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New Hiding Place for Drug Profits: Insurance Policies

December 6, 2002
By ERIC LICHTBLAU








WASHINGTON, Dec. 5 - Law enforcement officials said today
that Colombian cocaine traffickers seeking to launder tens
of millions in drug profits from the United States and
Mexico had begun exploiting an unlikely haven - life
insurance policies.

Officials at the Treasury Department said they were so
worried about the trend that they were pushing for tougher
regulation of the insurance industry as a way of
identifying suspicious insurance policies.

A central concern for the authorities is that terrorist
financiers, too, may seek to exploit vulnerabilities in the
insurance industry to launder money for their operations.

A federal grand jury indictment brought today in Miami
highlighted the phenomenon. In it, the authorities charged
that five Colombians took part in an elaborate scheme to
launder millions in cocaine profits originating from street
sales in New York City, Florida and elsewhere.

American law enforcement officials say Colombia has
indicated that it will extradite the five suspects to the
United States to stand trial.

Drug traffickers often use bank deposits, wire transfers
and other financial mechanisms to disguise the source of
their revenues. But officials at the Customs Service said
the current case was the first in which a major trafficking
ring has been known to use insurance policies to cover its
financial tracks.

In interviews and court documents, law enforcement
officials at the Customs Service said that in recent years,
brokers connected to the Cali drug cartel in Colombia had
bought insurance policies in the Isle of Man and other
British islands, as well as perhaps Florida and other
locations, to launder more than $80 million.

Using drug proceeds from the United States and Mexico, the
suspects opened some 250 different investment-grade life
insurance accounts in the Isle of Man alone, investigators
said. The insurance policies, worth as much as $1.9 million
each, were sometimes taken out in the names of nieces,
nephews and other relatives of the traffickers,
investigators said.

The traffickers would typically cash out all or part of the
Isle of Man policies prematurely after a year or so, paying
penalties of 25 percent or more to get access to the
laundered cash more quickly, investigators said.

Customs Service officials have seized $9.5 million in
Florida in connection with the case, most of it in the last
three weeks, officials said. They expect to seize more
assets and bring more charges against others they accuse of
involvement in the operation, and they are closely
scrutinizing a South Florida insurance company to determine
its role.

"This has opened our eyes," said John Clark, special agent
in charge of the Customs Service's Miami office, which led
the investigation. "We think this is just the tip the
iceberg. This is a system that seems to have been used and
abused by narcotics traffickers for years."

Officials in Colombia have also seized $20 million there
and in Panama in connection with the money-laundering
operation. They arrested at least nine people in the case
last month - including three of the five defendants charged
today in Miami. Another Colombian wanted in the case is
thought to be at large in California.

Those indicted today in Miami on conspiracy and
money-laundering charges were Rodrigo José Murillo and his
son, Alexander Murillo, who investigators say were active
on the drug-trafficking side of the operation; Jaime
Eduardo Rey Albornoz and Arturo Delgado, who investigators
say brokered the transactions; and their assistant,
Esperanza Romero.

The indictment seeks the forfeiture of $2.1 million that
the authorities say the defendants laundered through banks
and insurance companies.

The case was brought in Florida because some of the money
passed through companies in the state and because the
laundering investigation grew out of a major
drug-trafficking case there in the early 1990's.

The case led to the seizure of 47,000 kilograms of cocaine
distributed by the Cali cartel and others. In the last
several years it has also led investigators to develop
high-level informers in the trafficking industry. These
sources indicated that much of the cartel's money was
winding its way to the Isle of Man, investigators said.

The Customs Service started the financial spinoff of its
1990's case in early 2001, working closely with
counterparts in Colombia, Panama, Britain and the Isle of
Man.

Officials in the Isle of Man, a hub for global insurance
companies, were eager to cooperate, American officials
said. After concerns were raised in recent years about
whether the island's oversight of the industry was too lax,
the officials "wanted to put that to rest by cooperating
and to show that they weren't a money-laundering haven,"
said Anthony Arico, assistant special agent in charge in
Miami for the Customs Service.

Isle of Man officials said today that they had instituted
new safeguards against criminal use of their corporations
to launder money. But they acknowledged that the high
volume of global business in the territory made it an
attractive target for launderers.

In the current case, investigators pulled together
information from financial transactions as far away as
Russia, using informants, wiretaps and undercover
operations to trace the money trail, officials said.

In New York City, undercover Customs investigators acted as
go-betweens, funneling cash from local street sales and
forwarding it to the Isle of Man through checks or wire
transfers to buy life insurance policies, officials said.

Undercover agents also got the word out to drug dealers
that, for a fee, they would accept and launder large
amounts of cash, according to a seizure warrant filed in
federal court in New York in connection with the case.

Dealers would then drop off large sums of cash - sometimes
hundreds of thousands of dollars - and direct the
undercover agents to wire the money to banks and insurance
companies around the world, the warrant said.

American officials said that Mr. Albornoz and Mr. Delgado,
who each own financial transaction businesses in Colombia,
were the "master brokers" who oversaw the insurance scheme.
Colombian officials said Mr. Albornoz even organized
conferences on money laundering for insurance companies and
financial institutions around the world.

"The case just underscores the clever and crafty schemes
that drug traffickers and terrorists, too, are capable of
conceiving to move their money," said Rob Nichols, a
spokesman for the Treasury Department.

The department proposed in September that insurance
companies be required to adopt programs to better detect
accounts opened expressly to hide illegal revenues.

Officials said the investigation in Colombia was a driving
force in the still pending proposals, which have met with
general support from many insurance groups.

Mr. Clark of the Customs Service said that if insurance
companies were subject to the same types of rigorous
reporting and monitoring requirements as banks, the
authorities would have been able to detect some of the
suspicious tactics used by the Colombian launderers.

Insurance companies might have reported, for instance, that
policyholders were authorizing unrelated third parties to
withdraw money from their accounts or were frequently
cashing out their policies early, he said.

The proposed restrictions, he said, would help the
authorities "spot the type of irregular flow of money that
we were seeing here."

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/06/international/americas/06LAUN.html?ex=1040165759&ei=1&en=1e875aed2b2e659a



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