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Latest coverage for Money Laundering

Money laundering coverage examines how criminals abuse financial systems, digital assets, and stolen data to conceal proceeds and evade detection.

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Background for this topic.

Money laundering is the process of disguising proceeds from crime so they appear to come from legitimate activity. Criminals may introduce funds into financial services, move them through layers of accounts or assets, and later withdraw or spend them as apparently lawful money. The activity can involve banks, payment processors, online marketplaces, virtual-asset services, and cash businesses; laundering and terrorist financing are related financial-crime concerns but are not identical.

Its information-security relevance is the protection and trustworthy operation of systems used to move and monitor money. Account takeover, stolen identity data, compromised payment APIs, and networks of mule accounts can help conceal transfers; virtual-asset services may add cross-border or pseudonymous transaction paths. Defenders support anti-money-laundering (AML) controls with strong authentication, access limits, tamper-resistant logs, customer and beneficiary verification, and analytics that flag unusual transaction patterns for human review. These systems handle sensitive personal and financial data, so privacy controls, data quality, and secure retention matter alongside regulatory compliance. Preserving relevant logs and transaction records supports investigation and reporting.

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Bank Info Security 1 year, 6 months ago

Case Studies on Fraud and AML Collaboration

Mission Omega's Ian Mitchell on What Works and What Doesn't in Program IntegrationFraud management and anti-money laundering represent two distinct disciplines in financial crime prevention. While AML primarily is a compliance-driven function, fraud is a risk management function driven by the organization's risk appetite for fraud, said Ian Mitchell, co-founder of Mission Omega.