveness of
the due diligence may be difficult to ascertain
Nesting of respondent banks means that the correspondent
is further away from the actual customer
Note that the USA Patriot Act enforced a number of provisions
against correspondent banking – see separate section for details.
Payable Through Accounts (PTAs)
These are accounts, similar to respondent accounts, but where the
respondent bank offers the service direct to their customers. This means
that they could send a wire transfer without first clearing the transaction
with the respondent. This means that the respondent’ s customers can
directly control funds at the correspondent bank without oversight from
the respondent.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
The PTA account has a number of sub-accounts that can be offered to
customers such as individuals, commercial businesses, exchange houses,
or other banks.
Aspects of PTAs that could impact AML efforts:
PTAs with banks in offshore locations may have weak licensing or
supervision
PTAs where the CDD is performed only on the respondent, not the
respondent’s customers
PTAs where the sub-account holders can deposit and withdraw
currency
PTAs used by a subsidiary of a respondent bank, which can perform
banking activity without direct supervision
Concentration Accounts
Also known as special use, omnibus, settlement, suspense, intra-day,
sweep or collection accounts. They are internal accounts used to
assist with the settlement and processing of customer transactions,
often in conjunction with private banking, trust and custody
accounts, funds transfers.
They pose an AML threat if the customer-identifying information is
lost when the account is used, this loses the audit trail.
Good practices include:
Require dual signatures on all general ledger entries
Prevent direct customer access to concentration accounts
Capture information in customer statements
Prevent customer knowledge of concentration accounts
Reconcile the accounts frequently, ensure segregation between the
reconciliation staff and those that use the accounts on a day-to-day
basis
Resolve discrepancies timely
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Monitor for recurring customer names
Private Banking
Offered to wealthy customers who seek confidentiality and
personalized service. Often operates semi-autonomously to other
parts of the bank, and is highly lucrative.
Key factors in private banking:
High profitability
Competition
Powerful clientele
Confidentiality and secrecy between client and banker
Trust between client and banker
Commission-based compensation
Relationship managers that can become client advocates in order to
protect their clients
Often assets move overseas to corporations in secrecy havens.
PICs (Private Investment Companies) are established by individuals
to hold assets. They maintain confidentiality and are used for tax or
trust related reasons. The secrecy laws of the offshore havens where
PICs are located conceals the true identity of the beneficial owner.
Sometimes PICs are created with nominee owners (who hold the
title to the company for the benefit of unnamed owners) this can
sometimes be protected by attorney-client privilege to prevent
information about the beneficial owner from being obtained.
Many private banks establish PICs for clients, often using a trust
company in an offshore secrecy haven.
PEPs (Politically Exposed Persons) are a further risk in Private
Banking, as they may have access to the proceeds of bribes,
extortion, and embezzlement.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Structuring/Smurfing
Organizing a transaction in such a way as to avoid triggering a
reporting or record-keeping threshold. It is one of the most well-
known money laundering methods, and is a crime in many
countries. The people who perform this activity are known as
runners or smurfs, employed by the launderers. They deposit small
amounts of cash under the reporting threshold, or purchase
monetary instruments (cashiers checks) in amounts under the
reporting threshold.
A structurer may have 20 or more accounts open, some in false
identities of dead people. Cash is supplied to the structurer by a
money broker. The structurer deposits the cash in small quantities.
The money broker then uses checks drawn on the accounts to make
payments for exports from the country where the structuring takes
place to a different country (often linked to drug production).
Microstructuring
This is the same as structuring, but for very small amounts, e.g.
$800. The cash from the sale of drugs is deposited in one country
and often withdrawn in a foreign country to pay for the supplies of
the drugs.
It is very difficult to detect, but some signs might be:
Using blank deposit slips rather than paying in book slips
Frequent small cash deposits not consistent with usual business or
personal activity
Cash deposits followed quickly by ATM withdrawals in a high risk
country
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Cuckoo Smurfing
This requires an insider in a financial institution, often a money
remitter or alternative remittance system.
The first step is when a customer provides money to an alternative
remittance system for transfer to a bank account in a foreign country.
Rather than sending the money to the destination, the insider advises an
accomplice in the destination country of the bank account details of
where the cash should have been sent.
The associate then deposits dirty cash into the unwitting customer’s
account, who believes that it is the international transfer they awaited.
Then the alternative remitter provides the funds to the associate, who
has swapped dirty money for clean money received from the remitter,
which is supported by a genuine receipt.
The bank account used here is often innocent, but the cash deposit
would be by a launderer, so retain CCTV footage.
Bank Complicity
Employees can pose a significant money laundering risk. Background
screening for criminal history should be performed, as well as ongoing
monitoring for any employees that may be performing criminal
activities. Screening should include outsourced staff such as cleaners.
Credit Unions/Building Societies
Although a low risk due to their small size, and the difficulty of hiding
large transactions, they are still vulnerable because they handle a large
volume of cash transactions.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Credit Cards
Includes:
Credit card associations such as MasterCard, Visa, American
Express, Discover
Issuing banks, which issue cards to customers
Acquiring banks, which process transactions for merchants who
accept credit cards
Third-party processors, who have contracts with issuers and
acquirers to provide transaction processing and other services
Credit cards are often used in the layering or integration stages, as
cash payments to cards are often restricted. Accounts are usually
over-paid, creating a credit balance, which can be returned via a
refund.
Money Remitters & Money Exchange Houses
Money remitters move money for their customers, who often don’t
have access to traditional banking services; they are also often
cheaper than banks. Their services also cover all global locations,
including ones without a formal banking infrastructure.
Key types:
Separate networks such as Western Union and MoneyGram
Underground networks (alternative remitters)
Money transfers via foreign branches of a bank, where visiting
workers can remit funds back home
International money orders
They can be well regulated, if properly licensed.
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Insurance Companies
Investment products such as life insurance, which can be canceled
and cashed in (whole of life or permanent life) and annuities are
highest risk. Annuities allow a large cash payment to be exchanged
for a series of income payments. This is similar to purchasing
investments such as stocks, shares or bonds. Normal insurance (car,
household etc.) do not have the redeemable value feature and are
thus not susceptible to money laundering.
Key risks:
Brokers have a lot of freedom over the policies they sell
Salesmen may not work for the insurance company, and be
incentivized to sell, which makes them overlook suspicions
Overpaying the insurance, and receiving the payment as a clean
money check from the insurance company
Using the ‘free look’ period to take out a policy, the cancel it without
penalty for a clean check
Redeeming polices early, paying the redemption charge, and
receiving a clean check.
Customers who are more interested in the cancellation terms than
the policy may be a money launderer.
Products that allow purchase with cash or cash equivalents
Products that allow a customer to borrow money against the product
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Securities & Futures Broker-Dealers
The industry runs on electronic transfers not cash, so is usually part
of the integration or placement stages.
Key risk areas:
High speed, international nature, using wire transfers.
Ease of converting to cash without loss or penalty.
Competitive, commission driven culture, meaning salespeople can
overlook the source of funds.
Use of nominee or trustee accounts, obscuring true beneficiaries.
Use of cash trading accounts which are not subject to the AML
controls of banks.
There are also activities within the securities markets, such as
insider trading and market manipulation which generate illegal
funds that need to be laundered.
Wash trading is where two opposite transactions are placed – for
example dirty money could be introduced into a brokerage, and a
long and a short position could be taken on the same security or
future in different brokerages. No matter which way the market
moves, the principal is safe, as losses on one side are offset by gains
on the other side. If the market moves so that the dirty money is lost,
then the gains in the other brokerage account can be withdrawn
which look like legitimate investment returns.
Casinos & Gaming
Bookmakers, horse racing, and lotteries all are cash intensive, and
offer a potential source of recently acquired wealth.
Casino money laundering is usually at the placement stage,
converting cash into checks. The cash is used to buy chips, and then
the chips can be converted into a check drawn on the casino’s
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account. The credit can also be transferred to a different jurisdiction
where the casino operates, and the funds can be made available
there.
One method of gambling is to bet in such a way as to risk very little
of your capital (e.g. by betting on favorites). The winnings can then
be withdrawn and are the verifiable winnings from gaming.
Dealers in High Value Items
Precious metals, gem stones, jewelery, art and antiques are all
vulnerable. Gold is compact, valuable, and convertible to cash in
many parts of the world anonymously. For example, gold or
diamonds can be purchased using cash generated from drug sales.
The gold or diamonds can be smuggled back to the drug production
country and converted into clean money. This then funds the drug
production, with the reminder as profits for the producer. Often
dealers will buy the high value item, and will make payment to a
third party, allowing the change of the item from one form to
another (e.g. object to cash) and from one person to another. As a
result, this feature is useful in the layering phase.
Art auction houses have very high value items which are bought by
anonymous agents for elusive purchasers. The funds for the
purchase arrive as a wire transfer from an off-shore location.
Travel Agencies
Susceptible to money laundering where an expensive ticket or hotel
package is purchased for another person, who then cancels and
obtains a refund.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Vehicle Sellers
Cars and other vehicles (aircraft, helicopters, and yachts) are susceptible
to money laundering for four reasons:
You can often make multiple part payments, allowing you to
structure a cash deposit
You can downgrade your vehicle, and accept the difference in a
check made out to a third party (or yourself) which represents clean
money, or a layering technique
Dealers will accept third party payments for the vehicle (layering
technique)
The ability to trade multiple vehicles, which creates complex layers
of transactions
Gatekeepers: Accountants, Auditors, Lawyers, Notaries,
Company Formation Agents
They can all facilitate the entry of illicit money into the financial system
via the following methods:
Creating corporate vehicles and complex legal entities such as trusts.
These obscure the links between the proceeds of crime and the
perpetrator.
Buying and selling property can be used in the layering stage, or in
the integration stage where the asset is purchased and retained
Performing financial transactions on behalf of a client (making
deposits, issuing checks, making and receiving wires, buying and
selling stock).
Providing financial and tax advice. Criminals may pose as wealthy
individuals who need help sheltering wealth from tax.
The issue of lawyers or attorneys providing advice to their client is
controversial, as they have a confidential relationship with their
clients.
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Investment and Commodity Advisors
Accounts for commodities futures and options can be used for
laundering. These include:
Commodities: food, grains and metals are traded on exchanges,
often using futures
Commodity pools: combines funds from several members to allow
them to trade
Futures: contracts to buy or sell a commodity at a future date and set
price
Omnibus accounts: accounts held at a futures merchant on behalf of
another merchant, the transactions for multiple customers are
combined which obscures their identity
Options: create the right but not the obligation to buy or sell a
quantity of an item at a set price on or before an expiration date
Key risks:
Withdrawing assets by transferring the proceeds to unrelated
accounts or high-risk countries
Custodial relationships that allow the client to remain anonymous
Movement of funds to disguise the origin
Investing illegal proceeds
Trust & Company Service Providers
These create and administer companies.
They:
Form legal entities
Act as directors, secretaries, partners
Provide registered offices and business addresses
Act as a trustee of an express trust
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Act as a nominee shareholder on behalf of another person
Many of these activities can be performed by lawyers under legal
privilege provisions which prevent the disclosure of information.
Real Estate Industry
Investing illicit funds into real estate is common, because houses
provide shelter for criminals; rural properties can be used for
growing and storing drugs. The proceeds of crime can be used to pay
deposits/down payments, mortgages, and construction costs. Using
nominees to hide the beneficial owner is common.
Buying and selling real estate is used in layering or integration for
example, where a holiday resort can be purchased.
Escrow accounts are used to hold funds for the purchase, and these
accounts have many deposits and withdrawals related to the sale.
They can be used to disguise criminal transactions that look like
legitimate business transactions related to the sale or purchase of a
property. As a result escrow accounts require specific monitoring.
Reverse Flip
A technique where an asset is apparently acquired for less than the
normal price. This is paid for partly in clean money and partly in dirty
money. For example, a $2M house could be acquired for $1M plus a
further $1M of dirty money outside of the transaction (‘under the
table’). The property is later sold for the full $2M which is now all clean
money.
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Loan back
Dirty money is placed in the account of an offshore entity that is owned
by the criminal. The offshore location means that the beneficial owner is
difficult or impossible to determine. The offshore entity then makes a
loan to the criminal which is clean money. In addition, repayments on
the loan are also tax-deductible.
Manipulation of import/export prices
A technique where goods are shipped and the buyer either under- or
over-pays. This allows monetary worth to move from one country to
another. It may also be used to avoid taxes. They are known as
fraudulent transfer pricing schemes. Often exports are under-valued,
because governments scrutinize imports so that they collect import
taxes.
Letters of Credit
Letters of credit (L/C) are normally used to ensure that an exporter is
paid for the goods they are exporting. The buyer of the goods will
purchase a letter of credit from their bank, and forward it to exporter,
who lodges it at their bank. Payments will be released by the buyer’ s
bank when the conditions of the L/C are fulfilled – these are sometimes
stage payments such as when goods are loaded onto a shipping carrier,
when they arrive in the country, and when they are cleared by customs.
L/C facilitate money laundering by allowing funds to move country
when they don’t relate to an actual shipment, which is achieved in
countries with lax export controls. L/C can be used when import and
export prices are manipulated for money laundering or tax evasion
purposes.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Black Market Peso Exchange (BMPE)
Money in the US or other drug consuming countries is purchased by
agents working on behalf of drug producing countries. They deposit the
cash into accounts they control, and use these funds to purchase goods
in the drug consuming country. These goods are then shipped to the
drug producing country and sold, with the proceeds handed to the drug
producers.
Online/Internet Banking
Helps create distance between customer and the bank, by
eliminating face to face contact.
Cross border transactions from anywhere on earth.
Rapid execution of instructions.
To counter the threat, log files should be kept, including the IP
addresses of access, maintained for at least a year.
Internet Casinos
Transactions are primarily using debit or credit cards, and the
casinos are located in unregulated off-shore locations so prosecuting
individuals is difficult. Credit card transactions are identified by
codes which enable such transactions to be blocked by banks and
credit card companies.
Online gambling is not used for cash movement as there is no
physical presence to pay in cash.
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Prepaid Cards and E-cash
Prepaid cards are gift cards or Visa and MasterCard branded
payment cards, portable, valuable, exchangeable for cash or products
(via an ATM or shop purchase), and anonymous.
Key risks:
Anonymous card holders and funding, access to funds
High value limits, and no limits to the number of cards that can be
acquired
Global access to cash at ATMs
Offshore card issuers
Substitute for bulk-cash smuggling
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
There are some regulatory discrepancies over prepaid cards – in
Germany adding value is considered the same as making a deposit,
so prepaid card institutions are considered credit institutions, and
are regulated. In the US regulations do not exist that cover such
situations.
Stored value cards (or electronic purses) hold the funds physically
on a chip inside a card.
Ways to reduce risk:
Limit the functions and capacity of smart cards
Link new payment technologies to financial institutions and bank
accounts
Require standard documentation and record-keeping
Allow the examination of records by investigating authorities
Establish international standards for the above measures
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Types of Pre-Paid Cards
Name Description Anonymity Reloadable Value Examples
stored on
card
Open A Visa, MasterCard, Usually not, Yes: electronic Usually no – Visa or
system or American often banking, via transactions MasterCard
cards Express card that embossed retailers authorized prepaid cards
can be used in with the in real-time
ATMs and retailers card-holders
name
Semi- Same as open cards, No – same Yes Usually yes
open without ATM as open – lost and
system access (purchase cards stolen
cards only) cards/
vouchers
cannot be
replaced
Closed For buying goods Typically Often not, but Usually yes Proprietary gift
system from participating yes some cards can – lost and cards
cards retailer. be reloaded stolen
cards/vouch
ers cannot
be replaced
Semi- Can be used at Usually yes Often not, sold Usually yes Gift cards or
closed selected retailers at preset – lost and vouchers that
system denominations stolen can be used at a
cards cards/ range of
vouchers merchants.
cannot be
replaced
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Structures Designed to Hide Beneficial
Ownership
Shell Companies
Types:
Shelf company: A corporation without any activity, waiting to be
sold as a ready-made company
Shell company: A corporation which at the time of incorporation
has no significant assets or operations
They can be used for legitimate purposes (tax and estate planning,
mergers and acquisitions) and also by money launderers. They can issue
shares to natural or legal persons, and in registered or bearer form.
Bearer shares mean that whoever physically holds the share certificate,
owns the share. They can be created for a single purpose or to hold a
single asset.
Shell companies convert cash proceeds of crime into alternative assets.
The launderer can create the illusion of business activity by creating a
fictitious but cash-rich business (restaurant etc.). Any criminally
controlled company can offer the criminal employment in order to
appear legitimate.
Shell companies can disguise ownership. Nominees can be used as
owners, directors, shareholders. Criminals can avoid being linked to
assets by registering these assets in the name of a company. The records
can be held in offshore locations where the information is difficult to
access by law enforcement. In many cases the beneficial ownership
information, if collected, is not verified in any way.
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Front Companies
Launderers can also use legitimate businesses that offer a service, and
co-mingle illicit funds with legitimate proceeds from the business. Such
criminally controlled companies often use nominee owners or directors
to hide beneficial ownership.
Selling these criminal companies is a way to create legitimate funds for
the launderer, and they often get high prices as the turnover appears
artificially high.
Buying a company already owned by the criminal
This is a way of repatriating funds. The criminal business is bought by
an offshore company that was used to hide the criminal’s funds. In this
way the funds are repatriated, and appear as the legitimate proceeds of
the sale.
Double invoicing
An offshore company orders goods from an onshore subsidiary. The
payment is sent in full to their account. The payment is actually
repatriating funds that have been spirited out of the country. If the
subsidiary was over charged, they will show lower profits, reducing tax.
This can also work in reverse where the subsidiary purchases from the
parent at too high a price.
Trusts
These differ by jurisdiction, but generally the legal relationship is set up
by a settler, where assets are put into the trust for the benefit of one or
more beneficiaries (or for a stated purpose, such as a charitable trust).
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Trust accounts are very useful for money laundering, hiding beneficial
owners, converting between assets, and processing illicit funds. They
can also be formed in privacy havens making details about them
impossible to locate.
Payments to beneficiaries can also be used as they don’ t require any
justification as to the source of the wealth.
Bearer Bonds, Securities & Checks
Bearer bonds and shares have no registry of owners, so physical
possession is ownership. Banks should ask questions about the
beneficial owners of such entities and share this information with law
enforcement.
