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Bribe, Swindle or Steal

Primer on Money-Laundering

Bribe, Swindle or Steal

Alexandra Addison-Wrage of TRACE International

Business, News, Business News

4.9582 Ratings

🗓️ 11 September 2024

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A 22-year veteran of Treasury and consultant to the Dept of Justice, John Madinger sheds light on some of the money-laundering schemes he has uncovered and why the Breaking Bad car wash scheme probably wouldn't have worked.

This episode was originally posted: December 27, 2017

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome back to bribes, swindle, or steel. I'm Alexandra Rogge, and today we're talking about money laundering.

0:13.2

My guest recently wrapped up a 22-year career with the U.S. Department of the Treasury. He's currently

0:18.6

an anti-money laundering consultant with the Department of Justice

0:21.5

and the founding partner of AML Aware, providing AML compliance training programs to the government

0:27.6

and financial and insurance companies. John Madinger, thank you for joining me. Thanks for having me.

0:33.7

Okay, John, I've already confessed to you that my core understanding of money laundering comes from that nail salon scene in Breaking Bad, where Saul uses cotton balls and Q-tips to explain to Jesse how to launder his drug money.

0:46.5

With that admission in mind, why don't you explain what money laundering is, and then we'll turn to how companies can protect themselves against it.

0:55.6

Okay, well, the breaking bad scene with Saul, I've seen the episode, and it's really pretty good.

1:01.1

It's very, very accurate.

1:03.6

He breaks it down for the drug dealers and comes up with sort of a standard money laundering scheme,

1:11.2

which he offers to Jesse and, as I recall, Skyler and Walt.

1:17.9

So that was pretty accurate, actually,

1:21.2

and that's a good, it gives you a good sense of what's involved in the money laundering process.

1:25.9

What he did was he broke it up into the three

1:29.0

recognized sort of stages or phases of the money laundering. They call it a cycle. It's not really a

1:36.1

cycle because if cycle you wind up back where you were at the beginning, money lauders definitely don't

1:40.9

want that. But he actually, he does. He actually refers by name to placement, layering, and integration.

1:46.0

How, right?

1:47.0

So those, I guess, are the stages you're talking about.

1:50.0

How do those usually play out?

1:53.0

For the most part, crime is a cash business.

1:57.0

I mean, you do a lot of work with financial crimes,

...

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