FinCEN Reveals How BNY Mellon Processed $137M for OneCoin Ponzi Scheme

2020-9-21 16:08

Coinspeaker
FinCEN Reveals How BNY Mellon Processed $137M for OneCoin Ponzi Scheme

Thousands of “suspicious activity reports” commonly referred to as SARs and other U.S, government documents that were leaked by an investigative media outlet, BuzzFeed news, indicate that in February 2017, the Bank of New York Mellon (BNY Mellon) was used by OneCoin organizers to launder millions of customers’ money. According to the files, the bank flagged a number of transactions with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) that it deemed suspicious. Within the framework of the OneCoin scheme, the transactions moved a total of $137 million to other international bank accounts.

U.S. prosecutors have alleged the scheme brought in approximately $4 billion worldwide. However, in China, law enforcement managed to recover $267.5 million, whereby it went ahead to prosecute 98 people.

Years past and the founder is nowhere to be seen. Presumably aided by the same laws to maneuver her way out and remain safe.

OneCoin Scheme Uncover Banks Dubious Operations

Banks are using an obsolete system at a time when the market needs a well-structured system to democratize and decentralize services to where they are mostly needed.

According to the report compiled by Buzzfeednews, banks are using the same law created to protect consumers against money laundering to facilitate the same crime.

“Some of these people in those crisp white shirts in their sharp suits are feeding off the tragedy of people dying all over the world,” said Martin Woods, a former suspicious transactions investigator for Wachovia.

For a long, there has been a notion that bitcoin is the primary facilitator of money laundering but the case study is revealing differently.

“These documents, compiled by banks, shared with the government, but kept from public view, expose the hollowness of banking safeguards, and the ease with which criminals have exploited them. Profits from deadly drug wars, fortunes embezzled from developing countries, and hard-earned savings stolen in a Ponzi scheme were all allowed to flow into and out of these financial institutions, despite warnings from the banks’ own employees,” BuzzFeed news noted in the report.

Apparently, the banks only file the suspicious transactions only to fulfill the law but never attempt to block the transactions from being processed.

Notably, Deutsche Bank flagged a total of $1.3 trillion, JPMorgan approximately $500 billion and Bank of America another $384 billion. BNY Mellon underlined a total of $64 billion in 325 separate SARs filed with FinCEN, making it the second-most-frequent filer in the leaked documents.

With such huge transactions taking place in the close watch of the watchdog, it only shows how the cartels have infiltrated the system for their own benefit.

Derailing the wheel of justice by denying services to where it is much needed has made billions for the executive members of most of these banks, according to the report.

FinCEN Reveals How BNY Mellon Processed $137M for OneCoin Ponzi Scheme

Similar to Notcoin - TapSwap on Solana Airdrops In 2024

origin »

Bancacy (BNY) на Currencies.ru

$ 0 (+0.00%)
Объем 24H $0
Изменеия 24h: 0.00 %, 7d: 0.00 %
Cегодня L: $0 - H: $0
Капитализация $0 Rank 99999
Цена в час новости $ 0.0031625 (-100%)

onecoin scheme fincen ponzi reveals 137m bny

onecoin scheme → Результатов: 77


Co-Founder of OneCoin Pyramid Scheme Pleads Guilty; ‘CryptoQueen’ Still Wanted

One of the founders behind OneCoin pleaded guilty to federal U.S. charges on Friday after one of the largest financial scams of all time, according to the Department of Justice. The purported cryptocurrency project was fraudulent from its 2014 beginnings, prosecutors said, with OneCoin – co-founded by Karl Greenwood – setting up a pyramid scheme to market it to millions of people, generating as much as $4 billion in revenue.

2022-12-17 22:13


Embattled OneCoin Denies Multi-Billion Dollar Ponzi Scheme Allegations

By CCN: OneCoin execs are sick of being called a Ponzi scheme. Allegations of ripping off churches are false too, they claim. In a lengthy letter to the Samoa Observer, the cryptocurrency-powered marketing company defended itself against what it considers to be false allegations OneCoin takes issue with news articles that were used by the Central Bank of Samoa (CBS), which fueled the Ponzi scheme narrative.

2019-5-20 00:30


Фото:

‘Bitcoin Killer’ Onecoin Is Ashes But Investigations Continue to This Day

Back in 2014, a group led by a woman named Ruja Ignatova created a Ponzi scheme called Onecoin which, together with the organization Onelife, defrauded billions from 3 million people. At peak popularity, the group declared that Onecoin would be a “Bitcoin killer” but the pyramid scheme is now in ashes and many of its […] The post ‘Bitcoin Killer’ Onecoin Is Ashes But Investigations Continue to This Day appeared first on Bitcoin News.

2019-2-22 00:30


Фото:

The Onecoin ICO Doesn’t Appear to be Affilaited With Onecoin

There has been a fair bit of talk regarding Onecoin over the past few years. This notorious MLM scheme is widely considered to be a scam, even though its investors will gladly claim otherwise. To make things even more interesting, there is a Onecoin ICO taking place, even though this does not appear to be […] The post The Onecoin ICO Doesn’t Appear to be Affilaited With Onecoin appeared first on NullTX.

2018-10-21 03:35