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DEATH BY GOVERNMENT: GENOCIDE AND MASS MURDER

DEATH BY GOVERNMENT: GENOCIDE AND MASS MURDER
All told, governments killed more than 262 million people in the 20th century outside of wars, according to University of Hawaii political science professor R.J. Rummel. Just to give perspective on this incredible murder by government, if all these bodies were laid head to toe, with the average height being 5', then they would circle the earth ten times. Also, this democide murdered 6 times more people than died in combat in all the foreign and internal wars of the century. Finally, given popular estimates of the dead in a major nuclear war, this total democide is as though such a war did occur, but with its dead spread over a century

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Monday, April 4, 2011

How a big US bank laundered billions from Mexico's murderous drug gangs, And then the gov t ALLOWS them to steal trillions of dollars at US tax payer expense through TARP and QE1 QE2 ponzi schemes. Who are the crooks?


How a big US bank laundered billions from Mexico's murderous drug gangs

As the violence spread, billions of dollars of cartel cash began to seep into the global financial system. But a special investigation by the Observer reveals how the increasingly frantic warnings of one London whistleblower were ignored
Mexico drugs
A soldier guards marijuana that is being incinerated in Tijuana, Mexico. Photograph: Guillermo Arias/AP
On 10 April 2006, a DC-9 jet landed in the port city of Ciudad del Carmen, on the Gulf of Mexico, as the sun was setting. Mexican soldiers, waiting to intercept it, found 128 cases packed with 5.7 tons of cocaine, valued at $100m. But something else – more important and far-reaching – was discovered in the paper trail behind the purchase of the plane by the Sinaloa narco-trafficking cartel.
During a 22-month investigation by agents from the US Drug Enforcement Administration, the Internal Revenue Service and others, it emerged that the cocaine smugglers had bought the plane with money they had laundered through one of the biggest banks in the United States: Wachovia, now part of the giant Wells Fargo.
The authorities uncovered billions of dollars in wire transfers, traveller's cheques and cash shipments through Mexican exchanges into Wachovia accounts. Wachovia was put under immediate investigation for failing to maintain an effective anti-money laundering programme. Of special significance was that the period concerned began in 2004, which coincided with the first escalation of violence along the US-Mexico border that ignited the current drugs war.
Criminal proceedings were brought against Wachovia, though not against any individual, but the case never came to court. In March 2010, Wachovia settled the biggest action brought under the US bank secrecy act, through the US district court in Miami. Now that the year's "deferred prosecution" has expired, the bank is in effect in the clear. It paid federal authorities $110m in forfeiture, for allowing transactions later proved to be connected to drug smuggling, and incurred a $50m fine for failing to monitor cash used to ship 22 tons of cocaine.
More shocking, and more important, the bank was sanctioned for failing to apply the proper anti-laundering strictures to the transfer of $378.4bn – a sum equivalent to one-third of Mexico's gross national product – into dollar accounts from so-called casas de cambio (CDCs) in Mexico, currency exchange houses with which the bank did business.
"Wachovia's blatant disregard for our banking laws gave international cocaine cartels a virtual carte blanche to finance their operations," said Jeffrey Sloman, the federal prosecutor. Yet the total fine was less than 2% of the bank's $12.3bn profit for 2009. On 24 March 2010, Wells Fargo stock traded at $30.86 – up 1% on the week of the court settlement.
The conclusion to the case was only the tip of an iceberg, demonstrating the role of the "legal" banking sector in swilling hundreds of billions of dollars – the blood money from the murderous drug trade in Mexico and other places in the world – around their global operations, now bailed out by the taxpayer.
At the height of the 2008 banking crisis, Antonio Maria Costa, then head of the United Nations office on drugs and crime, said he had evidence to suggest the proceeds from drugs and crime were "the only liquid investment capital" available to banks on the brink of collapse. "Inter-bank loans were funded by money that originated from the drugs trade," he said. "There were signs that some banks were rescued that way."
Wachovia was acquired by Wells Fargo during the 2008 crash, just as Wells Fargo became a beneficiary of $25bn in taxpayers' money. Wachovia's prosecutors were clear, however, that there was no suggestion Wells Fargo had behaved improperly; it had co-operated fully with the investigation. Mexico is the US's third largest international trading partner and Wachovia was understandably interested in this volume of legitimate trade.
José Luis Marmolejo, who prosecuted those running one of the casas de cambio at the Mexican end, said: "Wachovia handled all the transfers. They never reported any as suspicious."
