A Damning Trail of Smuggling, Money Laundering and Kosher KP Certs
March 15, 12A report just published by the U.S. State Department's Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs states: "Existing safeguards do not address the issue of the laundering of diamonds and value transfer through
The International Narcotics Control Strategy Report Volume II Money Laundering and Financial Crimes report states that "
Though using dry language, or maybe because of that, the report unfolds like a crime book; adding information that, like pixels on a screen, become a full picture. The full picture in this case, is where this money is coming from. I hope you are sitting tight.
Source of Illicit Money
"[A] number of Lebanese abroad are involved in underground finance and trade-based money laundering (TBML) activities. (…) primarily from foreign criminal activity and organized crime, and Hizballah [sic], which the United States has designated as a terrorist organization."
These expatriates in Africa and
Where are the Diamonds Coming From?
Back in 2009, an investigative KP team travelled to
An analysis of the goods by type found that the make of these exports do not fit the characteristics of a
By comparison, in 2006 the entire
Don't be confused by the low cost of these goods. The total declared value of this jump in exports passed $3 million in 2007 and neared $13 million in 2008.
The Trail Of Goods
Two questions come to mind: where did the goods come from, and where did they go? The consensus among those involved is that most of the goods came from
To answer the second question, we don't need to go much further than KP's annual data reports. From imports of 186,365 carats in 2006,
These goods are not polished in
Odd Transactions
One possible reason for this assertion is the stated values of rough exports: they make no economic sense.
In 2006, a "normal" year for the global rough diamond trade, the average value of rough going through Lebanon increased 156.7 percent (!), indeed a fantastic return on investment for the Lebanon "brand," and the wet dream of any Antwerp, Mumbai or Ramat Gan-based rough trader.
In 2007, exports were valued 18.6 percent more than imports. The surprising outcome is what happened since: in 2008 the average value of exports equaled that of imports; in 2009 and 2010 the average value of the goods was actually deflated, declining 40.8 percent and 10.1 percent respectively.
If the transactions don't make sense economically, they must have some other value, for example: money laundering.
The Trail of Goods II
From
From
The Road Ahead
If all this looks bad – but old, it isn't. The basis for tracking this activity is existing documents that record lagged data. Nothing indicates that this has stopped.
KP needs to crack down on the use of genuine KP certificates with smuggled goods,
KP must examine
Place sanctions on countries that allow illicit activities such as smuggling, money laundering and trading in KP certificates,
Consider expanding KP beyond the movement of rough to include the movement of money.
KP was born out of public disclosures and outcries. It is in its DNA to act, or rather react, to make public calls to action. Here is one such opportunity.
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