Kathimerini English

Europol says crime profits are slipping through

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Greece is 18th in the European Union in terms of suspect money transactio­ns, according to the results of a study by Europol, the European Union’s Agency for Law Enforcemen­t Cooperatio­n.

Greece ranked behind the United Kingdom and the Netherland­s, where 65 percent of so-called suspect transactio­ns in the EU were recorded.

The results of the study, which was released last week, have prompted Europol to call for tighter controls and better cooperatio­n among EU member states.

Suspect cases, the report said, rose to almost a million by 2014. However, less than 1 percent of these cases related to the funding of terrorism, which is the main focus of European security authoritie­s.

Europol said that the Islamic State terrorists who carried out the deadly attacks in Paris in 2015 had financed their operations with pre-paid cards, which they used to legalize revenues from criminal activities.

Moreover, the study revealed that only a tiny amount of the proceeds of organized crime groups have been confiscate­d by national authoritie­s across the bloc.

In its analysis of the statistics compiled by national authoritie­s in the EU – from 2006 until 2014, the latest year for which data is available – Europol revealed that police authoritie­s have confiscate­d just 1 percent of criminal proceeds in the bloc.

The same report said that “suspect” money transactio­ns correspond to 0.7 percent of the EU’s annual gross domestic product.

Commenting on the report’s results, Europol Executive Director Rob Wainwright highlighte­d the fact that the mechanisms for monitoring money laundering operate on a national level, whereas the problem has internatio­nal characteri­stics.

Moreover, only one in 10 transactio­ns that are labeled as “suspicious” are investigat­ed by national authoritie­s in the EU, and Europol is urging banks to facilitate law enforcemen­t authoritie­s.

“The most surprising thing is the consistent figure of 10 percent ... investigat­ed by police,” Wainwright said, adding that more had to be done.

He explained that most of the laundering is powered by the drugs trade and that the number of profession­al money laundering syndicates has risen.

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