"As early as 2004, Wachovia understood the risk," the bank admitted in the statement of settlement with the federal government, but, "despite these warnings, Wachovia remained in the business". There is, of course, the legitimate use of CDCs as a way into the Hispanic market. In 2005 the World Bank said that Mexico was receiving $8.1bn in remittances.
During research into the Wachovia Mexican case, the Observer obtained documents previously provided to financial regulators. It emerged that the alarm that was ignored came from, among other places, London, as a result of the diligence of one of the most important whistleblowers of our time. A man who, in a series of interviews with the Observer, adds detail to the documents, laying bare the story of how Wachovia was at the centre of one of the world's biggest money-laundering operations.
Martin Woods, a Liverpudlian in his mid-40s, joined the London office of Wachovia Bank in February 2005 as a senior anti-money laundering officer. He had previously served with the Metropolitan police drug squad. As a detective he joined the money-laundering investigation team of the National Crime Squad, where he worked on the British end of the Bank of New York money-laundering scandal in the late 1990s.
Woods talks like a police officer – in the best sense of the word: punctilious, exact, with a roguish humour, but moral at the core. He was an ideal appointment for any bank eager to operate a diligent and effective risk management policy against the lucrative scourge of high finance: laundering, knowing or otherwise, the vast proceeds of criminality, tax-evasion, and dealing in arms and drugs.
Woods had a police officer's eye and a police officer's instincts – not those of a banker. And this influenced not only his methods, but his mentality. "I think that a lot of things matter more than money – and that marks you out in a culture which appears to prevail in many of the banks in the world," he says.
Woods was set apart by his modus operandi. His speciality, he explains, was his application of a "know your client", or KYC, policing strategy to identifying dirty money. "KYC is a fundamental approach to anti-money laundering, going after tax evasion or counter-terrorist financing. Who are your clients? Is the documentation right? Good, responsible banking involved always knowing your customer and it still does."
When he looked at Wachovia, the first thing Woods noticed was a deficiency in KYC information. And among his first reports to his superiors at the bank's headquarters in Charlotte, North Carolina, were observations on a shortfall in KYC at Wachovia's operation in London, which he set about correcting, while at the same time implementing what was known as an enhanced transaction monitoring programme, gathering more information on clients whose money came through the bank's offices in the City, in sterling or euros. By August 2006, Woods had identified a number of suspicious transactions relating to casas de cambio customers in Mexico.
Primarily, these involved deposits of traveller's cheques in euros. They had sequential numbers and deposited larger amounts of money than any innocent travelling person would need, with inadequate or no KYC information on them and what seemed to a trained eye to be dubious signatures. "It was basic work," he says. "They didn't answer the obvious questions: 'Is the transaction real, or does it look synthetic? Does the traveller's cheque meet the protocols? Is it all there, and if not, why not?'"
Woods discussed the matter with Wachovia's global head of anti-money laundering for correspondent banking, who believed the cheques could signify tax evasion. He then undertook what banks call a "look back" at previous transactions and saw fit to submit a series of SARs, or suspicious activity reports, to the authorities in the UK and his superiors in Charlotte, urging the blocking of named parties and large series of sequentially numbered traveller's cheques from Mexico. He issued a number of SARs in 2006, of which 50 related to the casas de cambio in Mexico. To his amazement, the response from Wachovia's Miami office, the centre for Latin American business, was anything but supportive – he felt it was quite the reverse.
As it turned out, however, Woods was on the right track. Wachovia's business in Mexico was coming under closer and closer scrutiny by US federal law enforcement. Wachovia was issued with a number of subpoenas for information on its Mexican operation. Woods has subsequently been informed that Wachovia had six or seven thousand subpoenas. He says this was "An absurd number. So at what point does someone at the highest level not get the feeling that something is very, very wrong?"
In April and May 2007, Wachovia – as a result of increasing interest and pressure from the US attorney's office – began to close its relationship with some of the casas de cambio. But rather than launch an internal investigation into Woods's alerts over Mexico, Woods claims Wachovia hung its own money-laundering expert out to dry. The records show that during 2007 Woods "continued to submit more SARs related to the casas de cambio".
In July 2007, all of Wachovia's remaining 10 Mexican casa de cambioclients operating through London suddenly stopped doing so. Later in 2007, after the investigation of Wachovia was reported in the US financial media, the bank decided to end its remaining relationships with the Mexican casas de cambio globally. By this time, Woods says, he found his personal situation within the bank untenable; while the bank acted on one level to protect itself from the federal investigation into its shortcomings, on another, it rounded on the man who had been among the first to spot them.
On 16 June Woods was told by Wachovia's head of compliance that his latest SAR need not have been filed, that he had no legal requirement to investigate an overseas case and no right of access to documents held overseas from Britain, even if they were held by Wachovia.