A bearer check is a check that can be paid out to the holder, usually
without any identification.
A non-bearer check can be converted into bearer form if the original
payee has endorsed it.
Terrorist Financing
Money laundering is always about money received for illegal activity.
Terrorist financing however may use legitimate funds for illegal
activities.
Terrorists wish to disguise the link between their funding source and
themselves so many of the layering techniques are used.
Key suspicious items:
Account holders name on a list of suspected terrorists
Frequent large cash deposits in a non-profit’s account
High volume of transactions
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Lack of clear relationship between activity and account holders
business
Large cash deposits followed by frequent withdrawals until the
funds are depleted
Informal Value Transfer Systems
Alternative money remittance systems: Hawala, poey kuan, Chop
shop, hundi. It is cheaper than sending international transfers.
Similar to Western Union® in operation:
A customer attends a local business such as a trading business
and deposits funds, asking that they be sent to another country.
The customer receives a code which they communicate to their
beneficiary, which enables them to collect the funds
The trader then asks his counter-party in another country to
make the funds available upon production of the code.
The debt between the two traders is either settled as part of the
usual trade process, or is balanced by incoming remittances
It can be used in any phase of money laundering
There is very little paper-trail maintained
Charities & Not-for-profits
Charities are cash intensive, have considerable funds, often with a
global presence, minimal oversight or regulation.
To minimize risks, charities should have full budgets and account
for all expenses, conduct independent audits and perform field
audits to ensure funds are being used for legitimate purposes.
Standard bank accounts should be used to ensure the normal
banking system controls are in place.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Chapter 4
Regulatory
Framework
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Standards for AML and Combating Financing
of Terrorism
FATF was launched in 1989 by the G7, and is based at the OECD
(Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) in Paris.
There are 38 members, comprised of 36 jurisdictions, and 2 regions
(GCC/Gulf Cooperation Council, and EU). There are 29 regional and
international organizations that are associate members or observers, and
participate in the work of the FATF.
Members:
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China,
Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong
(China), Iceland, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg,
Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, the
Russian Federation, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and
the United States.
Although the GCC is a member, the individual member countries of the
GCC are not members, this is Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
To be a member, the jurisdiction must be strategically important (by
GDP, size of banking sector, or impact to the global financial system),
and lead to a more balanced geographic spread of members.
It also should provide political commitment to the 40
recommendations, and AML/CFT, agree to implement all 40
recommendations within three years, be assessed for compliance
periodically, and actively participate in FATF. The country should also
be a member of the regional FATF member.
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The compliance criteria must be met in relation to:
Money laundering and terrorist financing offenses
Freezing and confiscation
Customer due diligence (although there is some flexibility in this
requirement)
Record-keeping
Suspicious transaction reporting
Financial sector supervision
International cooperation
Objectives of FATF:
Promote AML messages worldwide
Monitor implementation of recommendations by members (annual
self-assessment, plus periodic visit from another member)
Monitoring money laundering trends/countermeasures (the
‘typologies’ exercise)
FATF cannot impose fines or other penalties, if members do not
comply it applies a graduated approach of enhanced peer pressure,
including putting the jurisdiction on a watch list, and ultimately
rejecting the member.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
40 Recommendations
First issued in 1990, revised in 1996, 2003 and 2012.
Interpretive notes clarify the application of specific
recommendations
After September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, they issued nine
recommendations on terrorist financing: eight were adopted on Oct
31, 2001, and one was Oct 22, 2004.
The 2012 version of the 40 recommendations combined the nine
into the 40.
Recommendations cover:
Identify risk and develop policies
Criminal justice system and law enforcement
Financial system and regulation
Transparency of legal persons and arrangements
International cooperation
2003 revisions expanded the global reach of ways to crack down on
the illicit movement of funds; it also strengthened measures to
combat money laundering and terrorist financing.
Key changes in 2003:
Included terrorist financing
Included real estate agents, precious metals dealers, accountants,
lawyers, trust services providers
Specified procedures on customer identification, due diligence,
including extra ID for high risk customers
Clear definition of predicate offenses for money laundering
Prohibited shell banks, urged transparency over legal persons
International cooperation in terrorist financing investigations
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2012 revision introduced:
The risk assessment as the first step
Incorporated the nine terrorist financing recommendations into the
main 40
Measures against weapons of mass destruction
Domestic PEPs and those with prominent functions in international
organizations
Identifying risks of new products prior to launch
Financial groups should have a group-wide AML/CFT program
Include tax crimes within the scope of predicate offenses
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Overview of the 40 recommendations
Group Topic Recommendations
I AML/CFT Policies & Coordination 1-2
Assessing risks and applying a risk
based approach
National cooperation and
coordination
II Money laundering and confiscation 3-4
Money laundering offense
Confiscation and provisional
measures
III Terrorist financing and financing of 5-8
proliferation
Terrorist financing offense
Targeted financial sanctions related to
proliferation
Non-profit organizations
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Group Topic Recommendations
IV Financial and non-financial 9-23
institution measures
Financial institution secrecy laws
Customer due diligence and record
keeping
Additional measures for specific
customers and activities
Reliance, controls and financial
groups
Reporting of suspicious transactions
Designated non-financial businesses
and professions
V Transparency and beneficial 24-25
ownership of legal persons and
arrangements
Transparency and beneficial
ownership of legal persons
Transparency and beneficial
ownership of legal arrangements
VI Powers and responsibilities of 26-35
competent authorities and other
institutional measures
Regulation and supervision
Operational and law enforcement
General requirements
Sanctions
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Group Topic Recommendations
VII International cooperation 36-40
International instruments
Mutual legal assistance
Mutual legal assistance: freezing and
confiscation
Extradition
Other forms of international
cooperation
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Key highlights of the 40 recommendations
Risk based approach: countries and financial institutions should
understand the risks they face, and take measures against those risks.
This allows limited resources to be targeted.
Designated categories of offenses: where the money derived from
the specific offense is concealed in the financial system, this would
constitute criminal money laundering. Countries should also
confiscate the proceeds of crime.
Terrorist financing and proliferation: countries should criminalize
terrorist financing, freeze the assets of any entity that is identified by
the UN Security Council as involved in terrorism. Also control
against the use of non-profits for terrorist support.
Knowledge and criminal liability: willful blindness (deliberate
avoidance of knowledge of the facts) should not shield an entity
from money laundering offenses. Civil, or if possible, criminal
offenses should apply to legal entities.
Customer due diligence: should occur when business relations are
started, when occasional transactions occur above a specified
threshold, suspicions of money laundering or terrorist financing
arise, doubts about previous customer identification exist.
Financial institutions should:
Identify customers on a risk basis and verify their identity using
independent source documents.
Identify the beneficial owner and verify their identity.
Understand the nature of the business relationship.
Scrutinize transactions and ensure they match the knowledge of the
customer.
Maintain records.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Heightened CDD is recommended on the following:
PEPs including verifying source of funds.
Cross-Border correspondent banking, understanding the
respondent’s business and customers, levels of AML controls,
mitigate risks of payable through accounts.
Money or value transfer services (MVTS) should be licensed and be
subject to AML requirements.
New technologies should be risk-assessed, especially new products,
delivery mechanisms and business practices. Risks should be
mitigated.
Wire transfers – accurate originator, intermediary and beneficiary
information, and monitor for missing data, also sanctions screen the
data.
Suspicious transaction reporting: institutions must report to the FIU
any suspicions.
Expanded coverage of industries:
Casinos
Real estate agents
Dealers in precious metals and stones
Lawyers
Notaries
Accountants
Legal professionals (when they manage client money or
other assets, buy or sell real estate, create or manage
companies)
Trust and company service providers (when they act as
formation agents, act as a director or secretary, act as a
trustee or nominee shareholder for another person)
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FATF designated thresholds:
Financial institutions for occasional customers: €15,000.
Casinos, including internet: €3,000.
Dealers in precious metals and stones, when dealing in cash
€15,000.
Transparency and beneficial ownership of legal persons: particularly
those that issue bearer shares.
Powers and responsibilities of authorities: ensure FATF
recommendations are being implemented in financial institutions,
and are not owned or controlled by criminals.
International co-operation and mutual assistance.
Non-Cooperative Counties
FATF identifies non-cooperative countries assessing them on 4 criteria:
Loopholes in financial regulations: including inadequate
supervision or creation of financial institutions, excessive secrecy,
and lack of suspicious transaction reporting.
Obstacles raised by regulatory requirements: inadequate business
registrations, lack of beneficial owner information.
Obstacles to international cooperation: administrative or judicial
blockages.
Inadequate resources for AML efforts, including the absence of an
FIU
Nigeria and Myanmar were the last two countries to be removed from
the list in 2006.
FATF now risk rates jurisdictions based on the compliance with the
above.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
Established in 1974 by central bank governors of the G10. The
Secretariat is provided by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
in Switzerland, which promotes financial stability among central banks
and international organizations. Central bankers are not directly
responsible for AML, but they can enforce high ethical standards.
The Basel Committee’s members are Argentina, Australia, Belgium,
Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong SAR, India,
Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, Russia,
Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States.
In 1998, Basel Committee set out a statement of principles entitled
“Prevention of Criminal Use of the Banking System for the Purpose of
Money Laundering” covering:
Customer identification
Compliance with laws
Conformity with high ethical standards and local laws and
regulations
Full cooperation with national law enforcement to the
extent permitted without breaching customer
confidentiality
Staff training
Record keeping and audits
They stressed confidentiality, as this was a time before legislation that
required the identification of customers.
In 1997 the Basel committee issued the “Core Principles for Effective
Banking Supervision” that required strong KYC, and high ethical
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standards to prevent the use of the financial system by criminals. It also
urged adoption of the FATF 40 recommendations.
In October 2001 paper “Customer Due Diligence for Banks” covered:
Introduction
Importance of KYC standards for supervisors and banks
Essential elements of KYC standards
The role of supervisors
Implementation of KYC standards in a cross-border context
The paper indicates that banks should monitor account activity and
ensure that it is in line with expected usage. Numbered accounts are not
prohibited, but the real customer’s identification can’t be hidden from
compliance staff or regulators.
The paper introduces 7seven specific customer situations:
Trust, nominee and fiduciary accounts
Corporate vehicles, especially with nominee shareholders or
shares in bearer form
Introduced businesses
Client accounts opened by professional intermediaries (i.e.
pooled accounts for mutual funds, pension funds, and
money funds)
PEPs
Non-face-to-face customers
Correspondent banking
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
The following recommendations are made:
Private banking should not be exempt from KYC
Customer acceptance should include the country, business
and other risk factors and should indicate who is, and is not,
an acceptable customer
Understand the beneficial owner
Periodic training on KYC & AML
Internal audit and compliance should regularly monitor staff
performance and adherence to KYC policies
High risk accounts should be monitored for suspicious
activities away from normal patterns of usage
Regulators should ensure staff follow KYC procedures
The four key elements of KYC according to the paper are:
Customer identification
Risk management
Customer acceptance
Monitoring
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EU Directives on Money Laundering
First Directive
Issued in 1991 as 91/308/EEC, requires member states to prevent
domestic financial services being used for money laundering, amending
national law if needed. It only covered drug trafficking (as defined by the
1988 Vienna Convention), however member states could broaden the
predicate crimes.
Second Directive
Issued in 2001 as 2001/97/EEC; required stricter money laundering
controls.
It included all serious crimes as predicate crimes, including fraud
It brought bureau de change/currency exhanges and money
remitters into scope
It introduced ‘willful blindness’
A precise definition of laundering (i.e. concealing the criminal
source of funds, or using property knowing it was from a criminal
source)
It went much further than US law, and even the FATF guidance
It included lawyers moving money for clients, auditors, accountants,
tax advisers, real estate agents, notaries, legal professionals
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Third Directive
2005/60/EU is based on the FATF 40 recommendations, and was
adopted in 2005, to be implemented by 2007.
Defined money laundering and terrorist financing as separate
crimes, and ensured that the directives covered both
Risk based CDD – enhanced CDD for riskier customers
Protect employees who report suspicions
Collect statistics on the SARs, e.g. number filed, follow-up
performed, number of cases, prosecutions and convictions
Financial institutions must record beneficial owner of accounts held
by legal persons i.e. natural persons controlling 25% or more of a
legal entity
Defined PEPs as those in prominent positions and their publically
known associates, ceasing to be a PEP after one year of not holding
office
It applies to:
Credit institutions
Financial institutions
Auditors, external accounts, tax advisors
Legal professionals
Estate agents
New for the third directive are:
Trusts and company service providers
Dealers selling goods for cash (>€15,000)
Life insurance intermediaries
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Regional FATF-Style Bodies and FATF
Associate Members
There are eight regional FATF-style bodies and FATF Associate
Members that have similar form and functions to those of FATF. Many
FATF member countries are also members of these bodies.
Asia/Pacific Group on Money Laundering (APG)
A Financial Action Task Force (FATF)-style autonomous
voluntary and cooperative regional body, not derived from an
international treaty, and not part of an international
organization. Established in 1997 consisting of jurisdictions in
the Asia/Pacific Region. See [Link]
Caribbean Financial Action Task Force (CFATF)
A FATF-style regional body comprising Caribbean states,
including Aruba, the Bahamas, the British Virgin Islands, the
Cayman Islands and Jamaica. Established as the result of
meetings in 1990 and 1992. Cooperating nations include
Canada, France, Mexico, the Netherlands, Spain, UK, US. 19
recommendations, revised in 1999 which complement the FATF
40. See [Link]
Council of Europe Select Committee of Experts on the Evaluation of
Anti-Money Laundering Measures (MONEYVAL)
(formerly PC-R-EV)
Council of Europe Select Committee of Experts on the
Evaluation of Anti-Money Laundering Measures. Formerly PC-
R-EV, the committee was established in 1997 by the Committee
of Ministers of the Council of Europe to conduct self and
mutual assessments of anti-money laundering measures in place
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in Council of Europe countries that are not FATF members.
MONEYVAL is a sub-committee of the European Committee
on Crime Problems of the Council of Europe (CDPC).
Eastern and Southern Africa Anti-Money Laundering Group
(ESAAMLG)
A FATF-style regional body comprising fourteen countries from
the Eastern region of Africa down to the Southern tip of Africa.
It was established in 1999. Has adopted the FATF 40
recommendations. See [Link]
Eurasian Group (EAG)
A FATF-style regional body formed in October 2004 in
Moscow. Member countries include Belarus, China,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan. Observers include UK, USA, Italy, Georgia plus
organizations such as FATF, World Bank, IMF. See
[Link]
Financial Action Task Force of South America against Money
Laundering (GAFISUD – Grupo de Acción Financiera de Sudamérica)
A FATF-style regional body for South America, established in
2000. Members include: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay,
Peru, and Uruguay. Created by inter-governmental treaty which
permits more countries to join. Adopted the FATF
recommendations. See [Link]
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Intergovernmental Action Group against Money-Laundering in West
Africa (GIABA – Groupe Intergouvernemental d’Action contre le
Blanchiment d’Argent en Afrique de l’Quest)
GIABA is an institution of the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) responsible for facilitating the
adoption and implementation of Anti-Money Laundering
(AML) and Counter-Financing of Terrorism (CFT) in West
Africa. It is also a FATF-Styled Regional Body (FSRB) working
with its member States to ensure compliance with international
AML/CFT standards.
Middle East and North Africa Financial Action Task Force
(MENAFATF)
A FATF-style body established for the Middle Eastern and
North African regions in 2004. Algeria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia,
Bahrain, Libya, Sudan, Egypt, Mauritania, Syria, Iraq, Morocco,
Tunisia, Jordan, Oman, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Yemen. Voluntary,
not derived from international treaty, independent from any
other international organization. See [Link]
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Other AML initiatives
CICAD (Organization of American States: Inter-American Drug
Abuse Control Commission.
1992, OAS (Organization of American States) is a permanent
international body which provided model legislation tackling money
laundering. Forms Western Hemisphere’s drug policy.
1999 a specialist AML unit (CICAD-AMLU) formed, which
provides technical assistance and develops regulations (influenced
by and compatible with FATF 40).
They provide support to bankers and regulators, judges and
prosecutors, financial intelligence units, law enforcement.
Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Units
1995 FIUs worked together informally to reciprocate information,
supply training, create the Egmont Secure Web (ESW) technology
platform, promote operational autonomy, promote the
establishment of further FIUs.
It defined an FIU as: central, national agency for receiving analyzing
and disseminating SARs related to money laundering and terrorist
financing, as required by national legislation.
In 2010 there were 117 Egmont members.
Wolfsburg Group of Global Banks
Association of 11 global banks, settings standards for KYC, AML,
and terrorist financing policies.
Created in 2000, principles carry no force of law or penalties.
In partnership with Transparency International.
Covers private banking.
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Indicates the following as high risk: PEPs, high risk countries (those
without good AML standards), high risk activities (clients whose
wealth originates from activities susceptible to money laundering).
In 2002, prohibited concentration accounts (internal non-client
accounts) that sever the link between the sources of funds.
In 2002, agreed how to deal with terrorist financing, by sharing lists
of suspected terrorists globally, providing information on the
methods used by terrorists, defining business guidelines for sectors
and activities prone to terrorist financing, and develop uniform
policies.
Enhanced CDD for remittance services, exchange houses, bureau de
change, money transfer agents, and underground banking
businesses and alternative remittance systems.
Correspondent banking services should not be provided to a shell
bank, CDD should not be performed on IMF and World Bank.
Other International Organizations
Any country wanting financial assistance from the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund must have adequate AML controls.
Other organizations with AML or anti-terrorist financing initiatives
include:
African Development Bank
Asia Development Bank
The Commonwealth Secretariat
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(EBRD)
European Central Bank (ECB)
Europol
Inter-American Development Bank (IADB)
Interpol
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International Organization of Securities Commissions
(IOSCO)
Offshore Group of Banking Supervisors (OGBS)
World Customs Organization (WCO)
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Key US Legislation and Regulation relevant to
International Transactions
USA Patriot Act
The October 2001 Act strengthened money laundering laws introduced
in 1986, and the Bank Secrecy Act in 1970.
Title III (public law 107-56) “International Money Laundering
Abatement and Anti-terrorist Financing Act” of 2001 contains most of
the AML content. It governs US and non-US financial institutions that
operate in the US. It enables international access points to the US
financial system to be controlled.
