Fraud and Money Laundering
FORMER MONEYGRAM COMPLIANCE CHIEF PENALIZED $1
MILLION FOR ‘WILLFUL

The Treasury
Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) imposed a $1 million
civil penalty against the former chief compliance officer for MoneyGram
International Inc.
Thomas
E. Haider failed to ensure that his company complied with the anti-money
laundering (AML) provisions of the Bank Secrecy Act, FinCEN said.
FinCEN
also filed a complaint with the U.S. Attorney for Manhattan to
enforce the penalty and bar Haider from working in the financial industry.
Haider
ran MoneyGram's compliance program and fraud department from 2003 to 2008.
During that time, MoneyGram "collected thousands of complaints from
consumers who were victims of fraudulent schemes," FinCEN said.
The
government said Haider could have stopped the fraud. U.S. Attorney Preet
Bharara said Haider "allowed criminals to use MoneyGram to defraud
innocent consumers and then launder the proceeds of their fraudulent
schemes."
Scammers
told victims by mail, email, and telephone calls that they'd won the lottery or
been hired for a “secret shoppers” program. Others were duped to believe they'd
been approved for a guaranteed loan or had won a cash prize, FinCEN said. Many
victims were elderly.
The
fraudsters convinced victims to use MoneyGram’s transfer system to send them up
front taxes, customs duties, or processing fees.
In
a 2012 federal settlement, MoneyGram paid $100 million to compensate
fraud victims. The company admitted that it aided and abetted the fraud and
failed to maintain an effective anti-money laundering program. A five-year
deferred prosecution agreement required MoneyGram to retain an independent
monitor who reports to the DOJ.
Dallas,
Texas-based MoneyGram operates in more than 200 countries through a global
network of about 339,000 agent offices. At least 25 former MoneyGram agents
have been prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney in Pennsylvania.
FinCEN
director Jennifer Shasky Calvery called Haider’s AML failures "an affront
to his peers and to his profession."
"With
his willful violations," she said, "he created an environment where
fraud and money laundering thrived and dirty money rampaged through the very
system he was charged with protecting."
Haider's
inaction, Shasky Calvery said, "led to personal savings lost and dreams
ruined for thousands of victims.”
Haider
denies any wrongdoing. One of his lawyers, Ian Comisky, said, "While the
current government mantra is for heightened individual responsibility, this is
the wrong case to try to establish this principle."
Haider
didn't file suspicious activity reports on agents he knew or suspected were
engaged in fraud, money laundering, or other criminal activity, the DOJ said.
And he failed to perform adequate due dilgence or audits or terminate known
high-risk agents.
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