Woods's life went into freefall. He went to hospital with a prolapsed disc, reported sick and was told by the bank that he not done so in the appropriate manner, as directed by the employees' handbook. He was off work for three weeks, returning in August 2007 to find a letter from the bank's compliance managing director, which was unrelenting in its tone and words of warning.
The letter addressed itself to what the manager called "specific examples of your failure to perform at an acceptable standard". Woods, on the edge of a breakdown, was put on sick leave by his GP; he was later given psychiatric treatment, enrolled on a stress management course and put on medication.
Late in 2007, Woods attended a function at Scotland Yard where colleagues from the US were being entertained. There, he sought out a representative of the Drug Enforcement Administration and told him about the casas de cambio, the SARs and his employer's reaction. The Federal Reserve and officials of the office of comptroller of currency in Washington DC then "spent a lot of time examining the SARs" that had been sent by Woods to Charlotte from London.
"They got back in touch with me a while afterwards and we began to put the pieces of the jigsaw together," says Woods. What they found was – as Costa says – the tip of the iceberg of what was happening to drug money in the banking industry, but at least it was visible and it had a name: Wachovia.
In June 2005, the DEA, the criminal division of the Internal Revenue Service and the US attorney's office in southern Florida began investigating wire transfers from Mexico to the US. They were traced back to correspondent bank accounts held by casas de cambio at Wachovia. The CDC accounts were supervised and managed by a business unit of Wachovia in the bank's Miami offices.
"Through CDCs," said the court document, "persons in Mexico can use hard currency and … wire transfer the value of that currency to US bank accounts to purchase items in the United States or other countries. The nature of the CDC business allows money launderers the opportunity to move drug dollars that are in Mexico into CDCs and ultimately into the US banking system.
"On numerous occasions," say the court papers, "monies were deposited into a CDC by a drug-trafficking organisation. Using false identities, the CDC then wired that money through its Wachovia correspondent bank accounts for the purchase of airplanes for drug-trafficking organisations." The court settlement of 2010 would detail that "nearly $13m went through correspondent bank accounts at Wachovia for the purchase of aircraft to be used in the illegal narcotics trade. From these aircraft, more than 20,000kg of cocaine were seized."
All this occurred despite the fact that Wachovia's office was in Miami, designated by the US government as a "high-intensity money laundering and related financial crime area", and a "high-intensity drug trafficking area". Since the drug cartel war began in 2005, Mexico had been designated a high-risk source of money laundering.
"As early as 2004," the court settlement would read, "Wachovia understood the risk that was associated with doing business with the Mexican CDCs. Wachovia was aware of the general industry warnings. As early as July 2005, Wachovia was aware that other large US banks were exiting the CDC business based on [anti-money laundering] concerns … despite these warnings, Wachovia remained in business."
On 16 March 2010, Douglas Edwards, senior vice-president of Wachovia Bank, put his signature to page 10 of a 25-page settlement, in which the bank admitted its role as outlined by the prosecutors. On page 11, he signed again, as senior vice-president of Wells Fargo. The documents show Wachovia providing three services to 22 CDCs in Mexico: wire transfers, a "bulk cash service" and a "pouch deposit service", to accept "deposit items drawn on US banks, eg cheques and traveller's cheques", as spotted by Woods.
"For the time period of 1 May 2004 through 31 May 2007, Wachovia processed at least $$373.6bn in CDCs, $4.7bn in bulk cash" – a total of more than $378.3bn, a sum that dwarfs the budgets debated by US state and UK local authorities to provide services to citizens.
The document gives a fascinating insight into how the laundering of drug money works. It details how investigators "found readily identifiable evidence of red flags of large-scale money laundering". There were "structured wire transfers" whereby "it was commonplace in the CDC accounts for round-number wire transfers to be made on the same day or in close succession, by the same wire senders, for the … same account".
Over two days, 10 wire transfers by four individuals "went though Wachovia for deposit into an aircraft broker's account. All of the transfers were in round numbers. None of the individuals of business that wired money had any connection to the aircraft or the entity that allegedly owned the aircraft. The investigation has further revealed that the identities of the individuals who sent the money were false and that the business was a shell entity. That plane was subsequently seized with approximately 2,000kg of cocaine on board."
Many of the sequentially numbered traveller's cheques, of the kind dealt with by Woods, contained "unusual markings" or "lacked any legible signature". Also, "many of the CDCs that used Wachovia's bulk cash service sent significantly more cash to Wachovia than what Wachovia had expected. More specifically, many of the CDCs exceeded their monthly activity by at least 50%."