Section 311: special measures for primary money laundering concerns.
Allows the US Treasury to specify as a specific money laundering
concern: a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign financial institution, any type
of international transaction, or a type of account. US banks would then
need to take special measures with these types of concerns.
There are five, graduated special measures that can be taken:
1) Keep records, or file reports containing transaction data
including beneficial owners as well as originator and beneficiary.
2) Keep information about the beneficial owner of any US account
opened or maintained by a foreign person or their
representative.
3) Identify and obtain information about customers who are
permitted to use foreign bank’ s payable through accounts.
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4) Identify and obtain information about customers who are
permitted to use foreign bank’s correspondent accounts.
5) Close certain PTA or correspondent accounts.
Section 312: Correspondent and Private banking
Required due diligence or enhanced due diligence for foreign
correspondent and private banking accounts for non-US persons. It
covers almost all account relationships that can be held with a
foreign financial institution.
The rules apply to US banks, credit institutions, thrift institutions,
trust banks, broker-dealers, futures commission merchants, and
introducing brokers in commodities and mutual funds, and US-
based agencies and branches of foreign banks.
Foreign institutions includes: foreign banks, foreign branches of US
banks, credit unions, foreign businesses that would be considered
broker-dealers, futures commission merchants, introducing brokers
in commodities or mutual funds if operated in the US, and foreign
money transmitters or currency exchangers.
Due diligence should:
Determine whether enhanced DD is needed
Assess the money laundering risk associated with the correspondent
account
Use risk-based procedures and controls designed to detect and
report suspected money laundering
Enhanced DD should apply to a correspondent account for a foreign
bank operating under:
Off-shore banking license
A license issued by an non-cooperative country
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A license issued by a country deemed a risk under section 311 of the
Patriot Act.
Private banking is deemed as an account with a minimum deposit of
$1 million, assigned to a designed banker, for a non-US person
All beneficial owners should be identified
Verify whether an owner is a current or former senior foreign
political figure
Understand the purpose and use of the account, and the source of
the funds
Monitor the account to ensure the use is in line with expectations,
reporting any suspicions
Section 313 of the Act prohibited correspondent accounts for shell
banks
Section 319(a) allows forfeit of funds from a US correspondent
account of the same amount as those deposited in a foreign
correspondent account
Section 319(b) records relating to correspondent accounts at foreign
banks should be available within 120 hours (5 days)
OFAC: Office of Foreign Assets Control
OFAC enforces foreign policy and national security goals by
imposing economic and trade sanctions. They prohibit transactions
and require blocking of assets that belong to people on their lists.
They can apply significant sanctions for violations. The rules apply
to all US citizens, no matter where they are located, all people in the
United States, all US-incorporated entities and their foreign
branches.
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Key Groups
Group Description Key Documents
Financial Intergovernmental 40 Recommendations on
Action Task body with 34 Money Laundering and
Force on member countries Terrorist Financing (Last
Money
and two updated February 2012).
Laundering
international
organizations.
Sets money
laundering and
terrorist financing
standards.
Basel Established by the Customer Due Diligence
Committee central bank for Banks Paper (2001).
on Banking governors of the Sharing of financial
Supervision
G-10. records between
Promotes sound jurisdictions in connection
supervisory with the fight against
standards terrorist financing (2002).
worldwide. General Guide to Account
Opening and Customer
Identification (2003).
Consolidated KYC Risk
Management Paper
(2004).
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Group Description Key Documents
European The EU Directives 1st EU Directive on
Union on anti-money Prevention of the Use of
laundering require the Financial System for
the EU member the Purpose of Money
states to issue Laundering (1991).
legislation to 2nd Directive (2001).
prevent their 3rd Directive (2005).
domestic financial
systems being used
for money
laundering.
Wolfsburg Association of 11 Wolfsburg Anti-Money
Group global banks. Laundering Principles for
Aims to develop Private Banking (last
standards on money updated 2002).
laundering controls The Suppression of the
for banks. Financing of Terrorism
Guidelines (2002).
Anti-Money Laundering
Principles for
Correspondent Banking
(2002).
APG, FAFT-style Typologies exercises
GAFISUD, regional bodies. (methods of money
CFATF, laundering)
MENAFATF,
Eurasian
Group,
Eastern and
South African
AML Group
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Group Description Key Documents
Egmont Informal Statement of Purpose (last
Group networking group updated 2004).
for Financial Principles for Information
Intelligence Units. Exchange between
Financial Intelligence
Units for Money
Laundering Cases (2001).
Best Practices for the
Exchange of Information
Between Financial
Intelligence Units (2004).
CICAD Commission Model Regulations
within the
Organization of
American
States that deals
with drug-
related issues,
including
money
laundering.
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Group Description Key Documents
World These Reference Guide to
Bank and organizations Anti-Money
International work together Laundering and
Monetary and in Combating the
Fund conjunction Financing of
with FATF in Terrorism: A Manual
encouraging for Countries to
countries to Establish and Improve
have adequate Their Institutional
anti money Framework 2002
laundering laws (revised 2007).
and reviewing
the laws and
procedures of
FATF member
countries.
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Chronological AML Developments
Year Developments
1986 U.S. enacts its Money Laundering Control Act, codified at 18
U.S.C. Section 1956 and 1957, the first law in the world to make
money laundering a crime.
1988 Vienna Convention (UN Convention against Illicit Traffic in
Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances) is agreed.
Statement of principles is issued by Basel Committee on
Banking Regulations and Supervisory Practices.
Anti-Drug Abuse Act was enacted including car dealerships
and real estate closing personnel within the definition of
financial institutions, requiring them to report large currency
transactions.
1989 Financial Action Task Force established at G-7 economic
summit in Paris.
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1990 FATF issues its 40 Recommendations on Money Laundering.
Caribbean Financial Action Task Force is established and
issues CFATF 19 Recommendations on Money Laundering.
Council of Europe Convention on Laundering, Search,
Seizure and Confiscation of the Proceeds from Crime is
issued.
1991 FATF members agree on “mutual assessment” process.
Council of Europe Directive on Prevention of the Use of the
Financial System for the Purpose of Money Laundering
(91/308/EEC) is issued.
1992 Organization of American States (OAS) model anti-money
laundering regulations and legislation are adopted.
Kingston (Jamaica) Declaration on Money Laundering of the
CFATF is issued.
Annunzio-Wylie Anti-Money Laundering Act requires
Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) to be completed in the US.
1993 UN model law on Money Laundering, Confiscation and
International Cooperation in Relation to Drugs is proposed.
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1994 Money Laundering Suppression Act enacted in the US
requiring financial institutions to review and improve training,
develop anti-money laundering examinations, ensure cases are
referred to law enforcement agencies, streamlined
the Currency transaction report, and introduced new
requirements for money service businesses (MSBs).
1995 Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Units is formed.
1996 The FATF 40 Recommendations are revised to extend
predicate offenses beyond drugs to other serious crimes.
The first FATF Typologies Report is released.
1997 Asia/Pacific Group on Money Laundering (APG) is
established.
PC-R-EV (now MONEYVAL) is established, which
conducts self-assessments of AML measures in European
countries that are not FATF members.
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1998 OAS Model Regulations Concerning Laundering Offenses
Connected to Illicit Drug Trafficking and Other Serious
Offenses are amended.
Money Laundering and Financial Crimes Strategy Act
enacted in the US. Included the requirement for banking
agencies to conduct anti-money laundering training
required the development of the “National Money
Laundering Strategy”, and created the “High Intensity
Money Laundering and Related Financial Crime Area”
(HIFCA) Task Forces.
2001 South African Financial Intelligence Center Act and
subsequent amendments added responsibilities to the
Financial Services Board (FSB) to combat money
laundering.
2003 Money Laundering Regulations 2003 published in UK
2004 Intelligence Reform & Terrorism Prevention Act updated
the Bank Secrecy Act to require certain financial
institutions to report cross-border electronic transmittals
of funds if necessary to prevent money laundering.
2007 Money Laundering Regulations published in UK,
replacing the 2003 version.
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2010 Financial Crimes Enforcement Network issued an
advisory on “informal value transfer systems” in USA
2017 Money Laundering Regulation, Terrorist Financing and
Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations
published in the UK
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Chapter 5
Compliance
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Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Program
An effective compliance program covers:
What to consider when setting up an AML compliance program
Assessing risk
Identifying, managing, documenting and following-up any
suspicions
Knowing your customer and employee
Auditing your program
Training and screening employees
The main aim is to protect the organization from money laundering &
terrorist financing, plus ensure compliance with all relevant laws and
regulations by setting standards and policies for the organization.
The program should be risk based – not all products and services,
geographic regions, and customer types, and thus not all areas of the
business pose the same risk of money laundering.
Greater risks require greater controls. New products and services should
be evaluated for risk and any necessary controls implemented prior to
launch.
The AML function can be stand-alone, or combined with other
compliance duties, but must have a centralized aspect to ensure
consistency. It should also address corporate governance and overall
oversight.
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Assessing Risk and Developing a Risk Scoring Model
Identify legal requirements, and supplement with FATF risk-based
controls. Controls should be strong enough to counter the risk – low
risks can be managed with minimal controls, high risk areas need robust
controls. Controls include: verifying the identity of customers (KYC),
customer due diligence (CDD), suspicious activity monitoring and
economic sanctions screening.
Risk based approaches are more:
Flexible: useful because risks vary across geographical areas,
customers, products and delivery mechanisms, and over time.
Effective: because companies know better than regulators how to
mitigate money laundering risk.
Proportionate: because risk based approaches allow a common sense
and intelligent rather than check-box approach.
Levels of risk
Prohibited: where the risk is so high, no dealings of this type will be
performed by the company. Examples include shell bank customers,
or sanctioned geographic regions e.g. Sudan or Iran.
High Risk: significant risk exists, so enhanced controls are required
e.g. enhanced monitoring and customer due diligence. Countries
noted for drug trafficking, or corruption for example might be high
risks, as might customers who are PEPs, and products such as
correspondent and private banking.
Medium Risk: more than just a standard risk of money laundering,
and so merits additional controls.
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Low (or Standard) Risk: normal business rules apply, often
domestic customers and FATF member countries are considered
low risk.
The risk of the geography, customer type, and products/services are
each assigned a risk score e.g. 1-10 with 10 being high risk. These
could then be aggregated, or weighted then aggregated. Certain
combinations could also be assigned a higher significance if that
leads to a higher perception of risk. The risk ranking should be re-
evaluated periodically.
Note that any ‘prohibited’ items would cause the relationship to be
rejected.
High risk relationships should warrant more attention, so the
organization should be careful to ensure that there is sufficient
oversight if there are a lot of high risk customers as a proportion.
Geographical Location
Both the residence and the citizenship of customers are important.
Corporate headquarters and locations they carry out their business
are also key. Check if any pose and increased risk of money
laundering.
Organizations need to develop and document a methodology for
assessing geographical risk, including whether the county has
FATF-style membership, high levels of corruption (Transparency
International publish these each year), drug production or transit
history, or is in a secrecy haven.
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Customer Type
There are various classes of clients, such as individuals, and
different types of companies such as listed, private, partnerships,
joint ventures, as well as various types of financial institutions.
A history of involvement in criminal activity would warrant the
highest level of risk. Political figures and those in political
organizations are high as they may have access to corrupt funds.
Directors of multinationals may be lower risk than directors of
private companies due to the level of due diligence that is possible
for a listed company.
Company structures that offer some level of privacy (known as the
‘Corporate Veil’), such as charities, limited companies, trusts, or
other structures where it is difficult to identify the beneficial
owners.
The following types of companies pose an increased level of money
laundering risk:
Casinos
Companies and banks in tax and banking havens
Leather goods stores
Currency exchanges, money remitters, check cashers
Car, boat and plane dealerships
Used car and truck dealers, machine parts
Travel agencies
Brokers/dealers in securities
Precious metal and stones dealers
Import/export companies
Cash-intensive businesses – restaurants, retail, parking, car wash
Telemarketing – which is linked to ‘Boiler Room’ scams
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Products and Services Risk
Review your products and services to determine how they might be used
to launder money or finance terrorism. Key risk factors might include
the ability to pay third parties, complexity or anonymity, or minimal
oversight.
The following specific banking products are considered high-risk:
Private banking
Offshore international activity
Deposit taking facilities
Wire transfer and cash management functions
Transactions where the beneficiary is hidden
Loan guarantee schemes (where some or all of the loan is guaranteed
by a third party)
Travelers cheques, bank checks, money orders
Foreign exchange
Trade financing with unusual pricing features
Payable through accounts (PTAs)
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The Elements of an AML Program
An organization must address the following:
Internal policies, procedures and controls
Designated compliance officer with day to day oversight of the
program
On-going employee training
Independent audit function to test the program
Internal policies, procedures and controls
Polices are a high-level statement of principles. Procedures and
controls translate this into the details of how to execute and validate
success in implementation of those principles. Controls might
include dual controls such as secondary review, or technology
controls that prevent or detect certain incidents.
Check what laws and regulations apply, this will set the minimum
compliance level. Then based on the risk assessment, and risk
appetite, you should prohibit anything the organization deems too
risky i.e. regions, company types or customer types. You also need to
monitor laws and regulations for changes. The policies should be
approved by upper management or the board of directors.
Key aspects of the policies, procedures and controls:
Identify high risk products, services, customers and geographic
regions
Be tailored to organization risk
Inform the board and senior management of key initiatives,
deficiencies, details of suspicious reports filed, and actions taken
Clear accountability for all duties undertaken under the program
Ensure continuity despite staff changes
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Meet all regulatory requirements and recommendations
Annually review the program, and update timely in response to
changes in regulations
Include risk-based customer due diligence
Include controls and monitoring systems to detect and report
suspicions. The reporting should be centralized for consistency.
Dual controls/segregation of duties: those who complete forms
should not submit them or grant exceptions
Comply with record keeping requirements
Include supervision of employees engaged in any AML activity
Train employees on their obligations
Include AML in job descriptions
Screen new employees, and provide sanctions for employees who
fail in their AML duties
Test the effectiveness of AML controls, policies and procedures,
separate from internal audit
Designated compliance officer with day-to-day oversight of the
program
Responsible for:
Designing, implementing, and changing the AML program
Communicating successes and failures to management
Creating training
Staying current with regulatory & legal changes
Some departments are just one person, others are split into strategic
and operational (i.e. monitoring and reporting) aspects
Possible subgroups in the department could include:
Investigations – which monitor automated alerts and referrals from
other staff, files SARs
Business Support – performs CDD on higher risk clients, acts as a
point of contact for queries
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Oversight – reviews and updates the program and associated
procedures, monitors the legal and regulatory environment.
Coordinates regulatory exams with the business. May also prepare
training and provide guidance on complex AML issues.
In addition, within the business, there are AML activities where
there is customer contact e.g. CDD.
On-going employee training
Can include formal training, as well as emails, newsletters and team
meetings with AML content. Most areas of the business should have
AML training, and it should include most staff. The training should
only cover items relevant for those staff, and include real life
examples. Attendance or performance should be tracked, with
failure to attend or achieve a minimum score addressed through
disciplinary procedures.
Key training by staff type:
Customer-facing: this is the front line of defense; they need a deep
practical understanding of AML. Cash handing staff need to know
how to identify suspicious cash transactions, credit officers need an
understanding of how credit can be used for AML purposes.
Back office: cash vault, wire transfers, trade finance all need
specialist training. Many back office roles may only require general
training.
Audit and compliance: training on changes in regulation and law,
money laundering methods and enforcement.
AML Compliance: training to stay on top of changes e.g. attending
conferences.
Senior managers & board of directors: strong board support is
needed and AML should be regularly communicated, they need
understanding in line with their responsibility.
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Training topics:
General information/background, importance of AML
Legal framework & applicability to organisation and staff
Penalties – disciplinary action, fines and jail
How to deal with suspicions
Internal policies & procedures
Independent audit function to test the program
The audit must be carried out by people not involved in the AML
program. Audit must report directly to the board of directors or to a
designated board committee comprised of more than half outside
directors. Auditors should be qualified to perform the audit.
The audit should cover:
Adequacy of risk assessment, CCD policies, procedures and
processes
Adherence to the above
Testing of high risk transactions (i.e. high risk
products/services/customers/locations)
Adequacy of training
Compliance with laws and regulations
Integrity and accuracy of AML systems
Assess suspicious activity monitoring by:
Evaluating policies and procedures
Reviewing the system’s method for identifying suspicions
Evaluating the reports produced
Checking any filtering criteria
Where systems are not used, a review of the manual transactions
should check that large or suspicious transactions were
appropriately dealt with
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Evaluate how suspicious transaction reports (STRs) are researched
and evaluated
Compliance Culture
Compliance should be everyone’s role, supported by top
management. The board should approve the AML program, and are
responsible for implementing any examiners or internal audit
recommendations.
The AML officer has to ensure that management sees the cost of the
program as essential to mitigate reputational and financial risk.
CDD information can be used to cross sell other products.
Compliance staff should not have bonuses tied to the performance
of business units.
Compliance staff can be close to the business, but must report
outside to ensure independence.
Customer Due Diligence
There are seven elements to CDD:
1) Identify the customer/beneficial owner & source of
funds/wealth
2) Profiles of expected activity
3) Approval for specific products/services
4) Assessment of the risks of the customer
5) Monitoring of account & transactions
6) Investigation of unusual activity
7) Document findings
CCD should be consolidated across all regions and all products sold to
the customer by an institution.
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Account opening guidelines from Basel 2003
Legal name, and previous names
Address
Phone and email
Date and place of birth
Nationality
Occupation, position, employer
A unique identifier from a government issued document (passport,
driver license)
Signature
Verify this by checking the date of birth against a government ID,
the address using an official letter, contacting the customer using
phone, email and mail addresses. Check the official documentation
by physically inspecting it, or checking with a government agency.
The source of wealth and funds should be validated, and any
deposits not in line with this should be investigated.
The proximity of the customer to the branch should be checked and
if not close by, check why.
Equally effective CDD should apply to non-face-to-face customers.
For businesses, obtain the name, mailing address, business location,
contact people and phone/address details, official identification
number (e.g. tax number), the certificate of incorporation,
memorandum and articles of association, nature and purpose of the
business.
