What is money laundering?
Money laundering is the process by which criminal proceeds (which could be cash or other property, such as a house or car) are transformed to disguise their illicit origins.
There are three stages involved in money laundering:
- Placement
Placement is the movement of ‘dirty’ money from its source and then placing it into circulation through various businesses – for example financial institutions, casinos, shops etc.
- Layering
The layering stage (or structuring as it is sometimes referred to) is the most complex. The purpose is to separate the illicit money from its source by using sophisticated layering of transactions. This involves moving cash placed in a financial institution electronically from one country to another into various investments and transformed in a way to hide any audit trail.
- Integration
This is the final stage. Though the placement and layering stages, the money has been fully integrated into the financial system and mixed with funds of legimate origin. Money is then returned to the launderer from what appears to be ‘clean’ sources.