Recognising these "red flags", the US attorney's office in Miami, the IRS and the DEA began investigating Wachovia, later joined by FinCEN, one of the US Treasury's agencies to fight money laundering, while the office of the comptroller of the currency carried out a parallel investigation. The violations they found were, says the document, "serious and systemic and allowed certain Wachovia customers to launder millions of dollars of proceeds from the sale of illegal narcotics through Wachovia accounts over an extended time period. The investigation has identified that at least $110m in drug proceeds were funnelled through the CDC accounts held at Wachovia."
The settlement concludes by discussing Wachovia's "considerable co-operation and remedial actions" since the prosecution was initiated, after the bank was bought by Wells Fargo. "In consideration of Wachovia's remedial actions," concludes the prosecutor, "the United States shall recommend to the court … that prosecution of Wachovia on the information filed … be deferred for a period of 12 months."
But while the federal prosecution proceeded, Woods had remained out in the cold. On Christmas Eve 2008, his lawyers filed tribunal proceedings against Wachovia for bullying and detrimental treatment of a whistleblower. The case was settled in May 2009, by which time Woods felt as though he was "the most toxic person in the bank". Wachovia agreed to pay an undisclosed amount, in return for which Woods left the bank and said he would not make public the terms of the settlement.
After years of tribulation, Woods was finally formally vindicated, though not by Wachovia: a letter arrived from John Dugan, the comptroller of the currency in Washington DC, dated 19 March 2010 – three days after the settlement in Miami. Dugan said he was "writing to personally recognise and express my appreciation for the role you played in the actions brought against Wachovia Bank for violations of the bank secrecy act … Not only did the information that you provided facilitate our investigation, but you demonstrated great personal courage and integrity by speaking up. Without the efforts of individuals like you, actions such as the one taken against Wachovia would not be possible."
The so-called "deferred prosecution" detailed in the Miami document is a form of probation whereby if the bank abides by the law for a year, charges are dropped. So this March the bank was in the clear. The week that the deferred prosecution expired, a spokeswoman for Wells Fargo said the parent bank had no comment to make on the documentation pertaining to Woods's case, or his allegations. She added that there was no comment on Sloman's remarks to the court; a provision in the settlement stipulated Wachovia was not allowed to issue public statements that contradicted it.
But the settlement leaves a sour taste in many mouths – and certainly in Woods's. The deferred prosecution is part of this "cop-out all round", he says. "The regulatory authorities do not have to spend any more time on it, and they don't have to push it as far as a criminal trial. They just issue criminal proceedings, and settle. The law enforcement people do what they are supposed to do, but what's the point? All those people dealing with all that money from drug-trafficking and murder, and no one goes to jail?"
One of the foremost figures in the training of anti-money laundering officers is Robert Mazur, lead infiltrator for US law enforcement of the Colombian Medellín cartel during the epic prosecution and collapse of the BCCI banking business in 1991 (his story was made famous by his memoir, The Infiltrator, which became a movie).
Mazur, whose firm Chase and Associates works closely with law enforcement agencies and trains officers for bank anti-money laundering, cast a keen eye over the case against Wachovia, and he says now that "the only thing that will make the banks properly vigilant to what is happening is when they hear the rattle of handcuffs in the boardroom".
Mazur said that "a lot of the law enforcement people were disappointed to see a settlement" between the administration and Wachovia. "But I know there were external circumstances that worked to Wachovia's benefit, not least that the US banking system was on the edge of collapse."
What concerns Mazur is that what law enforcement agencies and politicians hope to achieve against the cartels is limited, and falls short of the obvious attack the US could make in its war on drugs: go after the money. "We're thinking way too small," Mazur says. "I train law enforcement officers, thousands of them every year, and they say to me that if they tried to do half of what I did, they'd be arrested. But I tell them: 'You got to think big. The headlines you will be reading in seven years' time will be the result of the work you begin now.' With BCCI, we had to spend two years setting it up, two years doing undercover work, and another two years getting it to trial. If they want to do something big, like go after the money, that's how long it takes."
But Mazur warns: "If you look at the career ladders of law enforcement, there's no incentive to go after the big money. People move every two to three years. The DEA is focused on drug trafficking rather than money laundering. You get a quicker result that way – they want to get the traffickers and seize their assets. But this is like treating a sick plant by cutting off a few branches – it just grows new ones. Going after the big money is cutting down the plant – it's a harder door to knock on, it's a longer haul, and it won't get you the short-term riches."

The office of the comptroller of the currency is still examining whether individuals in Wachovia are criminally liable. Sources at FinCEN say that a so-called "look-back" is in process, as directed by the settlement and agreed to by Wachovia, into the $378.4bn that was not directly associated with the aircraft purchases and cocaine hauls, but neither was it subject to the proper anti-laundering checks. A FinCEN source says that $20bn already examined appears to have "suspicious origins". But this is just the beginning.