Verify this by reviewing the latest accounts; use a business
information service or an undertaking from a lawyer or accountant.
This should be codified in a Customer Identification Program (CIP).
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Name lists
All customers should be checked against lists of known undesirables
such as OFAC.
There are difficulties identifying PEPs because although lists of
such people are kept, the information is incomplete (i.e. no date of
birth). This will likely cause issues with large retail bank, who may
find many matches.
Arabic Names
All names are translated (transliterated) from Arabic script.
Short vowels are often left out/altered e.g. Mohammed could be
Mohamad or Mohamed.
Names are often long, with the second name being the father’s
name.
If bin or ibn precedes the name, it means ‘son of’.
If a family name is appended, it sometimes includes ‘al’.
Common names are Mohammed, Ahmed, Ali and any name
beginning Abd- or Abdul which means ‘servant of’ which is then
followed by one of 99 suffixes which describe God.
Many names begin ‘Abu’ meaning father of, followed by a noun
that may mean ‘freedom’ or ‘struggle’. If this is a first name, it is not
usually a given name. Only when Abu is a prefix of a surname
should it be accepted as a correct name.
Know Your Employee
Insiders can pose the same threat as a customer. Perform background
screening for criminal history. Contractors should be subject to the same
controls. Consider re-screening as circumstances change e.g. promotion.
The FDIC issued guidance on this in 2005.
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Suspicious/Unusual Transaction Monitoring and
Reporting
Any activity that is not consistent with a customer’s source of income or
regular business. The system should be risk based (as there are so many
transactions to monitor, they can’t all be monitored). Some items that
can be monitored:
Daily cash in excess of reporting threshold
Daily cash just under reporting threshold
Cash activity over time to detect structuring
Wire transfer reports per country and value
Monetary instrument activity
Check kiting/drawing on uncollected funds
Significant change reports (i.e. beneficial owners, addresses, new
cards out to new addresses)
Activity on new accounts
Typical reporting process is:
Procedures to identify potential suspicious transactions
Formal evaluation of the activity and any continuation
Documentation of the decision
Procedures to notify senior management/board of directors of
SARs
Training on detecting suspicious transactions
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Red Flags
Customers
International use of ATMs
Customers who move frequently
Opening deposits such as international wires, large cash sums
Customers who are not local – ask why you won the business
Credit balances – customers who over pay on credit line or card
accounts
Common addresses, IP addresses, phone numbers – unrelated
customers who share data points could be suspicious. Customers
who change their information after opening an account to a shared
data point are particularly suspicious.
Customer discusses record keeping requirements, or is nervous or
threatening
Customer will not proceed with a transaction once they are
informed that it is reportable
Customers who offer bribes
Irrational behavior, such as turning down a better interest rate
Cash transactions
Large cash deposits without counting the cash
Exchanging small bills for large bills
Cash deposits contain fake bills, musty or very dirty bills
Students who have access to large sums of money
Offshore institutions whose names resemble well known
institutions
Transaction includes offshore islands or locations difficult to find
on a map
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Customer performs foreign exchange without caring about spread
Telephone number disconnected
Customer does not want any mail
Customer deposits cash wrapped in currency straps
Non-cash deposits
Frequent purchase of monetary instruments
Deposits travelers cheques in same denomination and serial number
sequence or consecutively numbered monetary instruments
Deposits third party checks
Wires
Incoming wire with instructions to convert to cashiers checks and to
mail them out
Wire transfers to secrecy havens
Customer moves ‘profits’ out of the country
Safe deposit activity
Spending unusual amount of time in a safe deposit box area
(indicating the keeping of large cash amounts)
Renting multiple safe deposit boxes
Credit transactions
A transaction is made to appear more complex than it needs to be by
use of nonsensical terms such as emission rate, prime bank notes,
standby commitment, arbitrage or hedge contracts
Customer requests loans made to offshore companies or secured by
obligations in offshore banks
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Customer suddenly pays off large problem loan, without any
obvious source of funds
Customer collateralizes loan with cash or certificates of deposit
Commercial account activity
Check cashing business that does not withdraw cash indicating it
has another source of the cash
Corporate account shows no periodic activity
Trade finance
Import or export of items at prices above or below normal market
rates
Changes to letter of credit beneficiary just before payment is made
Change to the place of payment to an account in another country to
the beneficiaries stated location
Letter Of Credit (LOC) is not in line with customer business
LOC is for goods not in demand in the importing country
LOC is for goods that are not produced in the exporting country
Commodities are shipped through locations without an apparent
economic or logistical reason
Investment accounts
Uses investment account as a pass-through vehicle for offshore
wires
Customer not interested in usual decisions around fees or
investment vehicles
Deposits of cash, money orders, travelers cheques, or cashiers
checks under the reporting threshold in order to fund the account
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Customer cashes out investments such as annuities or life insurance
early
Employees
Employee exaggerates the resources of a customer
Employee involved in excessive number of unresolved exceptions
Leads lavish lifestyle not in line with salary
Overrides internal controls or circumvents policy
Avoids taking periodic vacations
Money remitter/ currency exchange house
Unusual use of money orders, travelers checks or funds transfers
Two or more people working together on transactions
Transactions under the reporting threshold
Insurance companies
Cash payments on insurance policies
Refunds requested during cancellation period
Policy payments made from abroad
Beneficiary of policy has no relation to the policy owner
Unconcerned with penalties for early redemption
Bonds sold in one jurisdiction that are redeemed by an entity in
another jurisdiction
Broker-Dealers
The customer is acting as an agent for an undisclosed beneficiary
Large number of accounts, with transactions between them,
without just cause
Unexplained wire activity
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Deposits made to fund an investment account that are then
withdrawn
Penny stock, Regulation S stock and bearer bonds activity, which
have all been associated with money laundering
Black Market Peso Exchange Indicators
Payments made in cash or by wire by a third party
Use of third party checks, bank drafts or money orders
Structured currency deposits under the reporting threshold
Consumer checking accounts that become dormant
Personal checking accounts opened by foreign nationals who come
into the bank together
Multiple accounts opened the same day
Increases in the amounts of currency deposits by US businesses that
export to Columbia
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Electronic AML Solutions
Examples:
Transaction monitoring – scanning the transactions for laundering
activity
Watch list filtering – screening new accounts, existing customers,
beneficiaries and counter-parties against lists of known criminals
and terrorists
Automation of regulatory reporting – such as currency transaction
report (CTRs) or suspicious transaction reports (STRs)
Maintenance of audit trail
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Chapter 6
Investigations
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Conducting and responding to an investigation
Law enforcement investigations
These are normally triggered by STRs, tip offs, or other cases. The
requests arrive in the form of a subpoena or search warrant. Subpoenas
are issued by grand juries and empower law enforcement to obtain
evidence (i.e. documents & testimony).
A search warrant allows law enforcement to enter a specific location and
seize specific categories of items of documents. It doesn’t force
testimony. In the US and other jurisdictions, banking regulators have
the power to inspect all bank books and records as they see fit.
The 10 steps law enforcement takes are as follows:
Follow the money: either where the money originated or ended up to
understand the flow
Identify the unlawful activity: i.e. what is the predicate offense
(could be widely defined as: “any proceeds from criminal activity”)
Document activity and transactions: both the predicate offense and
the flow of money
Review databases: financial intelligence unit (FIU) database and
commercial databases can provide very useful and extensive
financial information, plus other governmental databases such as
social security and tax records
Review public information: court records, company filings, credit
reports can contain useful background
Review licensing and registration files: e.g. vehicle registration
documents
Analyze financial transactions: identify any unusual flows or
amounts
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Review STRs for any linked activity
Conduct computer-based searches
Obtain international co-operation: for cross-border cases
Decision to prosecute the institution
This will be made based on whether the institution has a criminal
history, has cooperated, whether the institution identified and self-
reported, there was a comprehensive AML program in place, took timely
remedial action, whether civil or criminal procedures would be best
suited, whether a deterrent to others would warrant a prosecution.
Responding to a law enforcement investigation
Respond quickly and completely to all requests. If the request is overly
broad or intrusive, you can seek to narrow the request. First ensure
senior management is informed (include legal) and establish the point
person to respond. If the inquiry is aimed at the institution, not a
customer, the board of directors should be informed. Check all requests
for any risk to the institution. Do not provide information to anyone
who may be implicated in the proceedings.
The institution should conduct an inquiry of its own to establish the
facts; determine the institution’s exposure, and what steps may need to
be taken.
Summonses and Subpoenas
Senior management and/or legal counsel should review. If there are no
grounds for contesting, then take all possible measures to comply timely
and completely. Do not notify the customer. If there is a requirement to
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keep the account open, this must be obtained in writing on letterhead,
with the proper authority.
Search Warrants
These are not open-ended; agents can enter the premises, and look for
and seize certain documents. A warrant does not compel a testimony.
Take the following steps:
Call legal counsel
Review the warrant to understand the scope
Obtain a copy of the warrant
Ask for the affidavit that accompanies the warrant (if you are
allowed to see it, it will provide some context to the warrant)
Watch the agents perform their search, make a record of any seized
items
Ask for the agents inventory of items seized
Note the names and agency affiliations of the agents
Documents and computer records that are protected by attorney-
client privilege should be marked and retained in a separate area. If
agents wish to seize these, suggest that they be given to the court for
safe keeping.
Orders to restrain or freeze accounts or assets
Only freeze once you have a copy of the warrant issued by a court
requiring the freezing of the funds or account.
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Dealing with Investigators and Prosecutors
The most effective strategy is to cooperate. Provide them the
information that they need, even if they don’t have a warrant or
subpoena. Make staff available for interview. It may also include
releasing any management report into the matter. Maintain a good
working relationship which will allow the organization to conduct a
parallel investigation which will enable the institution to be
prepared for inquiries.
Try to learn how the prosecutors view the facts, and correct those
that are inaccurate.
Obtaining Counsel for the Investigation
If the investigation appears to have risks to the institution, counsel
should be sought. Internal counsel will have a better understanding
of the organization, however if the case appears to have criminal
implications, outside counsel may be better. Ensure that in-house or
external counsel is sufficiently experienced and knowledgeable with
regard to the legal and factual issues involved.
Notices to Employees
For government investigations, ensure that staff know that
documents should be handed over to a central contact that can co-
ordinate handing documents over to investigators. The institution
can also determine what (if anything) can be contested.
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Media Relations
Public perception is vital to maintain trust of the institution and
their officers. If the facts are against the institution it may be best to
provide ‘no comment’ to the press, any false or misleading
statements will make the matter worse in the long run. False
statements by a publicly traded company could lead to an SEC
review or law enforcement action.
Internal Investigations
An internal investigation should be conducted when:
A report of an examination is received from regulators
Third-party information is received
Surveillance of monitoring systems indicate issues
Employee hotline tip-offs
Government subpoenas or search warrants
Government is asking questions about the institution, competitors,
customers or business practices
A civil lawsuit is filed against the institution
Document the purpose, scope, method and conclusions of the
investigation.
Closing the Account
Consider the following attributes:
What is the legal basis for closure?
The policies and procedures and terms and conditions around
closure?
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How serious is the conduct? If it is serious and is of the level where
you would normally close the account, then close the account.
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Conducting the Investigation
Review documents, interview employees and issue a report.
Decide whether to involve counsel.
Keep senior management, and if necessary the Board informed of
the scope and progress.
Documents
All documents should be kept in line with legal retention timescales
– US 5 years. Information can be useful from statements, signatures,
checks, loan documentation, correspondence etc. Ensure that
important documents are not lost, altered or destroyed. You can
send a memo informing staff of the retention requirement,
however, if this might prompt someone to destroy or alter
documents, deal with that separately.
Ensure the document destruction policy does not destroy
documents that should be retained for law enforcement.
It is acceptable to destroy documents in line with the destruction
policy prior to notification of a government investigation, but not
after.
Interviewing Employees
This should be done as soon as possible while memories are still
fresh. Counsel should prepare staff prior to investigator interviews
to understand the process, and also debrief them afterward to
identify the line of questioning.
Put people at their ease by asking general background questions at
the start, with contentious questions left to the end.
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Attorney-Client Issues
Attorneys represent the institution, not the individual employee. Any
report should be controlled – sending it into the public domain would
waive the attorney-client privilege. Document control includes a
statement on each page, numbered copies, and a log of who has received
it. All copies should be returned after a set period. Oral presentations
may be preferable to written documents.
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125
Chapter 7
International
Cooperation
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International Money Laundering Information Network
The International Money Laundering Information Network (IMoLIN)
– clearing house of money laundering information, created by the UN,
has five features:
AMLID – anti-money laundering international database, lists laws
and regulations per country and contacts for each county. The
database is not publicly available.
Reference Data – research, model laws, analysis
Country Page – links to national FIUs and, full text of AML
legislation
Calendar – training, conferences, seminars, workshops
Current News
Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties
The first gateway for international cooperation is the MLAT (Mutual
Legal Assistance Treaty), a legal basis for transmitting evidence. The
following happens:
A “commission rogatoire”, letter of request, or letters rogatory is
sent indicating the information requested, the nature of the request
and the charges, and the legal basis for the charge.
The central authority receives this, and sends it to a financial
investigator to obtain the information (if possible).
An investigator from the requesting country visits the country
where the information is, and accompanies the local investigator, to
obtain the information.
Permission is then sought from the central authority to remove the
evidence back to the requesting country.
The central authority sends the information to the requesting
country, satisfying the request for assistance.
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Local witnesses may need to attend court in the requesting country.
Financial Intelligence Units
The second gateway is the communication between FIUs who receive
and analyze STRs. They then pass this information on to law
enforcement and other international FIUs. The Egmont Group is the
body of FIUs and has over 100 members. 2003 FATF recommendations
include specific recommendations as to setting up and running an FIU.
FIUs need to both recognize the international need for FIUs and also
work within their local law enforcement and policy framework, set their
own priorities, objectives, within their budgets.
FIUs share information internationally using an MOU (Memorandum
of Understanding) which allows them to share intelligence (rather than
evidence per se).
Key principles from the Egmont group:
Free exchange of information, on the basis of reciprocity, including
spontaneous exchange of information.
Definitions of offenses that differ among jurisdictions should not
be a barrier to information exchange.
Privacy and confidentiality of the data should be assured.
Information exchange should be informal and rapid, without red
tape, or intermediaries.
Permission to disseminate to law enforcement should be granted,
provided it doesn’t jeopardize a criminal investigation, is
disproportionate to the legitimate interests of a person or company
in the providing country, or is not in accordance with national law.
Requesting countries should follow the Egmont principles:
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Submit requests for information as soon as the precise need is
identified.
When an FIU has information that could be useful to another FIU is
should be shared immediately.
Communication should be secure (Egmont Secure Web can use
used)
Use the standard form when requesting information, which
includes details of relevant facts.
Recipients should reply within one week if they have the
information, or there is a legal reason why the information can’t be
provided. If external parties must be consulted (e.g. Banks) then the
reply should be within one month, containing all information
obtained to date, and an estimate of when it will be completely filled.
The Supervisory Channel
April 2002 “Report on Sharing Information between Jurisdictions in
connection with the fight against terrorism” indicates that the
supervisory channel is the third gateway. This relates to supervision of
financial institutions, and can be used to share general information
about financial activity, as well as specific information such as regarding
Politically Exposes Persons (PEPs). Information obtained this way
should only be used for supervisory purposes, not as evidence, and
should not be widely shared with government departments.
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Chapter 8
Study Questions:
Simplified Answer
Format
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Introduction
This test covers the entire subject material, at a level similar to the exam.
The actual exam uses a slightly complicated multi-part answer format
which adds an extra layer of complexity to a test you might already find
challenging.
If this applies to you, don’t worry. Work on mastering the subject
material first, and answering the questions in this simplified answer
format.
Once you are confident with your abilities answering these questions,
move on to the next chapter, which contains the same material, but with
the added complexity of the multi-part answer format.
By separating the two key parts of this test: the subject matter and the
exam style itself, you can be confident of your knowledge before
mastering the exam style.
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Study Questions
Section 1
1. Which of the following is not an example of layering
a) Using cash deposited in a bank account to purchase an asset
b) Exchanging cash for a monetary instrument
c) Using an inbound wire transfer to purchase an asset
d) Using an inbound wire transfer to purchase a monetary
instrument
2. What are key effects of money laundering on countries?
Choose three.
a) Reputation risk
b) Losing control of regulatory policy
c) Being forced into adverse fiscal policies
d) Losing control of monetary policy
3. Risks of correspondent banking include the following.
Choose three.
a) The effectiveness of the regulatory regime may be unknown
b) The ultimate customers are at arm’s length
c) The USA Patriot Act did not address correspondent banking
risks
d) The volumes of transactions are high
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4. Which of the following are most vulnerable to the placement stage
of money laundering?
Choose two.
a) Purchasing diamonds
b) Overpaying a credit card balance
c) Obtaining cashiers checks
d) Internet casinos
5. Which of the following describes a payable through account?
a) A numbered account where the customer is unknown
b) A correspondent account that can be used directly by the
respondent’s customers without the respondent’s oversight
c) Internal bank accounts used to assist in the settlement and
processing of customer transactions. Also known as
omnibus, settlement, or collection account.
d) A system where a bank offers accounts to another bank to
enable it to perform transactions in a location where it does
not have a physical presence
6. What is a risk of concentration accounts?
a) The underlying customer identification can be lost
b) Co-mingling of clean and dirty funds can occur
c) Customers may be unaware they are using them
d) Confidentiality and secrecy between client and banker
7. What are two risks associated with private banking?
a) The area was not covered by the Wolfsburg group
b) Politically exposed persons
c) Private investment companies
d) Lack of competition
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8. Which of the following is a correct statement?
a) Smurfs travel from bank to bank withdrawing cash from
ATMs
b) Smurfing is a way to avoid triggering a currency reporting
threshold
c) Smurfs are dead people whose accounts have been taken
over by money launderers
d) Smurfing requires an insider at a financial institution
9. Which one of the following might indicate microstructuring?
a) Converting $800 of travelers cheques to a wire transfer
b) Using counter deposit slips
c) Large cash deposits
d) Using cash to purchase a gold ingot
10. Cuckoo smurfing features which three of the following?
a) An unwitting bank account owner
b) An insider in a financial institution
c) An accomplice in a foreign country who deposits cash
d) Concentration of funds
11. What is the best way to guard against the risk of money laundering
by bank staff?
a) Ensure that key staff are registered with the regulator
b) Ensure segregation of duties for all tasks
c) Conduct initial and ongoing criminal background checks
d) Ensure managers review staff work periodically
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12. Why are credit unions (building societies) vulnerable to money
laundering?
a) They are small in size
b) They have high levels of cash transactions
c) They offer complex products
d) They are not regulated
13. At which stages of money laundering are credit cards used?
Choose two.
a) Layering
b) Structuring
c) Integration
d) Placement
14. Which of the following are money laundering risks at insurance
companies? Choose two:
a) Early cancellation capabilities of car insurance
b) Salesmen are incentivized
c) Underpaying insurance and requesting refunds
d) Canceling life policies during the ‘free look’ period
15. What is wash trading?
a) The ability to launder funds using nominee accounts
b) The inherent anonymity granted by many broker-dealers
c) The use of offsetting trades to launder funds
d) The trading of commodities
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16. Securities dealers are attractive to money launderers for the
following reasons.
