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Hello, and welcome to episode 186 of the Financial Crime Weekly Podcast, I am Chris Kirkbride. In this episode, on sanctions, we look at action by the EU against Israel. The UK has reaffirmed financial sanctions against Chinese drone manufacturer Autel Robotics, and issued an advisory warning UK firms about using North Korean IT workers. On the regulatory and digital asset front, the Financial Conduct Authority outlined its strategy for combating financial crime, proposing new rules for crypto firms to enhance systems, controls, and operational resilience, and in Canada, the RCMP has announced the execution of the largest cryptocurrency seizure in its history. On fraud, we look at property fraud in England and Wales, and on cybercrime, we discuss the significant threat to critical infrastructure, and a survey revealing that cyber attacks, often traced to Russia and China, have cost the German economy nearly €300 billion over the past year.
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 186 of the Financial Crime Weekly Podcast, I am Chris Kirkbride. In this episode, on sanctions, we look at action by the EU against Israel. The UK has reaffirmed financial sanctions against Chinese drone manufacturer Autel Robotics, and issued an advisory warning UK firms about using North Korean IT workers. On the regulatory and digital asset front, the Financial Conduct Authority outlined its strategy for combating financial crime, proposing new rules for crypto firms to enhance systems, controls, and operational resilience, and in Canada, the RCMP has announced the execution of the largest cryptocurrency seizure in its history. On fraud, we look at property fraud in England and Wales, and on cybercrime, we discuss the significant threat to critical infrastructure, and a survey revealing that cyber attacks, often traced to Russia and China, have cost the German economy nearly €300 billion over the past year.
A transcript of this podcast, with links to the stories, will be available at www.crimes.financial.

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