Antonio Maria Costa, who was executive director of the UN's office on drugs and crime from May 2002 to August 2010, charts the history of the contamination of the global banking industry by drug and criminal money since his first initiatives to try to curb it from the European commission during the 1990s. "The connection between organised crime and financial institutions started in the late 1970s, early 1980s," he says, "when the mafia became globalised."
Until then, criminal money had circulated largely in cash, with the authorities making the occasional, spectacular "sting" or haul. During Costa's time as director for economics and finance at the EC in Brussels, from 1987, inroads were made against penetration of banks by criminal laundering, and "criminal money started moving back to cash, out of the financial institutions and banks. Then two things happened: the financial crisis in Russia, after the emergence of the Russian mafia, and the crises of 2003 and 2007-08.
"With these crises," says Costa, "the banking sector was short of liquidity, the banks exposed themselves to the criminal syndicates, who had cash in hand."
Costa questions the readiness of governments and their regulatory structures to challenge this large-scale corruption of the global economy: "Government regulators showed what they were capable of when the issue suddenly changed to laundering money for terrorism – on that, they suddenly became serious and changed their attitude."
Hardly surprising, then, that Wachovia does not appear to be the end of the line. In August 2010, it emerged in quarterly disclosures by HSBC that the US justice department was seeking to fine it for anti-money laundering compliance problems reported to include dealings with Mexico.

"Wachovia had my résumé, they knew who I was," says Woods. "But they did not want to know – their attitude was, 'Why are you doing this?' They should have been on my side, because they were compliance people, not commercial people. But really they were commercial people all along. We're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars. This is the biggest money-laundering scandal of our time.
"These are the proceeds of murder and misery in Mexico, and of drugs sold around the world," he says. "All the law enforcement people wanted to see this come to trial. But no one goes to jail. "What does the settlement do to fight the cartels? Nothing – it doesn't make the job of law enforcement easier and it encourages the cartels and anyone who wants to make money by laundering their blood dollars. Where's the risk? There is none.
"Is it in the interest of the American people to encourage both the drug cartels and the banks in this way? Is it in the interest of the Mexican people? It's simple: if you don't see the correlation between the money laundering by banks and the 30,000 people killed in Mexico, you're missing the point."
Woods feels unable to rest on his laurels. He tours the world for a consultancy he now runs, Hermes Forensic Solutions, counselling and speaking to banks on the dangers of laundering criminal money, and how to spot and stop it. "New York and London," says Woods, "have become the world's two biggest laundries of criminal and drug money, and offshore tax havens. Not the Cayman Islands, not the Isle of Man or Jersey. The big laundering is right through the City of London and Wall Street.
"After the Wachovia case, no one in the regulatory community has sat down with me and asked, 'What happened?' or 'What can we do to avoid this happening to other banks?' They are not interested. They are the same people who attack the whistleblowers and this is a position the [British] Financial Services Authority at least has adopted on legal advice: it has been advised that the confidentiality of banking and bankers takes primacy over the public information disclosure act. That is how the priorities work: secrecy first, public interest second.
"Meanwhile, the drug industry has two products: money and suffering. On one hand, you have massive profits and enrichment. On the other, you have massive suffering, misery and death. You cannot separate one from the other.
"What happened at Wachovia was symptomatic of the failure of the entire regulatory system to apply the kind of proper governance and adequate risk management which would have prevented not just the laundering of blood money, but the global crisis."

Comments in chronological order (Total 173 comments)

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  • Heiland
    3 April 2011 12:24AM
    kentgoldings
    I'm shocked
    I know what you mean, and yes, this is just capitalism, but doesn't it strike you somewhere that kind of thing is simply wrong?
  • mikedow
    3 April 2011 12:25AM
    For a few years I've joked that marijuana wouldn't get legalized because it would hurt the banking industry that laundered drug money. Why can't I be this prescient when buying lottery tickets?
  • TobySaunders
    3 April 2011 12:35AM
    These drugs & drug products should be legal & regulated for the sake of ethics; prohibition is counter-productive & in the case of cannabis it is entirely tryannical.
  • Strummered
    3 April 2011 12:39AM
    Prohibition and 'the war and drugs' has got to be the biggest con going, it would be a farce if it wasn't so desperately serious with millions of victims.