Choose three:
a) They have information that can be used for insider trading
b) They use high speed wire transfers
c) They have a competitive, commission-driven culture
d) They use cash accounts that are not subject to banking AML
controls
17. Casinos and other gaming venues are attractive to money launderers
for the following reasons.
Choose three:
a) They offer a plausible source of recently acquired wealth
b) Gambles can be placed so that there is very little risk to
capital
c) The variety of gambling opportunities are useful at the
integration stage
d) Funds can be made available in different jurisdictions
18. Which two of the following makes gold the most attractive to money
launderers?
a) It has high demand due to religious or cultural reasons
b) It can be used in the placement phase
c) It can be easily melted down
d) It can be used in the layering phase
19. Why are travel agents vulnerable to money launderers? Choose one.
a) They sell hotel rooms in high risk destinations
b) Hotels are frequented by politically exposed persons
c) Refunds can be made to third parties
d) They are listed in the FATF 40 recommendations
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20. Vehicle sellers are susceptible to money laundering because of the
following reasons. Choose three:
a) They allow third party payments
b) They sell high value items
c) They allow down trading
d) They allow partial down payments
21. Lawyers are more useful in money laundering than company
formation agents because of the following reason:
a) They have a client-attorney privilege
b) They can represent the launderer in court
c) They can create complex vehicles such as private investment
companies
d) They can act as nominee shareholders, directors and
secretaries
22. Real estate is most often associated with which two of the following:
a) Layering
b) Placement
c) Integration
d) Structuring
23. Under valuing exports are used to:
a) Move money using nominee accounts
b) Enable the black market peso exchange
c) Create fraudulent transfer pricing schemes
d) Add an air of legitimacy to letters of credit
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24. What three features of prepaid cards make them most attractive to
money launderers:
a) Anonymity
b) Widely accepted at merchants
c) High value limits
d) ATM access
25. Front companies are useful to the launderer for the following
three reasons:
a) They generate legitimate cash which can be co-mingled
with dirty money
b) They provide a source of employment
c) They have low overheads
d) They can be sold for high profits
26. Why would a money launderer purchase a company that he already
owned?
a) To avoid tax
b) To hide money
c) To repatriate wealth
d) To appear successful
27. What is double invoicing?
a) The raising of two invoices payable by the same party against
the same goods
b) The raising of two invoices payable by different parties
against the same goods
c) A subsidiary purchasing goods from a parent at too high a
price
d) The creation of an invoice where the goods are non-existent
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28. What is a settlor?
a) A beneficiary of a trust
b) A lawyer
c) A third party
d) A person who sets up a trust
29. What should banks do in order to mitigate the risk of companies
with bearer shares? Choose one.
a) Refuse to do business with such firms
b) Insist that the shares are handed over to the bank for safe
keeping
c) Inspect the register of owners
d) Inquire as to the beneficial owners of the company
30. What are the main differences between terrorist financing and
money laundering?
a) Only one of these is covered by the Wolfsburg group
b) Terrorist financing can involve the use of legitimate funds
c) Layering is used in money laundering, not terrorist
financing
d) All of the above
31. Which of the following statements is true?
a) An alternative remittance system is usually more expensive
than a bank transfer
b) Informal value transfer systems settle balances through the
normal process of trade
c) Hawala is illegal
d) Informal remittance systems are only used in the placement
phase of money laundering
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32. How can charities ensure they are less attractive to money
launderers? Choose three.
a) Ensure strict oversight and regulation
b) Use standard bank accounts
c) Use full accounting for all expenditure
d) Conduct field audits
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Section 2
33. Which of the following compliance criteria is not a requirement for
membership of FATF?
a) Freezing and confiscation of funds
b) Payment of FATF penalties
c) Customer due diligence
d) International cooperation
34. What are the three objectives of FATF?
a) Monitoring implementation of recommendations by
members
b) Promoting AML messages worldwide
c) Encouraging the use of risk based methods
d) Monitoring money laundering trends and countermeasures
35. What three of the following items did the 2003 revision to the FATF
recommendations include:
a) Transparency of legal persons
b) Terrorist financing
c) Predicate offenses for money laundering
d) Prohibition of shell banks
36. What three of the following items did the 2012 revision to the FATF
recommendations include:
a) Merging the 9 terrorist financing recommendations
b) Domestic politically exposed persons
c) Setting up financial intelligence units
d) Tax crimes
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37. Why does FATF recommend a risk-based approach?
a) More effective use of resources
b) More cost effective approach
c) Because FATF better understands risk
d) All of the above
38. In what situations does FATF recommend heightened customer due
diligence?
Choose three:
a) Wire transfers
b) Politically exposed persons
c) New technologies
d) Counter transactions
39. FATF recommendations specify which of the following would
encounter a FATF designated threshold of €15,000:
a) Bank customers carrying out regular cash transactions
b) Internet casinos
c) Cash dealers of precious stones
d) Car dealers
40. Non-Cooperative Countries are measured by the FATF using which
criteria?
Choose three:
a) Loopholes in financial regulations
b) Obstacles raised by regulatory requirements
c) Inadequate AML resources
d) Geographic location
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41. Which of the following industries does the FATF guidelines not
cover:
a) Notaries
b) Legal professionals
c) Trust and company service providers
d) High value vehicle sales
42. According to the Basel paper published in 2001 covering Customer
Due Diligence for Banks, what are the four key elements of KYC?
a) Identification, transaction profile, monitoring, reporting
b) Risk management, identification, monitoring, acceptance
c) Risk-based controls, identification, monitoring, acceptance
d) Identification, transaction profile, source of funds,
monitoring
43. What did the Basel paper published in 1997 covering Core Principles
for Effective Banking Supervision, recommend?
a) Strong KYC, high ethical standards, adoption of the FATF
recommendations
b) Capital requirements, liquidity measures, monitoring and
reporting requirements
c) Controls over private banking, correspondent banking,
payable through accounts, and shell banks
d) None of the above
44. What did the EU First Directive on Money Laundering
(91/308/EEC) cover?
a) Terrorist financing
b) Drug Trafficking
c) International financial services
d) All of the above
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45. What was not introduced into the scope of the EU Second Directive
on Money Laundering (2001/97/EEC)?
a) Politically exposed persons (PEPs)
b) Willful blindness
c) Precise definition of laundering
d) Bureau de change/currency exchange and money
transmitters
46. What was introduced into the scope of the EU Third Directive on
Money Laundering (2001/97/EEC)?
Choose three.
a) Protection for employees reporting suspicious transactions
b) Collection of statistics on suspicious transactions
c) Life insurance intermediaries
d) Fraud and other serious predicate crimes
47. Which regional FATF body was created by an inter-governmental
treaty?
a) MONEYVAL (Council of Europe Select Committee of
Experts on the Evaluation of Anti-Money Laundering
Measures
b) Eurasian Group (EAG)
c) Financial Action Task Force of South America against
Money Laundering (GAFISUD – Grupo de Acción
Financiera de Sudamérica)
d) Middle East and North African Financial Action Task Force
(MENAFATF)
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48. Which countries are co-operating nations of the Caribbean
Financial Action Task Force (CFATF)?
a) Nauru, Aruba, Bahamas
b) UK, USA, Canada, Mexico, France, Spain, the Netherlands
c) Cayman Islands, Guernsey, Seychelles
d) Monaco, Luxembourg, Cyprus
49. Which of the following activities is carried out by the Egmont
group?
a) Drafting model anti-money laundering laws
b) Promoting the establishment of financial intelligence units
c) Recommends controls within private banking
d) Partnership with Transparency International
50. Which three of the following did the Wolfsburg group cover?
a) Standards and policies for KYC, AML and terrorist
financing
b) Prohibition of concentration accounts
c) Enhanced customer due diligence for money services
businesses
d) Supporting regulators, judges, prosecutors, financial
intelligence units and law enforcement
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51. What does section 311 of the USA Patriot Act cover?
a) The ability to designate a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign
financial institution, a type of international transaction, or a
type of account as a specific concern to be addressed by US
banks.
b) Prohibiting correspondent accounts for shell banks
c) Making correspondent account records available within 120
hours
d) Due diligence for non-US private bank customers
52. What does section 312 of the USA Patriot Act cover?
a) The ability to designate a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign
financial institution, a type of international transaction, or a
type of account as a specific concern to be addressed by US
banks.
b) Prohibiting correspondent accounts for shell banks
c) Making correspondent account records available within 120
hours
d) Due diligence for non-US private bank customers
53. What does section 313 of the USA Patriot Act cover?
a) The ability to designate a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign
financial institution, a type of international transaction, or a
type of account as a specific concern to be addressed by US
banks.
b) Prohibiting correspondent accounts for shell banks
c) Making correspondent account records available within 120
hours
d) Due diligence for non-US private bank customers
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54. What does section 319b of the USA Patriot Act cover?
a) The ability to designate a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign
financial institution, a type of international transaction, or a
type of account as a specific concern to be addressed by US
banks.
b) Prohibiting correspondent accounts for shell banks
c) Making correspondent account records available within 120
hours
d) Due diligence for non-US private bank customers
55. Which three sentences describe the Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC)?
a) Enforces economic and trade sanctions
b) Enforces fiscal policy
c) Applies to all US citizens, regardless of location
d) Applies to all US-incorporated entities, including foreign
branches
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Section 3
56. Which of the following statements is correct?
a) AML functions should be centralized to ensure
efficiency
b) AML functions should be decentralized to ensure
product knowledge
c) AML functions should have a centralized aspect to
ensure consistency
d) AML functions should be external to the firm to provide
objectivity
57. Which three statements describe the motivations behind risk-based
approaches to AML?
a) They are flexible to meet the risks of different
geographical areas, products, and customers
b) They are effective, as companies know better than
regulators how to mitigate risk
c) They are cost-effective, because organizations only need
to look at the highest risks
d) They are proportionate, and allow an intelligent, rather
than a check-box, approach
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58. Which of the following types of companies pose a high risk of
money laundering?
Choose three:
a) Art dealers, and dealers in precious stones and metals
b) Restaurants, parking, car washes
c) Travel Agencies, machine parts
d) Electronics merchants, supermarkets.
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59. Which group of banking products is the highest risk:
a) Deposit taking, retail brokerage, cash advances on a
credit card
b) Wire transfers, travelers cheques, bankers checks
c) Foreign exchange, savings accounts, checking accounts
d) Private banking, fixed income bonds, domestic accounts
60. What are the four key elements of an AML program?
Choose one:
a) AML certifications; regulator liaison; law enforcement
liaison; and documentation standards
b) Policies & procedures; senior management sponsorship;
on-going compliance testing; and third party oversight
c) On-going employee training; designated compliance
office ,internal audit testing; and policies, procedures
and controls
d) Board approval; approved procedures; supervisor
testing; and agreed reporting arrangements
61. What should be addressed within the AML policies and procedures?
a) Risk based due diligence
b) Segregation of duties
c) Record keeping requirements
d) All of the above
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62. Which two are important functions of the designated compliance
officer?
a) Creating training
b) Delivering training
c) Staying current with regulatory and legal changes
d) Conducting reviews of AML compliance
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63. Which of the following is not a requirement for customer due
diligence:
a) Profiles of expected account activity
b) Documenting findings
c) Conducting investigations into the source of a client’s
wealth
d) Investigating unusual activity
64. Basel 2003 account opening guidelines included which three of the
following items:
a) Government issued unique identification
b) Date and place of birth
c) Occupation, position, employer
d) Countries visited and visas recorded in passport
65. Why are politically exposed persons (PEPs) difficult to identify for a
retail bank?
a) The large volume of transactions makes screening
impractical
b) The lack of identifying information (e.g. date of birth)
makes false hits common
c) The lack of PEP name lists make automation impossible
d) The secrecy laws of some jurisdictions means
identifying PEPs is impractical
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66. FDIC guidance issued in 2005 recommended which of the
following for ‘know your employee’ programs
a) Re-screen when a person is promoted
b) Subject contractors to the same controls
c) Background screen on employment for criminal history
d) All of the above
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67. Which three of the following would be a red flag in a customer
situation:
a) Customers who move frequently
b) International use of ATMs
c) Customers who send wire transfers
d) Turning down high interest rates
68. Which three of the following would be a red flag when dealing with
cash transactions?
a) Changing large bills for smaller bills frequently
b) Deposits contains lots of fake bills, or very dirty or
musty bills
c) Making large deposits without counting the cash
d) Making deposits of currency wrapped in currency straps
69. Which three of the following would be a red flag regarding non-cash
deposits?
a) Depositing consecutively numbered travelers cheques
b) Depositing bearer bonds
c) Depositing third party checks
d) Frequent purchase of monetary instruments
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70. Which three of the following would be a red flag regarding trade
finance?
a) Changes to the beneficiary of a letter of credit just
before a payment is made
b) Letter of credit is for goods not in demand in the
exporting country
c) Goods for import or export are at prices above or below
normal market rates
d) Commodities shipped through locations without
apparent economic or logistical reason
71. Which three of the following would be a red flag regarding
employees?
a) Employees carry over vacation days from one year to the
next
b) Employee is involved in an large number of unresolved
exceptions
c) Employee leads a lavish lifestyle, not in line with the
salary
d) Employee circumvents policies
72. Which three of the following would be a red flag in an insurance
situation?
a) Changes to the beneficiary of car insurance
b) Early redemption of life policy
c) Unconcerned with early redemption charges
d) Cash payments
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73. Electronic AML solutions offer which three of the following
benefits:
a) Monitoring of transactions for signs of laundering
b) Screening of data against known watch lists
c) Efficiencies permitting the outsourcing of compliance
functions
d) Automated regulatory reporting
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Section 4
74. What does a subpoena allow?
a) Entry of a specific location to seize specific categories of
documents or items
b) Law enforcement to obtain documents and testimony
c) Law enforcement to commence proceedings
d) Law enforcement to evaluate documents under client-
attorney privilege
75. What does a search warrant allow?
a) The interview of subjects
b) Entry of a specific location to seize specific categories of
documents or items
c) The arrest of a suspect
d) A court case to proceed
76. Which three of the following are steps that law enforcement should
take when performing an investigation?
Choose three.
a) Documenting activity and transactions; reviewing
databases; and reviewing licensing and registration files
b) Analyzing financial transactions; Reviewing STRs; and
conducting computer based searches
c) Decide whether to prosecute; obtain evidence; cross-
examine witnesses
d) Follow the money; identify the unlawful activity; and
obtain international co-operation
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77. What three steps should an institution take to respond to all law
enforcement investigations?
a) Respond quickly and completely to all requests
b) Narrow overly broad requests
c) Establish a single point of contact
d) Notify the customer
78. When law-enforcement exercise search warrants, what three things
should the organization do?
a) Ask for the affidavit
b) Ask for the subpoena
c) Ask for the inventory
d) Ask for the warrant
79. When should you freeze accounts or assets?
a) When asked to do so by law enforcement
b) Upon receipt of the warrant issued by the court ordering
the freeze
c) Upon request of legal counsel
d) All of the above
80. Why should ‘no comment’ be provided to the press when the facts
are against an organization under investigation?
a) To prevent appearing foolish should subsequent leaks
occur
b) Because any admission of wrong doing would cause the
share price to drop
c) Because any inaccuracies could lead to an investigation
by the SEC
d) All of the above
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81. When should you conduct an internal investigation?
a) When you receive an adverse regulatory opinion
b) When you receive an adverse internal audit report
c) When you receive an employee hot-line tip off
d) All of the above
82. Which one of the following statements is correct:
a) Documents can be destroyed in line with the document
destruction policy even though they may be of use in an
on-going government investigation
b) Documents cannot be destroyed in line with the
document retention policy
c) Documents can be destroyed in line with the document
destruction policy, provided no government
investigation is on-going
d) Documents should be retained for a minimum of 6 years
83. Which three of the following are useful techniques to use when
interviewing employees:
a) Carry out the interview as soon as possible to ensure
memories are fresh
b) Interrogation rooms should be set up with bright lights
facing the interviewee
c) General background questions should be asked at the
start, with contentious questions left to the end
d) Counsel should prepare staff before the interview, and
debrief them afterwards to identify the line of
questioning.
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84. What is the main purpose of IMoLIN, International Money
Laundering Information Network?
a) It created and disseminated model laws
b) It was created by the UN (United Nations)
c) It acts as a clearing house of money laundering
information
d) All of the above
85. What is a ‘commission rogatoire’?
a) A letter requesting cooperation from a foreign central
authority
b) A gateway for international cooperation
c) Permission from a central authority that allows a foreign
investigation to occur
d) A letter of decline, where a central authority refuses a
foreign investigation
86. How do FIUs (financial intelligence units) share information
internationally?
a) Using a commission rogatoire
b) Using a multilateral legal assistance treaty (MLAT)
c) Using a memorandum of understanding
d) Using the Wolfsburg principles
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87. What are the principles from the Egmont group related to
information sharing?
