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Author Topic: Liberty Reserve - "history's biggest money laundering prosecutions"  (Read 1404 times)
Damme (OP)
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May 28, 2013, 08:23:03 PM
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sorry for bad english, translated with google from swedish newspaper: http://www.gp.se/ekonomi/1.1699994-massivt-tillslag-mot-digital-valuta

"Prosecutors in the U.S. has launched what is described as "history's biggest money laundering prosecutions" against Liberty Reserve which handles digital currencies. The service alleged to have allowed massive illegal transfers.According to prosecutors, Liberty Reserve, completed at least 55 million illegal transactions of at least one million users for a value of nearly 40 billion Swedish kronor. This should have "made possible criminal acts globally."The service has profiled itself as a simple and legitimate system of transferring money, but made the transactions are very difficult to track which got prosecutors to describe Liberty Reserve as "cybercrime financial hub."Virtual currencies, such as bitcoin, has grown huge phenomenon but scrutinized ever more zealously by authorities."

did some searches, new or old? posted today 19.07 CET

edit: found: http://www.cnbc.com/id/100769961
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es.blofeld
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May 29, 2013, 01:47:58 AM
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LR was around for quite some years - the US indictments quite recent.

Clearly amateurs when compared to HSBC, Barclays or Wachovia Bank...
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May 29, 2013, 09:56:35 PM
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LR was around for quite some years - the US indictments quite recent.

Clearly amateurs when compared to HSBC, Barclays or Wachovia Bank...

This is my biggest concern. Liberty Reserve had been around for a long time before I even joined up. The only reason I used it was not because of anonymity - that was just a bonus feature. It was nice having an account number which didn't reveal much than an email which somebody could use against me if they had ill intentions - but it was the no chargeback feature which appealed to me most. With PayPal I was subject to so many fraudulent payments from crooks and thieves, and even with supposed seller protection I lost quiet a bit to thieves. I have no problem with my information being shared with the right people and for the right reason.

The reports state that Liberty Reserve submitted fake documents and lied - so why was this not caught out by the person overseeing the verification? Surely the verification team should be held responsible for their negligence too? Reports also state that this was because they were operating with no license, so why had it taken this long to have something done about it?

Users of Liberty Reserve were also led to believe that the company was complying with AML policy. Even though I was never asked for much information, I believed that should I reach a certain threshold, I would be asked for verification which was fine.

http://web.archive.org/web/20130424142948/https://www.libertyreserve.com/en/home/amlpolicy

Even if the system was used by mainly criminals because of it's ease of access and anonymity, it had legitimate uses too. It's just a shame that the owners knew of the problem and did nothing about it. Openly admitting that your company is used by criminals and that pretty much nothing is going to be done about it is ignorance. Not everyone uses LR with bad intentions, I know companies will suffer greatly because of this and it's a shame that the legit users are now just seen as necessary collateral damage.

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May 29, 2013, 10:16:05 PM
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all this money laundering garbage is gibberish people will launder money if they want to.
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