  • priory39
    3 April 2011 12:40AM
    I am shocked also - but I would like to know what happened to the bank administrator who wanted him off the case -
    the comment that money laundering goes on in London and New York has been the case for years - but what I find not surprising but never-the-less shocking is that this current government has encourage high net worth people to buy their way into the country - - many of whom are leaving from countries in the middle east in which the population is trying to rid itself from
    corruption - -
    what this country needs is brilliant designers and IT engineers -
    let them do here as they have done in the States where over half of the patents in Silicon valley come from immigrants who have established prospering --- and legal business
  • oriel1000
    3 April 2011 12:41AM
    Is anything even going to happen?
    We get the facts given to us on a plate (Wikileaks) but is anyone actually interested in the laborious and tedious pursuit of justice?
    Rhetoric is all we seem to have in the mild, mild west.
  • greensox
    3 April 2011 12:41AM
    This comment was removed by a moderator because it didn't abide by ourcommunity standards. Replies may also be deleted. For more detail see our FAQs.
  • Zadokk
    3 April 2011 12:43AM
    Explains why governments don't legalise drugs so that we - as a society - benefit from an inevitability. Why spread the benefit across all of society when it can be spread to the handful of individuals who own the banks. Brilliant.
  • Contributor
    teaandchocolate
    3 April 2011 12:47AM
    The banks I have worked at have very serious programs devoted to stopping money laundering
    The global banking system is beyond contempt.
  • TerribleLyricist
    3 April 2011 12:48AM
    This kind of grubbiness is almost guaranteed by the prohibition of drugs. Because drugs are banned, they are more valuable than they otherwise would be, which creates a bigger incentive to trade them. Crack down harder and you only make the incentive bigger.
  • swiss3
    3 April 2011 12:48AM
    the entire situation is madness & sickening!
    its time t legalize drugs, treat addicts as mentally ill or physicly sick. Treat responsibl recreational users as noughty but legitimate- trying t effect a reduction of thr use thru advertising. Put the tax proceeds from the legal drug business t good ends, as well as save the incalcualabl amounts it costs for the current costly but ineffectual drug policing. How many 'drug warriors' could be doing actual profitabl & useful work on this planet? Bridges need t b built & farms tended, thrs countless USEFUL things needed t b done! &We're talking 10s of billions every year in cash here all around, thru taxes, thru reduced police costs, thru reduced prison populations & court costs- maybe 100s of billions! In this time of global financial crisis we need t restructure & manage our economys & industrys wisely, that includes the highly profitabl drug industry.
    otherwise we hav a NEVER ENDING military-police-state vrs drug cartels... its time to put an end to both!!! they are both sickening! they are nearly one and the same either side if u ask me! both ill & disgusting, feeding off eachother 2 sides t the same coin! Cartels need police t keep drug costs up & allow for shadow income, police need drug cartels for thr jobs & income thru tax-funded low-oversight government payments & also asset seizure!
    how many lives need t be destroyed & how much blood needs t be shed???
    Somday people will wake up on this planet & the never ending international drug war started by the disgraced president Nixon will finally come t a close!
  • stiofaing
    3 April 2011 12:51AM
    Could i just point out that Capitalism isn't really an ideology, it is simply a mechanist to create wealth. As such it is open to all the corruption and deceit that the human condition is capable of.
    Apportion blame where appropriate please.
  • AlbionEikon
    3 April 2011 12:53AM
    Not only is the global banking system beyond contempt, but there's no way I believe the US government would treat a foreign bank in a similar manner. Not only would the bank be dealt with far more harshly, but also the country from which it originates from.
    One major problem with western democracy is how passive mainstream society is to the primary issues because they get overly distracted by the tertiary issues.
  • NT3058
    3 April 2011 12:59AM
    Before any of you fools post "This is just capitalism Blah blah blah" Know this >> In a truly capitalist society drugs would be legal and sold by stores not drug cartels. It's control of the markets which spawn these horrors (*Cough* Key word Market Controls).
    The day you can buy your weed at Walmart is the day Drug cartels and gangs start to fade away.
  • theantipodes
    3 April 2011 1:09AM
    How many of YOU are willing to act morally and expose illegal and/or immoral acts by your employer or co-workers/colleagues?
    In doing so you expose your very core to expensive legal action, private investigators hired to go through your trash with a fine-tooth comb, corrupt contacts in banks hand over your financial information and all of a sudden you start having money problems. Your lawyer calls you and for no apparent reason suddenly can't help you any more, or demands more for the same. If anybody in your family has a business it begins to suffer. Anonymous calls are made to significant clients, casting aspersions on your character (e.g. used to be a child sex-offender) and suddenly their businesses are suffering.
    This goes on and on. It's not the legal pressure alone that is put on people, but a whole range of tactics designed to discredit and destroy. All paid for by those who have the cash to effect an outcome that benefits them.