Choose three.
a) Free exchange of information, on the basis of reciprocity
b) Grant permission to law enforcement, if appropriate
c) Respect privacy and confidentiality
d) Share information with every member as a matter of
course
88. According to the 2002 Basel committee “Report on sharing
information between jurisdictions in connection with the fight
against terrorism” which of the following statements is true:
a) Supervisors should disseminate information to
government departments
b) Information can be used as evidence
c) General information about financial activity can be
shared between regulators
d) Specific information about politically exposed persons
can be shared between regulators and used as evidence
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Answer Sheet
1 31 61
2 32 62
3 33 63
4 34 64
5 35 65
6 36 66
7 37 67
8 38 68
9 39 69
10 40 70
11 41 71
12 42 72
13 43 73
14 44 74
15 45 75
16 46 76
17 47 77
18 48 78
19 49 79
20 50 80
21 51 81
22 52 82
23 53 83
24 54 84
25 55 85
26 56 86
27 57 87
28 58 88
29 59
30 60
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Answers
1 Answer B.
This answer uses physical cash to purchase an asset, and is a
feature of placement. All other answers use money that is
already in the financial system and are thus examples of
layering
2 Answer: A, C, D.
Counties can suffer reputational risk if they are known as a
haven for money laundering, they may be forced to make
adverse fiscal (tax and budget) policy to compensate for the tax
revenue lost to criminal laundering, and they may lose control
of monetary policy as currency flows are directed by launderers
out of the country. The country should use regulatory policy to
enforce antimony laundering.
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3 Answer: A, B, D.
While the regulatory regime may be known, the effectiveness
of that regime on any one institution may be difficult to assess
beyond standard checklists. The arms-length nature of
correspondent banking means that customer due diligence of
the ultimate customer is difficult or impossible, and the
transaction volumes are high, so suspicious transactions are
hidden in the noise. The USA Patriot act contained specific
provisions concerning correspondent banking in sections 312,
313, 319a & b.
4 Answer A & C.
Gem stones and cashiers checks can be purchased using cash,
making them vulnerable to placement. Credit cards and
internet casinos do not usually allow cash payments, and so are
less likely to be used as part of the placement phase.
5 Answer B.
C describes a concentration account, D is a correspondent
account, A is numbered account.
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6 Answer A.
The internal accounts used by the bank may be set up so that
the audit trail is lost when they are used. The other answers are
not relevant risks to the use of concentration accounts
7 Answer B&C.
Politically exposed persons (PEPs) use private banking, and
may have access to funds derived from embezzlement or
bribes.
Wealthy users of private banking often use private investment
companies (PICs) to manage their wealth which may hide the
beneficial owners.
The Wolfsburg group did cover private banking, and there is
intense competition in private banking, making those answers
incorrect.
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8 Answer B.
Smurfing is used to deposit cash at a financial institution below
the reporting threshold.
A is incorrect because smurfs deposit cash, rather than
withdrawing it.
C is incorrect, smurfs often use accounts set up using dead
people’s identities, but the term does not refer to them.
D is incorrect because this is relates to cuckoo smurfing.
9 Answer B.
Micro-structurers often use counter deposit slips as they make
many small cash deposits and will have insufficient pre-printed
paying in slips.
A is incorrect as there is no cash involved, C&D both mention
either large cash amounts, or expensive items which would not
indicate micro-structuring, which uses small amounts of cash,
typically under $1000.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
10 Answer A,B,C.
Although the remitter is expecting funds to be sent via an
international wire transfer, in a cuckoo smurfing situation, an
accompanied in a financial institution diverts it elsewhere.
The funds are instead deposited as dirty cash by an accomplice
in a foreign country into the unwitting recipient’s bank
account.
There is no concentration of funds as this would cause a
discrepancy between the remittance and receipt which would
raise the alarm.
11 Answer C.
All of these are methods to guard against money laundering
risks, however not all of them are effective.
Registering staff with the regulator is not possible in all
jurisdictions, and may only cover senior roles not all roles that
might be at risk of money laundering, segregation of duties is
effective, but would not be practical for all tasks, reviewing
work periodically may be effective, but would very much
depend on the depth and scope of the review.
The most effective method is to conduct initial and ongoing
criminal background checks.
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12 Answer: B.
These financial institutions are low risk because they are small,
but they are vulnerable because of the level of cash
transactions.
They do not usually offer complex products, and they are
regulated.
13 Answer: A&C.
Structuring and placement are methods of disposing of cash,
which many credit cards do not permit. They are used for
layering and integration.
14 Answer: B&D.
Salesmen that are incentivized may overlook their suspicions,
and canceling life insurance during the free look period enables
the launderer to obtain a refund of clean money.
Underpaying insurance does not lead to an excess cash balance
and canceling car insurance early would not lead to a large
refund so is not a significant risk of money laundering.
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15 Answer: C.
The use of two offsetting trades means that the market can
move in either direction and the principle is safe.
The loss of dirty money in one account is compensated by the
creation of legitimate gains in another trading account. None
of the other descriptions matches that of a wash trade.
16 Answer: B, C, D.
Broker dealers are not party to insider information. They do
use wire transfers, which are useful to money launderers.
The commission-driven culture could cause sales staff to
overlook the source of funds, and their cash accounts are not
subject to the same level of AML oversight at banking accounts.
17 Answer: A, B, D.
Answer C is incorrect because gaming venues offer a means to
place cash, rather than integrate it. All of the other answers are
correct.
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18 Answer: B & D.
Gold can be purchased with dirty cash, meaning it is useful in
the placement phase. It can also be exchanged for cash or other
items or physically handed to another person with little or no
audit trail, making it useful in the layering phase.
Although gold is in high demand and can be easily melted
down, these are not the most useful features of gold to money
launderers.
19 Answer: C.
Expensive flights and hotels can be purchased for a third party,
who can then request a refund of the cost.
20 Answer: A, C, D.
They allow third party payments which can obscure the link
between the asset and the source of the funds. They do sell high
value items, but this in and of itself does not make the vehicle
seller susceptible, so this is not a correct answer.
They do allow down trading, with the difference available as a
check made out from the dealer. They allow partial down
payments which could be used for structuring.
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21 Answer: A
The attorney-client privilege means that some information
cannot be released to law enforcement.
While a lawyer does represent a client in court, this is not part
of the money laundering process.
Both lawyers and company formation agents can create
complex vehicles and act as nominee, so these factors do not
make lawyers more useful.
22 Answer: A&C.
Property is often used to disguise the source of funds, making
it useful in the layering phase.
It can also be used in the integration phase where an asset such
as a holiday complex can be purchased, adding to the air of
legitimacy.
Because real estate is costly, it is not usually a good candidate
for placement, which would require very large sums of cash, or
structuring, which requires multiple small sums of cash to
avoid reporting thresholds.
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23 Answer: C.
Fraudulent transfer pricing schemes are most often associated
with the undervaluing of exports.
They can be used in conjunction with the black market peso
exchange; however they are not necessary for the BMPE to
work.
They are not used to move money using nominee accounts.
Letters of credit can be used to add an air of legitimacy to
undervalued exports, but not the other way around.
24 Answer: A, C, D.
The ability to use the cards at a wide range of merchants is a
benefit to a normal retail customer more than it is a benefit to a
money launderer.
The global ATM access allows the transfer of money out of the
country, the high value limits make them useful as an
alternative to smuggling cash, and the anonymity reduced the
audit trail that can be linked to the launderer.
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25 Answer: A,B, D.
C is incorrect because although criminally controlled front
companies do have lower overheads (as they are not subject to
commercial pressures such as bank financing costs) these
commercial considerations are not the primary reason the
enterprise is used by the launderer.
The generation of cash with which to co-mingle funds is a key
driver, as is the need to have legitimate employment to avoid
suspicion. The high profits that they generate when sold, due to
their artificially high turnover, is another attraction.
26 Answer: C.
The money launderer uses offshore wealth to purchase the
company that he already owns, thus repatriating the cash and
maintaining his ownership of the company.
27 Answer: C.
Double invoicing is where a subsidiary purchases goods from a
parent at too high a price, or a parent purchases from a
subsidiary at too low a price.
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28 Answer: D.
A settlor is the person who creates the trust which defines how
the assets of the trust are to be distributed to the beneficiaries.
The settlor may be a lawyer, or other legal professional a third
party, or even the beneficiary of a trust, however this is not
required.
29 Answer: D.
There is no requirement to refuse to do business with such
entitles, however there is no register of owners to check.
The bank cannot insist that the shares be handed over, as
possession equates to ownership. The bank should satisfy itself
as to the beneficial owners of the entity.
30 Answer B.
Terrorist financing can involve the use of legitimate funds for
illegitimate purposes.
The Wolfsburg group included terrorist financing in the 2002
revisions. Layering is used by both money launderers and
terrorist financiers to disguise the source of funds.
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31 Answer: B.
Alternative remittance systems usually settle their balances in
the normal process of international trade.
Hawala is illegal in most, but not all, countries.
Alternative remittance systems are usually less expensive than
bank transfers, and these systems can be used in any phase of
money laundering, not just the placement phase.
32 Answer: B, C, D.
Charities are not subject to strict oversight or regulation, so this
would not be possible.
The charity can ensure that normal bank accounts are used, so
that bank AML controls are in place.
Accounting for all expenditure ensures a clear audit trail, and
field audits can ensure that expenditure is appropriate.
33 Answer: B.
FATF cannot impose fines or apply other direct sanctions.
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34 Answer: A, B, D.
Although FATF does recommend risk based measures in its
guidance; it’s not a specific stated objective.
35 Answer: B, C, D.
The transparency of legal persons was already in the original
FATF recommendations.
36 Answer: A, B, D.
Setting up an FIU was a function of the IMF and World Bank,
further codified by the Egmont Group.
37 Answer: A.
It is recognized that a budget will always be limited, and the risk
based approached allows the best use of this budget.
The motivation is not to save costs, or for the FATF to specify
the risks faced by a specific institution or jurisdiction.
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38 Answer: A, B, C.
Counter transactions should be subject to currency reporting
thresholds and suspicious transaction reporting, but not
enhanced customer due diligence.
39 Answer: C.
Dealers of precious metals and stones are subject to a $/
€15,000 threshold for reporting when dealing in cash.
The same threshold also applies to financial institutions, but
only for occasional customer transactions. Internet casinos are
subject to a $/€3,000 limit. Car dealers are not covered by the
reporting thresholds.
40 Answer: A, B, C.
The geographic location is not a measure of cooperation.
41 Answer: D.
The FATF recommendations cover the others in some
circumstances (such as when managing client money, or acting
as a nominee shareholder).
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42 Answer B.
Although the order has been re-arranged, these are the four key
elements of KYC according to the paper.
43 Answer: A.
The paper covered KYC, the use of high ethical standards in
the fight against criminals using the banking system, and urged
the adoption of the FATF 40 recommendations.
44 Answer: B.
The directive only covered drug trafficking and domestic
financial services; however, the scope could be broadened by
member states to cover other predicate crimes.
45 Answer: A.
PEPS were introduced in the Third Directive.
46 Answer: A, B, C.
Fraud and other serious predicate crimes were introduced in
the Second Directive.
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47 Answer: C.
The Financial Action Task Force of South America against
Money Laundering (GAFISUD – Grupo de Acción Financiera
de Sudamérica) was set up by an inter-governmental treaty.
48 Answer: B.
Nauru, Guernsey, Seychelles, Monaco, Luxembourg and
Cyprus are known as tax havens, they are not CFATF co-
operating nations.
49 Answer: B.
The Egmont group is a body of financial intelligence units
(FIUs).
50 Answer: A, B, C.
The Wolfsburg group is an association of banks and is
concerned with managing banking policy, not the link to other
enforcement bodies.
51 Answer: A.
A is the content of section 311.
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52 Answer: D.
D is the content of section 312.
53 Answer: B.
B is the content of section 313.
54 Answer: C .
C is the content of section 319b.
55 Answer: A, C, D.
OFAC is not involved in fiscal (tax and expenditure) matters.
56 Answer: C.
AML functions can be either centralized or decentralized;
however they should ensure that they have a centralized aspect
to ensure consistency.
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57 Answer A, B, D.
Although focusing on only high risks could be a cost saving
measure, cost effectiveness should not be a primary motivation
for the approach.
58 Answer A, B, C.
Electronics merchants and supermarkets are not generally
considered to represent a high risk of money laundering.
59 Answer B.
All three of these are high risk as they allow cash management
and are negotiable instruments.
All of the other answers start with a high risk activity, followed
by two activities that are not considered high risk.
60 Answer: C.
The four key elements of an AML program are internal
policies, procedures and controls, with a designated
compliance officer with day-to-day oversight of the program.
This should be combined with ongoing training and an
independent audit function to test the program.
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61 Answer: D.
They should all be addressed within the policies and
procedures.
62 Answer A & C.
The training could be delivered by another competent
individual once it has been created by the compliance officer in
line with the organization’s needs.
Reviews of AML compliance should be carried out by an
independent function separate from the compliance officer.
63 Answer: C.
Although understanding the client’s source of wealth should
be validated as part of CDD, conducting an investigation
without any suspicion is not a requirement.
64 Answer: A, B, C.
There is no requirement to review the passport for visas and
visits.
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65 Answer: B.
The name lists of PEPs do not include date of birth, which
means that larger banks are likely to have many matches based
on the name alone.
66 Answer: D.
All of these were recommended by the FDIC.
67 Answer A, B, D.
Sending wire transfers, by itself, is not a red flag.
68 Answer B, C, D.
Exchanging large bills for smaller bills is common for retail
shops that provide change. The others are all red flags.
69 Answer A, C, D.
Bearer bonds cannot be deposited.
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70 Answer A, C, D.
B would be a red flag if the goods were not in demand in the
importing country, but the lack of domestic demand could be a
good reason to export.
71 Answer B, C, D.
Carrying over vacation would only be a red flag if it amounted
to not taking periodic vacations at all in order to prevent
someone else taking on their responsibilities while they are out
of the office, and potentially revealing wrongdoing.
72 Answer B, C, D.
It is not normally possible to use car insurance as a money
laundering vehicle, and changing the beneficiary on a policy is
not usually permitted.
73 Answer: A, B, D.
Outsourcing of compliance is not a stated benefit of electronic
AML solutions.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
74 Answer: B.
A subpoena allows law enforcement to obtain documents and
testimony. The entry of a specific location requires a search
warrant, law enforcement can commence proceedings without
a subpoena, and law enforcement cannot generally evaluate
documents under privilege.
75 Answer B.
Interviewing subjects can only happen after arrest and arrest
can only occur with an arrest warrant. A court case may come
after the search warrant after evidence of criminal wrong-
doing is discovered.
76 Answer: A, B, D.
The points within C would be carried out after the
investigation, if criminal wrong-doing was identified.
77 Answer: A, B, C.
The institution should not notify the customer, which would
constitute ‘tipping off’ in many jurisdictions.
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78 Answer A, C, D.
The affidavit accompanies the warrant, and contains additional
information. It may not be possible to obtain, but should always
be asked for.
The inventory of items removed should also be requested.
There would not be a subpoena issued at the same time as the
search warrant.
79 Answer B.
Assets may only be frozen upon court order.
80 Answer: C.
Although the share price may drop, admitting wrong doing
during an investigation would be premature, appearing foolish
in the light of later leaks is less important than ensuring that
true and accurate representations are made to the market.
Answer: C.
81
The other situations would warrant remediation of the
identified issues, but it should not be necessary to conduct an
investigation in order to do this.
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82 Answer: C.
Once notified of an investigation, documents should no longer
be destroyed, as they may need to be provided as evidence.
Documents are normally permitted to be destroyed in line with
the destruction policy.
Retaining documents for a minimum of 6 years would depend
on the specific documentation and the legal requirements of
the jurisdiction. It is not a blanket approach to all documents.
83 Answer: A, C, D.
There is no need to set up bright lights facing interviewees in
an interview situation.
84 Answer: C.
IMoLIN was set up with its main purpose as a clearing house of
information. Answers A and B are both correct, but are not the
main purpose of the organization.
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85 Answer A.
It is a letter of request, issued to a foreign authority, seeking
their cooperation in an investigation.
It forms part of the gateway for Mutual legal assistance treaties
to operate, however it is not the gateway itself. It is also does
not imply permission being granted or refused.
86 Answer: C.
A memorandum of understanding MOU) is used by FIUs to
share information. A commission rogatoire is used by law
enforcement under a MLAT. The FIUs adhere to the Egmont
principles to share information, not the Wolfsburg principles.
87 Answer: A, B, C.
D is incorrect as the information should be shared with every
relevant FIU, but not every member as a matter of course.
88 Answer: C.
Supervisors should not disseminate information to
government departments, information may not be used as
evidence, and specific information about PEPs can be shared,
but not used as evidence.
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191
Chapter 9
Study Questions:
Standard Answer
Format
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
193
Introduction
This test, similar to the last, covers the entire subject material, at a level
similar to the exam.
The actual exam uses a slightly complicated multi-part answer format
which is replicated in this test.
If you have already completed the simplified answer format test, and are
getting good scores, then you are ready to take this test.
The material will be familiar to you, so you should be able to concentrate
just on the answer style.
If you haven’t taken the simplified test, you can jump straight in and try
this test. If you don’t get the scores you are hoping for, try the simple
answer format test. This will identify whether you need to spend more
time with the study material, or more time understanding the exam style
and answering format.
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Study Questions
Section 1
1. Which of the following is not an example of layering?
a) Using cash deposited in a bank account to purchase an asset
b) Exchanging cash for a monetary instrument
c) Using an inbound wire transfer to purchase an asset
d) Using an inbound wire transfer to purchase a monetary
instrument
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2. What are key effects of money laundering on countries? Choose
three.
i) Reputation risk
ii) Losing control of regulatory policy
iii) Being forced into adverse fiscal policies
iv) Losing control of monetary policy
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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3. Risks of correspondent banking include the following.
Choose three.
i) The effectiveness of the regulatory regime may be unknown
ii) The ultimate customers are at arms length
iii) The USA Patriot Act did not address correspondent banking
risks
iv) The volumes of transactions are high
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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4. Which of the following are most vulnerable to the placement stage of
money laundering?
