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Hello, and welcome to episode 183 of the Financial Crime Weekly Podcast, I am Chris Kirkbride. In this episode, we look at the US Treasury's actions against Palestinian NGOs and Southeast Asian cyber scam networks, alongside Vanquis Bank's censure for delayed counter-terrorism sanctions enforcement in the UK. International efforts to combat money laundering are examined through a joint handbook launched by FATF, INTERPOL, UNODC, and the Egmont Group, alongside investigations into Roman Abramovich. We look at the surge in US money mule cases and stablecoin abuse, new FinCEN guidance on cross-border information sharing, and the FCA's warnings about market abuse risks in corporate finance firms. Finally, we look at FinCEN's congressional scrutiny regarding surveillance and cartel crackdowns, the SFO's successful use of an Unexplained Wealth Order, and Transparency International UK's blueprint for ending offshore financial secrecy.
A transcript of this podcast, with links to the stories, will be available at www.crimes.financial.
By Christopher Kirkbride3
11 ratings
Hello, and welcome to episode 183 of the Financial Crime Weekly Podcast, I am Chris Kirkbride. In this episode, we look at the US Treasury's actions against Palestinian NGOs and Southeast Asian cyber scam networks, alongside Vanquis Bank's censure for delayed counter-terrorism sanctions enforcement in the UK. International efforts to combat money laundering are examined through a joint handbook launched by FATF, INTERPOL, UNODC, and the Egmont Group, alongside investigations into Roman Abramovich. We look at the surge in US money mule cases and stablecoin abuse, new FinCEN guidance on cross-border information sharing, and the FCA's warnings about market abuse risks in corporate finance firms. Finally, we look at FinCEN's congressional scrutiny regarding surveillance and cartel crackdowns, the SFO's successful use of an Unexplained Wealth Order, and Transparency International UK's blueprint for ending offshore financial secrecy.
A transcript of this podcast, with links to the stories, will be available at www.crimes.financial.

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