The latest money laundering techniques

Published: 5 September 1999 y., Sunday
The Bank of New York on Friday fired Lucy Edwards, one of two executives suspended amid allegations that Russian mobsters had used accounts at the bank in a major money laundering operation. Ms. Edwards was in charge of the bank_s Eastern European operations in London. She was suspended Aug. 18, and her home and office were searched by authorities three days later. A spokesman for the Bank of New York said Edwards was dismissed on Friday. She would not elaborate on the bank_s decision, but Dow Jones Newswires reported that the bank suspected her of misconduct and falsifying records. A second executive suspended by the bank, Natasha Kagalovsky, has denied wrongdoing. Edwards could not be reached for comment, and has not been charged with any crime. In an ironic twist to the case, Edwards made a presentation on the latest money laundering techniques at a conference for financial executives in Riga, Latvia, in June. Her speech was entitled "Money Laundering: Latest Developments and Regulations." Money laundering is the process of moving ill-gotten gains through a series of bank accounts until they appear like legitimate profits from legal businesses. Investigators suspect that billions of dollars were moved through accounts at the Bank of New York, partly through a company called Benex Worldwide Ltd. Edwards_ husband, Russian businessman Peter Berlin, is listed as a director of Benex. Investigators believe the total amount funneled through the bank may exceed $10 billion, reports have said. A spokesman for the Federal Bureau of Investigations declined to comment. A call to the U.S. Attorney_s office in New York, which is believed to be investigating the matter, was not returned. The other Bank of New York official suspended pending the investigation, Kagalovsky, is a senior vice president in New York who also supervised the bank_s business in Eastern Europe.
Šaltinis: MSNBC
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Positive ratings for Poland

Two credit-rating agencies believe Poland's economic outlook is "positive" more »

Polish Central Bank May Reduce Benchmark Rate, Survey Shows

Poland's central bank probably will lower borrowing costs, the second highest in the European Union, for the first time since June 2003 more »

SIEMENS TO DESIGN HIGH-SPEED ELECTRIC TRAINS FOR RUSSIA

The public company Russian Railways will sign a treaty with the Siemens on the stage of designing, the organization of the production of high-speed electric trains and general terms of the contract on April 11 in Hannover more »

Swiss airline: hawk turned pigeon in European sky wars

Switzerland's top airline, after being one of the hunters during the 1990s, succumbed to upheaval in the European air travel market last week to become the prey of German carrier Lufthansa more »

Saddam-Linked Firm with Bulgarian Bank Account

A company linked to the regime of ousted Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein has had an account in a Bulgarian bank since 1994 more »

Ukraine PM plans more social spending

Ukraine’s parliament on Friday examined the new government’s revised 2005 budget more »

Knowledge Economy Forum IV

EUROPEAN, CENTRAL ASIAN COUNTRIES TO DISCUSS BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT ISSUES more »

Lithuania Losing Patience With Yukos

The Lithuanian government said it was not happy with Yukos' work at Mazeikiu Nafta, an oil refinery and terminal, and has held talks with companies that want to buy Yukos' 54 percent stake more »

UZPRIVATBANK ISSUES CREDIT CARDS

Uzprivatbank started to issue credit cards along with debit cards more »

U.S. Treasury Backs Poland's Buyback Plan

The United States will take part in Poland's plan to buy back a large chunk of its $16 billion in Communist-era debt more »