Choose two.
i) Purchasing diamonds
ii) Overpaying a credit card balance
iii) Obtaining cashier’s checks
iv) Internet casinos
A) i, ii
B) i, iii
C) i, iv
D) ii, iii
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
5. Which of the following describes a payable through account?
a) A numbered account where the customer is unknown
b) A correspondent account that can be used directly by the
respondent’s customers without the respondent’s oversight
c) Internal bank accounts used to assist in the settlement and
processing of customer transactions. Also known as omnibus,
settlement, or collection account.
d) A system where a bank offers accounts to another bank to
enable it to perform transactions in a location where it does not
have a physical presence
6. What is a risk of concentration accounts?
a) the underlying customer identification can be lost
b) co-mingling of clean and dirty funds can occur
c) customers may be unaware they are using them
d) confidentiality and secrecy between client and banker
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7. What are two risks associated with private banking?
i) The area was not covered by the Wolfsburg group
ii) politically exposed persons
iii) Private investment companies
iv) Lack of competition
A) i, ii
B) i, iv
C) ii, iii
D) ii, iv
8. Which of the following is a correct statement?
a) smurfs travel from bank to bank withdrawing cash from
ATMs
b) smurfing is a way to avoid triggering a currency reporting
threshold
c) smurfs are dead people whose accounts have been taken over
by money launderers
d) smurfing requires an insider at a financial institution
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9. Which one of the following might indicate microstructuring?
a) converting $800 of travelers cheques to a wire transfer
b) using counter deposit slips
c) large cash deposits
d) using cash to purchase a gold ingot
10. Cuckoo smurfing features which three of the following?
i. An unwitting bank account owner
ii. An insider in a financial institution
iii. An accomplice in a foreign country who deposits cash
iv. Concentration of funds
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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11. What is the best way to guard against the risk of money laundering by
bank staff?
a. Ensure that key staff are registered with the regulator
b. Ensure segregation of duties for all tasks
c. Conduct initial and ongoing criminal background checks
d. Ensure managers review staff work periodically
12. Why are credit unions (building societies) vulnerable to money
laundering?
a) They are small in size
b) They have high levels of cash transactions
c) They offer complex products
d) They are not regulated
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13. At which stages of money laundering are credit cards used?
Choose two.
i) Layering
ii) Structuring
iii) Integration
iv) Placement
A) i, ii
B) i, iii
C) i, iv
D) ii, iii
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14. Which of the following are money laundering risks at insurance
companies? Choose two:
i) Early cancellation capabilities of car insurance
ii) Salesmen are incentivized
iii) Underpaying insurance and requesting refunds
iv) Canceling life policies during the ‘free look’ period
A) i, ii
B) i, iii
C) i, iv
D) ii, iv
15. What is wash trading?
a. The ability to launder funds using nominee accounts
b. The inherent anonymity granted by many broker-dealers
c. The use of offsetting trades to launder funds
d. The trading of commodities
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16. Securities dealers are attractive to money launderers for the following
reasons.
Choose three:
i. They have information that can be used for insider trading
ii. They use high speed wire transfers
iii. They have a competitive, commission-driven culture
iv. They use cash accounts that are not subject to banking AML
controls
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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17. Casinos and other gaming venues are attractive to money launderers
for the following reasons.
Choose three:
i. They offer a plausible source of recently acquired wealth
ii. Gambles can be placed so that there is very little risk to capital
iii. The variety of gambling opportunities is useful at the
integration stage
iv. Funds can be made available in different jurisdictions
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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18. Which two of the following makes gold the most attractive to money
launderers?
i. It has high demand due to religious or cultural reasons
ii. It can be used in the placement phase
iii. It can be easily melted down
iv. It can be used in the layering phase
A) i, ii
B) i, iii
C) i, iv
D) ii, iv
19. Why are travel agents vulnerable to money launderers? Choose one.
a. They sell hotel rooms in high risk destinations
b. Hotels are frequented by politically exposed persons
c. Refunds can be made to third parties
d. They are listed in the FATF 40 recommendations
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20. Vehicle sellers are susceptible to money laundering because of the
following reasons.
Choose three:
i. They allow third party payments
ii. They sell high value items
iii. They allow down trading
iv. They allow partial down payments
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
21. Lawyers are more useful in money laundering than company
formation agents because of the following reason:
a. They have a client-attorney privilege
b. They can represent the launderer in court
c. They can create complex vehicles such as private investment
companies
d. They can act as nominee shareholders, directors and
secretaries
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22. Real estate is most often associated with which two of the following:
i. Layering
ii. Placement
iii. Integration
iv. Structuring
A) i, ii
B) i, iii
C) i, iv
D) ii, iii
23. Under valuing exports are used to:
a. Move money using nominee accounts
b. Enable the black market peso exchange
c. Create fraudulent transfer pricing schemes
d. Add an air of legitimacy to letters of credit
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24. What three features of prepaid cards make them most attractive to
money launderers?
i. Anonymity
ii. Widely accepted at merchants
iii. High value limits
iv. ATM access
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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25. Front companies are useful to the launderer for the following three
reasons:
i. They generate legitimate cash which can be co-mingled with
dirty money
ii. They provide a source of employment
iii. They have low overheads
iv. They can be sold for high profits
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
26. Why would a money launderer purchase a company that he already
owned?
a. To avoid tax
b. To hide money
c. To repatriate wealth
d. To appear successful
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27. What is double invoicing?
a. The raising of two invoices payable by the same party against
the same goods
b. The raising of two invoices payable by different parties
against the same goods
c. A subsidiary purchasing goods from a parent at too high a
price
d. The creation of an invoice where the goods are non-existent
28. What is a settlor?
a. A beneficiary of a trust
b. A lawyer
c. A third party
d. A person who sets up a trust
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29. What should banks do in order to mitigate the risk of companies
with bearer shares? Choose one.
a. Refuse to do business with such firms
b. Insist that the shares are handed over to the bank for safe
keeping
c. Inspect the register of owners
d. Inquire as to the beneficial owners of the company
30. What are the main differences between terrorist financing and
money laundering?
a. Only one of these is covered by the Wolfsburg group
b. Terrorist financing can involve the use of legitimate funds
c. Layering is used in money laundering, not terrorist financing
d. All of the above
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31. Which of the following statements is true?
a. An alternative remittance system is usually more expensive
than a bank transfer
b. Informal value transfer systems settle balances through the
normal process of trade
c. Hawala is illegal
d. Informal remittance systems are only used in the placement
phase of money laundering
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32. How can charities ensure they are less attractive to money
launderers? Choose three.
i. Ensure strict oversight and regulation
ii. Use standard bank accounts
iii. Use full accounting for all expenditure
iv. Conduct field audits
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Section 2
33. Which of the following compliance criteria is not a requirement for
membership of FATF?
a. Freezing and confiscation of funds
b. Payment of FATF penalties
c. Customer due diligence
d. International cooperation
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
34. What are the three objectives of FATF?
i. Monitoring implementation of recommendations by members
ii. Promoting AML messages worldwide
iii. Encouraging the use of risk based methods
iv. Monitoring money laundering trends and countermeasures
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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35. What three of the following items did the 2003 revision to the FATF
recommendations include?
i. Transparency of legal persons
ii. Terrorist financing
iii. Predicate offenses for money laundering
iv. Prohibition of shell banks
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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36. What three of the following items did the 2012 revision to the FATF
recommendations include?
i. Merging the 9 terrorist financing recommendations
ii. Domestic politically exposed persons
iii. Setting up financial intelligence units
iv. Tax crimes
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
37. Why does FATF recommend a risk-based approach?
a. More effective use of resources
b. More cost effective approach
c. Because FATF better understands risk
d. All of the above
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38. In what situations does FATF recommend heighted customer due
diligence? Choose three:
i. Wire transfers
ii. Politically exposed persons
iii. New technologies
iv. Counter transactions
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
39. FATF recommendations specify which of the following would
encounter a FATF designated threshold of €15,000:
a. Bank customers carrying out regular cash transactions
b. Internet casinos
c. Cash dealers of precious stones
d. Car dealers
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40. Non-Cooperative Countries are measured by the FATF using which
criteria? Choose three:
i. Loopholes in financial regulations
ii. Obstacles raised by regulatory requirements
iii. Inadequate AML resources
iv. Geographic location
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
41. Which of the following industries does the FATF guidelines not
cover?
a. Notaries
b. Legal professionals
c. Trust and company service providers
d. High value vehicle sales
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42. According to the Basel paper published in 2001 covering Customer
Due Diligence For Banks, what are the four key elements of KYC?
a. Identification, transaction profile, monitoring, reporting
b. Risk management, identification, monitoring, acceptance
c. Risk-based controls, identification, monitoring, acceptance
d. Identification, transaction profile, source of funds,
monitoring
43. What did the Basel paper published in 1997 covering Core Principles
for Effective Banking Supervision, recommend?
a. Strong KYC, high ethical standards, adoption of the FATF
recommendations
b. Capital requirements, liquidity measures, monitoring and
reporting requirements
c. Controls over private banking, correspondent banking,
payable through accounts, and shell banks
d. None of the above
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44. What did the EU First Directive on Money Laundering
(91/308/EEC) cover?
a. Terrorist financing
b. Drug Trafficking
c. International financial services
d. All of the above
45. What was not introduced into the scope of the EU Second Directive
on Money Laundering (2001/97/EEC)?
a. Politically exposed persons (PEPs)
b. Willful blindness
c. Precise definition of laundering
d. Currency exchange (Bureau de change) and money
transmitters
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46. What was introduced into the scope of the EU Third Directive on
Money Laundering (2001/97/EEC)?
Choose three.
i. Protection for employees reporting suspicious transactions
ii. Collection of statistics on suspicious transactions
iii. Life insurance intermediaries
iv. Fraud and other serious predicate crimes
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
47. Which regional FATF body was created by an inter-governmental
treaty?
a. MONEYVAL (Council of Europe Select Committee of
Experts on the Evaluation of Anti-Money Laundering Measures
b. Eurasian Group (EAG)
c. Financial Action Task Force of South America against Money
Laundering (GAFISUD – Grupo de Accion Financiera de
Sudamerica)
d. Middle East and North African Financial Action Task Force
(MENAFATF)
48. Which countries are co-operating nations of the Caribbean
Financial Action Task Force (CFATF)?
a. Nauru, Aruba, Bahamas
b. UK, USA, Canada, Mexico, France, Spain, the Netherlands
c. Cayman Islands, Guernsey, Seychelles
d. Monaco, Luxembourg, Cyprus
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49. Which of the following activities is carried out by the Egmont
group?
a. Drafting model anti-money laundering laws
b. Promoting the establishment of financial intelligence units
c. Recommends controls within private banking
d. Partnership with Transparency International
50. Which three of the following did the Wolfsburg group cover?
i. Standards and policies for KYC, AML and terrorist financing
ii. Prohibition of concentration accounts
iii. Enhanced customer due diligence for money services
businesses
iv. Supporting regulators, judges, prosecutors, financial
intelligence units and law enforcement
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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51. What does section 311 of the USA Patriot Act cover?
a. The ability to designate a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign
financial institution, a type of
international transaction, or a type of account as a specific
concern to be addressed by US banks.
b. Prohibiting correspondent accounts for shell banks
c. Making correspondent account records available within 120
hours
d. Due diligence for non-US private bank customers
52. What does section 312 of the USA Patriot Act cover?
a. The ability to designate a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign
financial institution, a type of international transaction, or a
type of account as a specific concern to be addressed by US
banks.
b. Prohibiting correspondent accounts for shell banks
c. Making correspondent account records available within 120
hours
d. Due diligence for non-US private bank customers
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53. What does section 313 of the USA Patriot Act cover?
a. The ability to designate a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign
financial institution, a type of international transaction, or a
type of account as a specific concern to be addressed by US
banks.
b. Prohibiting correspondent accounts for shell banks
c. Making correspondent account records available within 120
hours
d. Due diligence for non-US private bank customers
54. What does section 319b of the USA Patriot Act cover?
a. The ability to designate a foreign jurisdiction, a foreign
financial institution, a type of international transaction, or a
type of account as a specific concern to be addressed by US
banks.
b. Prohibiting correspondent accounts for shell banks
c. Making correspondent account records available within 120
hours
d. Due diligence for non-US private bank customers
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55. Which three sentences describe the Office of Foreign Assets Control
(OFAC)?
i. Enforces economic and trade sanctions
ii. Enforces fiscal policy
iii. Applies to all US citizens, regardless of location
iv. Applies to all US-incorporated entities, including foreign
branches
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Section 3
56. Which of the following statements is correct?
a. AML functions should be centralized to ensure efficiency
b. AML functions should be decentralized to ensure product
knowledge
c. AML functions should have a centralized aspect to ensure
consistency
d. AML functions should be external to the firm to provide
objectivity
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57. Which three statements describe the motivations behind risk-based
approaches to AML?
i. They are flexible to meet the risks of different geographical
areas, products, and customers
ii. They are effective, as companies know better than regulators
how to mitigate risk
iii. They are cost-effective, because organizations only need to
look at the highest risks
iv. They are proportionate, and allow an intelligent, rather than a
check-box, approach
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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58. Which of the following types of companies pose a high risk of money
laundering?
Choose three:
i. Art dealers, and dealers in precious stones and metals
ii. Restaurants, parking, car washes
iii. Travel Agencies, machine parts
iv. Electronics merchants, supermarkets.
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
59. Which group of banking products is the highest risk?
a. Deposit taking, retail brokerage, cash advances on a credit card
b. Wire transfers, travelers cheques, bankers checks
c. Foreign exchange, savings accounts, checking accounts
d. Private banking, fixed income bonds, domestic accounts
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60. What are the four key elements of an AML program? Choose one
answer:
a. AML certifications; regulator liaison; law enforcement
liaison; and documentation standards
b. Policies & procedures; senior management sponsorship; on-
going compliance testing; and third party oversight
c. On-going employee training; designated compliance office,
internal audit testing; and policies, procedures and controls
d. Board approval; approved procedures; supervisor testing; and
agreed reporting arrangements
61. What should be addressed within the AML policies and procedures?
a. Risk based due diligence
b. Segregation of duties
c. Record keeping requirements
d. All of the above
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62. Which two are important functions of the designated compliance
officer?
i. Creating training
ii. Delivering training
iii. Staying current with regulatory and legal changes
iv. Conducting reviews of AML compliance
A) i, ii
B) i, iii
C) i, iv
D) ii, iii
63. Which of the following is not a requirement for customer due
diligence:
a. Profiles of expected account activity
b. Documenting findings
c. Conducting investigations into the source of a client’s wealth
d. Investigating unusual activity
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
64. Basel 2003 account opening guidelines included which three of the
following items:
i. Government issued unique identification
ii. Date and place of birth
iii. Occupation, position, employer
iv. Countries visited and visas recorded in passport
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
65. Why are politically exposed persons (PEPs) difficult to identify for a
retail bank?
a. The large volume of transactions makes screening impractical
b. The lack of identifying information (e.g. date of birth) makes
false hits common
c. The lack of PEP name lists make automation impossible
d. The secrecy laws of some jurisdictions means identifying
PEPs is impractical
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66. FDIC guidance issued in 2005 recommended which of the following
for ‘know your employee’ programs
a. Re-screen when a person is promoted
b. Subject contractors to the same controls
c. Background screen on employment for criminal history
d. All of the above
67. Which three of the following would be a red flag in a customer
situation?
i. Customers who move frequently
ii. International use of ATMs
iii. Customers who send wire transfers
iv. Turning down high interest rates
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
68. Which three of the following would be a red flag when dealing with
cash transactions?
i. Changing large bills for smaller bills frequently
ii. Deposits contains lots of fake bills, or very dirty or musty bills
iii. Making large deposits without counting the cash
iv. Making deposits of currency wrapped in currency straps
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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69. Which three of the following would be a red flag regarding non-cash
deposits?
i. Depositing consecutively numbered travelers cheques
ii. Depositing bearer bonds
iii. Depositing third party checks
iv. Frequent purchase of monetary instruments
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
70. Which three of the following would be a red flag regarding trade
finance?
i. Changes to the beneficiary of a letter of credit just before a
payment is made
ii. Letter of credit is for goods not in demand in the exporting
country
iii. Goods for import or export are at prices above or below
normal market rates
iv. Commodities shipped through locations without apparent
economic or logistical reason
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
239
71. Which three of the following would be a red flag regarding
employees?
i. Employees carry over vacation days from one year to the next
ii. Employee is involved in a large number of unresolved
exceptions
iii. Employee leads a lavish lifestyle, not in line with the salary
iv. Employee circumvents policies
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
72. Which three of the following would be a red flag in an insurance
situation?
i. Changes to the beneficiary of car insurance
ii. Early redemption of life policy
iii. Unconcerned with early redemption charges
iv. Cash payments
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
241
73. Electronic AML solutions offer which three of the following
benefits:
i. Monitoring of transactions for signs of laundering
ii. Screening of data against known watch lists
iii. Efficiencies permitting the outsourcing of compliance
functions
iv. Automated regulatory reporting
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Section 4
74. What does a subpoena allow?
a. Entry of a specific location to seize specific categories of
documents or items
b. Law enforcement to obtain documents and testimony
c. Law enforcement to commence proceedings
d. Law enforcement to evaluate documents under client-
attorney privilege
75. What does a search warrant allow?
a. The interview of subjects
b. Entry of a specific location to seize specific categories of
documents or items
c. The arrest of a suspect
d. A court case to proceed
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76. Which three of the following are steps that law enforcement should
take when performing an investigation?
Choose three.
i. Documenting activity and transactions; reviewing databases;
and reviewing licensing
and registration files
ii. Analyzing financial transactions; Reviewing STRs; and
conducting computer based searches
iii. Decide whether to prosecute; obtain evidence; cross-
examine witnesses
iv. Follow the money; identify the unlawful activity; and obtain
international co-operation
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
77. What three steps should an institution take to respond to all law
enforcement investigations?
i. Respond quickly and completely to all requests
ii. Narrow overly broad requests
iii. Establish a single point of contact
iv. Notify the customer
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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78. When law-enforcement exercise search warrants, what three things
should the organization do?
i. Ask for the affidavit
ii. Ask for the subpoena
iii. Ask for the inventory
iv. Ask for the warrant
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
79. When should you freeze accounts or assets?
a. When asked to do so by law enforcement
b. Upon receipt of the warrant issued by the court ordering the
freeze
c. Upon request of legal counsel
d. All of the above
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
80. Why should ‘no comment’ be provided to the press when the facts
are against an organization under investigation?
a. To prevent appearing foolish should subsequent leaks occur
b. Because any admission of wrong doing would cause the share
price to drop
c. Because any inaccuracies could lead to an investigation by the
SEC
d. All of the above
81. When should you conduct an internal investigation?
a. When you receive an adverse regulatory opinion
b. When you receive an adverse internal audit report
c. When you receive an employee hot-line tip off
d. All of the above
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82. Which one of the following statements is correct?
a. Documents can be destroyed in line with the document
destruction policy even though
they may be of use in an on-going government investigation
b. Documents cannot be destroyed in line with the document
retention policy
c. Documents can be destroyed in line with the document
destruction policy, provided no government investigation is on-
going
d. Documents should be retained for a minimum of 6 years
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83. Which three of the following are useful techniques to use when
interviewing employees?
i. Carry out the interview as soon as possible to ensure memories
are fresh
ii. Interrogation rooms should be set up with bright lights facing
the interviewee
iii. General background questions should be asked at the start,
with contentious questions left to the end
iv. Counsel should prepare staff before the interview, and
debrief them afterwards to identify the line of questioning.
