The Malta Independent on Sunday

Four Malta-based companies received $3 million in laundered funds

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Four Maltese companies received close to USD3 million in laundered Russian funds according to research published by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project this week.

The transfer of the funds all occurred between August 2013 and January 2014. The largest share of laundered funds went to a firm named ASAP Equipment Limited, which received USD2,496,515. Smaller amounts were received by: Corinaro Trading Ltd (USD184,288), La Vida Enterprise­s Ltd (USD147,232) and F.I.T. Ltd (USD135,240).

All four companies concerned appear to be held by Maltese fiduciary firms. Maltese fiduciary firms and their practice of holding companies on behalf of Ultimate Beneficiar­y Owners, the names of whom the firms are not obliged to disclose, have been embroiled in several scandals over recent years – from the Panama Papers to Offshore Leaks to the ‘ Ndrangheta mafia remote gaming scandal.

It is not known whether the Maltese authoritie­s are investigat­ing the allegation­s.

The revelation­s came this week when a group of anti-corruption reporters, who in 2014 first exposed the criminal scheme to move large sums of money out of Russia, said they uncovered the details about how the system worked, including the transfer of USD21 billion through major banks.

Members of the group say in a report published this week that they now know where the funds ended up and that banks allegedly refused to shut it down, despite warnings.

The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project said that reporters from the group and the Novaya Gazeta newspaper in Moscow obtained bank records showing that funds were transferre­d worldwide via 112 bank accounts in Eastern Europe. They shared the details of the scheme, dubbed Laundromat, with investigat­ive reporters in 32 countries.

Those details included the informatio­n on the funds transferre­d to Malta, which, although a drop in the USD21 billion bucket, should still warrant an investigat­ion by the Maltese antimoney laundering authoritie­s.

“Law enforcemen­t agencies in Moldova, Latvia, Britain and Russia continue to investigat­e Laundromat, but attempts to bring those responsibl­e to justice and to recover the money have been hampered in part by the reluctance of Russian officials to cooperate,“the group said on its website.

Organizers of the scheme created a core of 21 companies based in Britain, Cyprus and New Zealand, run by hidden owners and used by several Russian companies to move their money abroad. All the core companies appeared to be owned by proxies standing in for hidden owners, with fake directors and shareholde­rs, though the reporters provided no evidence to back the claims.

Between 2011 and 2014, the 21 shell companies sent 26,746 payments from various accounts to 96 countries, including to some of the world’s biggest banks, such as HSBC, Deutsche Bank, Bank of China, Bank of America and Emirates NBD.

Laundered money ended up at several big name companies, including South Korea’s Samsung, Swedish telecom company Ericsson, toolmaker Black & Decker and Total Golf Constructi­on Inc., which says it has renovated a Donald Trump golf course in the Grenadines.

Using company records, the investigat­ive reporters said they tracked some clients, many rich and powerful Russians who made fortunes from dealing with the Russian state, including a businessma­n in the inner circle of Russian President Vladimir Putin and IT distributo­rs in Russia, including for Apple, Samsung and Asus.

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