  • canubelievethat
    3 April 2011 1:11AM
    This is more evidence of collusion between cartels,banks,government agencies and they have no intention of ending this because it is big business.
  • isse92
    3 April 2011 1:12AM
    Shocked aswell but in all honesty why should we be surprised? We give weapons to despots don't we?
    Oh Capitalism.
  • isse92
    3 April 2011 1:14AM
    A very fine effort by everyone who investigated this and managed to get this story out! Well done!
  • Picaro
    3 April 2011 1:19AM
    Nations go bankrupt and their people pay the price.
    And in the meantime we are told that we have to be good little citizens: go to work, get a loan to buy a house which you will only ever own in 25 years, pay your frickin taxes, put your kids in daycare so that both parents can work to barely get ahead, buy stuff to keep the wheels of our 19th century economic system going. Drink chlorinated tap water. Eat dead chemical food. Destroy our own sourse of life.
    We are sick - corrupted by money and egotistical opinions and desires.
    THIS SHIT HAS GOT TO GO.
  • muckytackies
    3 April 2011 1:24AM
    Greensox, forgive me if I dont feel any sympathy towards your plight as painting the banks as some paradigm of decency. This article highlights just one of a myriad of indiscretions the bank system has foisted on us of late. Don't hurt your fingers playing the little violin of yours, you could be playing it for some time before people start listening to your tune again.
  • alloomis
    3 April 2011 1:40AM
    first i discovered bambi was tricking, then that john wayne was not an actual hero, now this. is it any wonder, if i ask the tooth fairy for a receipt?
    america has always been crooked, the first big banking scam came along about 3 years after the first federal bank. this is curable, and i am hopeful that when the union of south and central american states occupies the remaining bandit strongholds in north america, they will apply a stiff broom to american culture. this may have to take the form of bonfires, into which will be thrown bankers, politicians and lawyers, so that ordinary norte americanos can finally learn that crime does not pay. it will be a shock to them, having no previous evidence.
  • 48209
    3 April 2011 1:55AM
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  • RobRoy08
    3 April 2011 2:08AM
    Have the drugs stopped running? No? Then neither has the cash.
    Know the size of the money flows? Yes? Then don't expect any surprises on the means of transfer.
    Why not take that next step in understanding that someone is deliberately avoiding doing their job today, just as they were yesterday, and that their friends are clipping the ticket.
  • ammypam
    3 April 2011 2:13AM
    Drug cartels, the Mafia, the banks, hedge funds, oil companies, arms manufacturers, governments....they're all the same - no morality except money.
  • jimmysten
    3 April 2011 2:21AM
    A fantastic and brave article. A lot of praise must be given to all those involved in reporting the story, and also to those who live/lived through it.
    Just a shame it won't be read by nearly enough people. It's worrying how lazily ignorant some people can be to the biggest issues that surrounds them.
    Still, I suppose this is the price you pay for Western 'democracy and freedom'.
  • ammypam
    3 April 2011 2:27AM
    NT3058 -
    Before any of you fools post "This is just capitalism Blah blah blah" Know this >> In a truly capitalist society drugs would be legal and sold by stores not drug cartels. It's control of the markets which spawn these horrors (*Cough* Key word Market Controls).
    'capitalism' and 'free market' are not totally synonymous. One version of capitalism is the one we have - manipulation of the markets and society in favour of the few who have the capital. 'Free market' for the poor, 'socialism' for the rich. High taxes for the poor, low taxes for the rich. In a truly capitalist society, RBS, Lloyds, etc, would have gone to the wall, too.
  • KoaChinHorSays
    3 April 2011 2:34AM
    The banks are just as crooked as the drug cartels.
    The global drugs trade is worth over 200 BILLION a year, think about that for five minutes and then ask yourself whether or not the banks should also stop handling money from the sales of weapons, cigarettes, alcohol, prostitution, human trafficking or vital organs stolen from prisoners in Chinese jails.
    Banks are in the finance business, they don't care where the money is coming from, never have done and never will.
    Do you really think for a minute that an industry (drugs) that dwarfs the combined efforts of Coca Cola, Samsung, Microsoft and Walmart is really in the hands of a few South American crack heads?
    My final question, do you have a bank account and own any stocks and shares?
  • snix
    3 April 2011 2:37AM
    "That is how the priorities work: secrecy first, public interest second."
    Its a conspiracy,isn't it?
  • Gurufootball
    3 April 2011 3:00AM
    3 April 2011 12:48AM
    how many lives need t be destroyed & how much blood needs t be shed???