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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84. What is the main purpose of IMoLIN, International Money
Laundering Information Network?
a. It created and disseminated model laws
b. It was created by the UN (United Nations)
c. It acts as a clearing house of money laundering information
d. All of the above
85. What is a ‘commission rogatoire’?
a. A letter requesting cooperation from a foreign central
authority
b. A gateway for international cooperation
c. Permission from a central authority that allows a foreign
investigation to occur
d. A letter of decline, where a central authority refuses a foreign
investigation
86. How do FIUs (financial intelligence units) share information
internationally?
a. Using a commission rogatoire
b. Using a multilateral legal assistance treaty (MLAT)
c. Using a memorandum of understanding
d. Using the Wolfsburg principles
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
87. What are the principles from the Egmont group related to
information sharing? Choose three.
i. Free exchange of information, on the basis of reciprocity
ii. Grant permission to law enforcement, if appropriate
iii. Respect privacy and confidentiality
iv. Share information with every member as a matter of course
A) i, iii, iv
B) ii, iii, iv
C) i, ii, iv
D) i, ii, iii
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88. According to the 2002 Basel committee “Report on sharing
information between jurisdictions in connection with the fight against
terrorism” which of the following statements is true:
a. Supervisors should disseminate information to government
departments
b. Information can be used as evidence
c. General information about financial activity can be shared
between regulators
d. Specific information about politically exposed persons can be
shared between regulators and used as evidence
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
Answer Sheet
1 31 61
2 32 62
3 33 63
4 34 64
5 35 65
6 36 66
7 37 67
8 38 68
9 39 69
10 40 70
11 41 71
12 42 72
13 43 73
14 44 74
15 45 75
16 46 76
17 47 77
18 48 78
19 49 79
20 50 80
21 51 81
22 52 82
23 53 83
24 54 84
25 55 85
26 56 86
27 57 87
28 58 88
29 59
30 60
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Answers
1 Answer B.
This answer uses physical cash to purchase an asset, and is a
feature of placement. All other answers use money that is
already in the financial system and are thus examples of
layering
2 Answer: A.
Counties can suffer reputational risk if they are known as a
haven for money laundering, they may be forced to make
adverse fiscal (tax and budget) policy to compensate for the tax
revenue lost to criminal laundering, and they may lose control
of monetary policy as currency flows are directed by launderers
out of the country. The country should use regulatory policy to
enforce antimony laundering.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
3 Answer: C.
While the regulatory regime may be known, the effectiveness
of that regime on any one institution may be difficult to assess
beyond standard checklists. The arms-length nature of
correspondent banking means that customer due diligence of
the ultimate customer is difficult or impossible, and the
transaction volumes are high, so suspicious transactions are
hidden in the noise. The USA Patriot act contained specific
provisions concerning correspondent banking in sections 312,
313, 319a & b.
4 Answer B.
Gem stones and cashiers checks can be purchased using cash,
making them vulnerable to placement. Credit cards and
internet casinos do not usually allow cash payments, and so are
less likely to be used as part of the placement phase.
5 Answer B.
C describes a concentration account, D is a correspondent
account, A is numbered account.
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6 Answer A.
The internal accounts used by the bank may be set up so that
the audit trail is lost when they are used. The other answers are
not relevant risks to the use of concentration accounts
7 Answer C.
Politically exposed persons (PEPs) use private banking, and
may have access to funds derived from embezzlement or
bribes.
Wealthy users of private banking often use private investment
companies (PICs) to manage their wealth which may hide the
beneficial owners.
The Wolfsburg group did cover private banking, and there is
intense competition in private banking, making those answers
incorrect.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
8 Answer B.
Smurfing is used to deposit cash at a financial institution below
the reporting threshold.
A is incorrect because smurfs deposit cash, rather than
withdrawing it.
C is incorrect, smurfs often use accounts set up using dead
people’s identities, but the term does not refer to them.
D is incorrect because this is relates to cuckoo smurfing.
9 Answer B.
Microstructuers often use counter deposit slips as they make
many small cash deposits and will have insufficient pre-printed
paying in slips.
A is incorrect as there is no cash involved, C&D both mention
either large cash amounts, or expensive items which would not
indicate microstructuring, which uses small amounts of cash,
typically under $1000.
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10 Answer D.
Although the remitter is expecting funds to be sent via an
international wire transfer, in a cuckoo smurfing situation, an
accompanied in a financial institution diverts it elsewhere.
The funds are instead deposited as dirty cash by an accomplice
in a foreign country into the unwitting recipient’s bank
account.
There is no concentration of funds as this would cause a
discrepancy between the remittance and receipt which would
raise the alarm.
11 Answer C.
All of these are methods to guard against money laundering
risks, however not all of them are effective.
Registering staff with the regulator is not possible in all
jurisdictions, and may only cover senior roles not all roles that
might be at risk of money laundering, segregation of duties is
effective, but would not be practical for all tasks, reviewing
work periodically may be effective, but would very much
depend on the depth and scope of the review.
The most effective method is to conduct initial and ongoing
criminal background checks.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
12 Answer: B.
These financial institutions are low risk because they are small,
but they are vulnerable because of the level of cash
transactions.
They do not usually offer complex products, and they are
regulated.
13 Answer: B.
Structuring and placement are methods of disposing of cash,
which many credit cards do not permit. They are used for
layering and integration.
14 Answer: D.
Salesmen that are incentivized may overlook their suspicions,
and canceling life insurance during the free look period enables
the launderer to obtain a refund of clean money.
Underpaying insurance does not lead to an excess cash balance
and canceling car insurance early would not lead to a large
refund so is not a significant risk of money laundering.
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15 Answer: C.
The use of two offsetting trades means that the market can
move in either direction and the principle is safe.
The loss of dirty money in one account is compensated by the
creation of legitimate gains in another trading account. None
of the other descriptions matches that of a wash trade.
16 Answer: B.
Broker dealers are not party to insider information. They do
use wire transfers, which are useful to money launderers.
The commission-driven culture could cause sales staff to
overlook the source of funds, and their cash accounts are not
subject to the same level of AML oversight at banking accounts.
17 Answer: C.
Answer C is incorrect because gaming venues offer a means to
place cash, rather than integrate it. All of the other answers are
correct.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
18 Answer: D.
Gold can be purchased with dirty cash, meaning it is useful in
the placement phase. It can also be exchanged for cash or other
items or physically handed to another person with little or no
audit trail, making it useful in the layering phase.
Although gold is in high demand and can be easily melted
down, these are not the most useful features of gold to money
launderers.
19 Answer: C.
Expensive flights and hotels can be purchased for a third party,
who can then request a refund of the cost.
20 Answer: A.
They allow third party payments which can obscure the link
between the asset and the source of the funds. They do sell high
value items, but this in and of itself does not make the vehicle
seller susceptible, so this is not a correct answer.
They do allow down trading, with the difference available as a
check made out from the dealer. They allow partial down
payments which could be used for structuring.
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21 Answer: A
The attorney-client privilege means that some information
cannot be released to law enforcement.
While a lawyer does represent a client in court, this is not part
of the money laundering process.
Both lawyers and company formation agents can create
complex vehicles and act as nominee, so these factors do not
make lawyers more useful.
22 Answer: B.
Property is often used to disguise the source of funds, making
it useful in the layering phase.
It can also be used in the integration phase where an asset such
as a holiday complex can be purchased, adding to the air of
legitimacy.
Because real estate is costly, it is not usually a good candidate
for placement, which would require very large sums of cash, or
structuring, which requires multiple small sums of cash to
avoid reporting thresholds.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
23 Answer: C.
Fraudulent transfer pricing schemes are most often associated
with the undervaluing of exports.
They can be used in conjunction with the black market peso
exchange; however they are not necessary for the BMPE to
work.
They are not used to move money using nominee accounts.
Letters of credit can be used to add an air of legitimacy to
undervalued exports, but not the other way around.
24 Answer: A.
The ability to use the cards at a wide range of merchants is a
benefit to a normal retail customer more than it is a benefit to a
money launderer.
The global ATM access allows the transfer of money out of the
country, the high value limits make them useful as an
alternative to smuggling cash, and the anonymity reduced the
audit trail that can be linked to the launderer.
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25 Answer: C.
C is incorrect because although criminally controlled front
companies do have lower overheads (as they are not subject to
commercial pressures such as bank financing costs) these
commercial considerations are not the primary reason the
enterprise is used by the launderer.
The generation of cash with which to co-mingle funds is a key
driver, as is the need to have legitimate employment to avoid
suspicion. The high profits that they generate when sold, due to
their artificially high turnover, is another attraction.
26 Answer: C.
The money launderer uses offshore wealth to purchase the
company that he already owns, thus repatriating the cash and
maintaining his ownership of the company.
27 Answer: C.
Double invoicing is where a subsidiary purchases goods from a
parent at too high a price, or a parent purchases from a
subsidiary at too low a price.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
28 Answer: D.
A settlor is the person who creates the trust which defines how
the assets of the trust are to be distributed to the beneficiaries.
The settlor may be a lawyer, or other legal professional a third
party, or even the beneficiary of a trust, however this is not
required.
29 Answer: D.
There is no requirement to refuse to do business with such
entitles, however there is no register of owners to check.
The bank cannot insist that the shares be handed over, as
possession equates to ownership. The bank should satisfy itself
as to the beneficial owners of the entity.
30 Answer B.
Terrorist financing can involve the use of legitimate funds for
illegitimate purposes.
The Wolfsburg group included terrorist financing in the 2002
revisions. Layering is used by both money launderers and
terrorist financiers to disguise the source of funds.
265
31 Answer: B.
Alternative remittance systems usually settle their balances in
the normal process of international trade.
Hawala is illegal in most, but not all, countries.
Alternative remittance systems are usually less expensive than
bank transfers, and these systems can be used in any phase of
money laundering, not just the placement phase.
32 Answer: B.
Charities are not subject to strict oversight or regulation, so this
would not be possible.
The charity can ensure that normal bank accounts are used, so
that bank AML controls are in place.
Accounting for all expenditure ensures a clear audit trail, and
field audits can ensure that expenditure is appropriate.
33 Answer: B.
FATF cannot impose fines or apply other direct sanctions.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
34 Answer: C.
Although FATF does recommend risk based measures in its
guidance; it’s not a specific stated objective.
35 Answer: B.
The transparency of legal persons was already in the original
FATF recommendations.
36 Answer: C.
Setting up an FIU was a function of the IMF and World Bank,
further codified by the Egmont Group.
37 Answer: A.
It is recognized that a budget will always be limited, and the risk
based approached allows the best use of this budget.
The motivation is not to save costs, or for the FATF to specify
the risks faced by a specific institution or jurisdiction.
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38 Answer: D.
Counter transactions should be subject to currency reporting
thresholds and suspicious transaction reporting, but not
enhanced customer due diligence.
39 Answer: C.
Dealers of precious metals and stones are subject to a $/
€15,000 threshold for reporting when dealing in cash.
The same threshold also applies to financial institutions, but
only for occasional customer transactions. Internet casinos are
subject to a $/€3,000 limit. Car dealers are not covered by the
reporting thresholds.
40 Answer: D.
The geographic location is not a measure of cooperation.
41 Answer: D.
The FATF recommendations cover the others in some
circumstances (such as when managing client money, or acting
as a nominee shareholder).
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
42 Answer B.
Although the order has been re-arranged, these are the four key
elements of KYC according to the paper.
43 Answer: A.
The paper covered KYC, the use of high ethical standards in
the fight against criminals using the banking system, and urged
the adoption of the FATF 40 recommendations.
44 Answer: B.
The directive only covered drug trafficking and domestic
financial services; however, the scope could be broadened by
member states to cover other predicate crimes.
45 Answer: A.
PEPS were introduced in the Third Directive.
46 Answer: D.
Fraud and other serious predicate crimes were introduced in
the Second Directive.
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47 Answer: C.
The Financial Action Task Force of South America against
Money Laundering (GAFISUD – Grupo de Acción Financiera
de Sudamérica) was set up by an inter-governmental treaty.
48 Answer: B.
Nauru, Guernsey, Seychelles, Monaco, Luxembourg and
Cyprus are known as tax havens, they are not CFATF co-
operating nations.
49 Answer: B.
The Egmont group is a body of financial intelligence units
(FIUs).
50 Answer: D.
The Wolfsburg group is an association of banks and is
concerned with managing banking policy, not the link to other
enforcement bodies.
51 Answer: A.
A is the content of section 311.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
52 Answer: D.
D is the content of section 312.
53 Answer: B.
B is the content of section 313.
54 Answer: C .
C is the content of section 319b.
55 Answer: A.
OFAC is not involved in fiscal (tax and expenditure) matters.
56 Answer: C.
AML functions can be either centralized or decentralized;
however they should ensure that they have a centralized aspect
to ensure consistency.
271
57 Answer C.
Although focusing on only high risks could be a cost saving
measure, cost effectiveness should not be a primary motivation
for the approach.
58 Answer D.
Electronics merchants and supermarkets are not generally
considered to represent a high risk of money laundering.
59 Answer B.
All three of these are high risk as they allow cash management
and are negotiable instruments.
All of the other answers start with a high risk activity, followed
by two activities that are not considered high risk.
60 Answer: C.
The four key elements of an AML program are internal
policies, procedures and controls, with a designated
compliance officer with day-to-day oversight of the program.
This should be combined with ongoing training and an
independent audit function to test the program.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
61 Answer: D.
They should all be addressed within the policies and
procedures.
62 Answer B.
The training could be delivered by another competent
individual once it has been created by the compliance officer in
line with the organization’s needs.
Reviews of AML compliance should be carried out by an
independent function separate from the compliance officer.
63 Answer: C.
Although understanding the client’s source of wealth should
be validated as part of CDD, conducting an investigation
without any suspicion is not a requirement.
64 Answer: D.
There is no requirement to review the passport for visas and
visits.
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65 Answer: B.
The name lists of PEPs do not include date of birth, which
means that larger banks are likely to have many matches based
on the name alone.
66 Answer: D.
All of these were recommended by the FDIC.
67 Answer C.
Sending wire transfers, by itself, is not a red flag.
68 Answer B.
Exchanging large bills for smaller bills is common for retail
shops that provide change. The others are all red flags.
69 Answer A.
Bearer bonds cannot be deposited.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
70 Answer A.
B would be a red flag if the goods were not in demand in the
importing country, but the lack of domestic demand could be a
good reason to export.
71 Answer B.
Carrying over vacation would only be a red flag if it amounted
to not taking periodic vacations at all in order to prevent
someone else taking on their responsibilities while they are out
of the office, and potentially revealing wrongdoing.
72 Answer B.
It is not normally possible to use car insurance as a money
laundering vehicle, and changing the beneficiary on a policy is
not usually permitted.
73 Answer: C.
Outsourcing of compliance is not a stated benefit of electronic
AML solutions.
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74 Answer: B.
A subpoena allows law enforcement to obtain documents and
testimony. The entry of a specific location requires a search
warrant, law enforcement can commence proceedings without
a subpoena, and law enforcement cannot generally evaluate
documents under privilege.
75 Answer B.
Interviewing subjects can only happen after arrest and arrest
can only occur with an arrest warrant. A court case may come
after the search warrant after evidence of criminal wrong-
doing is discovered.
76 Answer: C.
The points within C would be carried out after the
investigation, if criminal wrong-doing was identified.
77 Answer: D.
The institution should not notify the customer, which would
constitute ‘tipping off’ in many jurisdictions.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
78 Answer A.
The affidavit accompanies the warrant, and contains additional
information. It may not be possible to obtain, but should always
be asked for.
The inventory of items removed should also be requested.
There would not be a subpoena issued at the same time as the
search warrant.
79 Answer B.
Assets may only be frozen upon court order.
80 Answer: C.
Although the share price may drop, admitting wrong doing
during an investigation would be premature, appearing foolish
in the light of later leaks is less important than ensuring that
true and accurate representations are made to the market.
Answer: C.
81
The other situations would warrant remediation of the
identified issues, but it should not be necessary to conduct an
investigation in order to do this.
277
82 Answer: C.
Once notified of an investigation, documents should no longer
be destroyed, as they may need to be provided as evidence.
Documents are normally permitted to be destroyed in line with
the destruction policy.
Retaining documents for a minimum of 6 years would depend
on the specific documentation and the legal requirements of
the jurisdiction. It is not a blanket approach to all documents.
83 Answer: A.
There is no need to set up bright lights facing interviewees in
an interview situation.
84 Answer: C.
IMoLIN was set up with its main purpose as a clearing house of
information. Answers A and B are both correct, but are not the
main purpose of the organization.
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Anti Money Laundering Exam Study Guide & Practice Exam
85 Answer A.
It is a letter of request, issued to a foreign authority, seeking
their cooperation in an investigation.
It forms part of the gateway for Mutual legal assistance treaties
to operate, however it is not the gateway itself. It is also does
not imply permission being granted or refused.
86 Answer: C.
A memorandum of understanding MOU) is used by FIUs to
share information.
A commission rogatoire is used by law enforcement under a
MLAT.
The FIUs adhere to the Egmont principles to share
information, not the Wolfsburg principles.
87 Answer: D.
D is incorrect as the information should be shared with every
relevant FIU, but not every member as a matter of course.
279
88 Answer: C.
Supervisors should not disseminate information to
government departments, information may not be used as
evidence, and specific information about PEPs can be shared,
but not used as evidence.
280