    End prohibition on drugs? Have you or anyone in favor considered the ramifications? I mean let’s consider prohibition of alcohol. Has the legalizing benefited society by reducing the costs associated, such as health related disease, property losses(i.e. car accidents etc.), human toll(i.e. killed/mutilated by drunk drivers etc.)? I think this causes a lot more misery in the world than the illegal drug trade. A burden by the way on the healthcare system in any country paid for by tax payers.
    So now we want to legalize the drug trade. Judging from the scope described in this article we are not just talking about a hand full of people, not to mention how many more would become users and addicts. What will be the effect of more volatile people in our society? This volatility seems to me comes with a large financial, moral and physical price. Is society prepared for it? I’m not convinced.
    Seems to me those pushing for legalization are themselves users and addicts, and as far as destroying lives and blood who’s to say the legalizing would not create more of it. Remember the vast majority of those 30,000 dead in Mexico are people involved in the drug trade and not innocent bystanders.
  • tresequis
    3 April 2011 3:25AM
    Some people here are talking about legalising and regulating the drug trade as a means of preventing this kind of appalling corruption. Very broadly speaking I agree with them, but the reality is that making that kind of change would solve almost nothing. I live in mexico and i know that the people who run the drug trade are not about to peacefully give up their control of a multi-billion-dollar industry, nor will they suddenly drop their other interests (eg prostitution, gambling) if drugs were to be legalised.
    There is absolutely no easy fix, but well done Martin Woods and well done Grauniad for devoting some energu to this topic.
  • ellipsis10
    3 April 2011 3:35AM
    A fantastic and brave article. A lot of praise must be given to all those involved in reporting the story
    Why brave? All this information has been a matter of public record for five years.
  • ToothySmiles
    3 April 2011 3:47AM
    This story has affected me emotionally like no other. Even as I marvel that it exists, I intend to monitor just how effectively its ignored by the feckless US press. I have no doubt Obama's administration is not going to join in an attack of his precious financial sector. And without that kind of support this racist nation which regularly yawns its indifference to the plight of Mexicans, will shrug it all off with campaign contributions.
  • Poliander
    3 April 2011 3:54AM
    As a Mexican citizen I am appalled. More than 30,000 people have been killed in my country since 2004, many in the turf wars among the cartels, but it seems likely that at least half of the victims were pacific people.
    Thanks to Mr. Woods it is clear now that some international banks reap enormous benefits thereby. I don't know what would be the amount of commissions for handling $378.4 bn (and this, only from 2004 and through one single bank!) No doubt many people found all along extremely good reason$ to turn a blind eye on that. And surely this goes a long way to explain why all this pain is so hard to stop.
  • kells1001
    3 April 2011 3:57AM
    In the competitive supply side world of global economics money rules. Regulation is viewed as meaningless and getting caught is only a risk to be objectively analyzed. Lawyers, bankers, politicians, and corporate heads are often supportive of the present state of the money laundering and drug smuggling industry because it pays the bills and makes them rich one way or another. Our system spends way more time on traffic tickets and petty small time drug users than on any real way to go through the maze and track down these major sources of drugs and counterfeiting. There are certainly a number of very successful people who have agreed to collude with the mob which is evidenced by the inaccessible industries protected by insurance constituencies and banks. This only ads to and protects the misguided concept that the world will be solely saved through unregulated free market philosophy and military might. Unfortunately the very type of dedicated selfless people it takes to make justice happen are exactly the opposite of those making such drug profiteering a reality.
  • Nexusone
    3 April 2011 4:00AM
    If this is not evidence that the parasitic banking system is profoundly and systemically corrupt then I don't know what would be.
    We have seen corrupt financial services behavior range from falsification of sales targets, buying their own financial products to 'hit' targets', packaging and selling mortgage products knowingly to people that would not be able to service the debt, high levels of usury and predatory behavior in the credit card market (especially in the US but elsewhere), etc, etc....and now we have money laundering on a massive scale. I doubt if this is the only bank that has an 'alternative' line of business.
    Worst of all is that no one has been called to account.....you rob a store and you get a prison sentence. You rip off billions and nothing happens. The system cannot regulate and control its actions and the only outcome will be increased corruption and financial collapse.
    Where are the politicians? I would guess they are on one hand active participants in this, or on the other are hiding what is going on.
  • tresequis
    3 April 2011 4:13AM
    @jimmysten
    Just a shame it won't be read by nearly enough people. It's worrying how lazily ignorant some people can be to the biggest issues that surrounds them.
    Still, I suppose this is the price you pay for Western 'democracy and freedom'.
    What does that comment actually mean?
    ....that in an authoritarian, Eastern society, the general populace would do little but read exposés of corruption in high places???
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