Transaction monitoring (TM) tools have lulled many large banks into a false
sense of security, according to anti-money laundering firm Datanomic.
This incorrect assumption by the banks is not due to a failing of the systems
themselves, but because TM tools issue alerts only when a suspicious transaction
is made.
Money laundering is an increasingly sophisticated threat which carries very
heavy penalties, and many fraudsters are currently lying dormant because they
have not yet been caught doing anything suspicious.
"Sophisticated criminals and terror cells have woken up to what triggers a
transaction monitoring alert inside a bank's system and have adapted their
behaviour accordingly," said Dr Jonathan Pell, chief executive at Datanomic.
The company reckons that this reactive approach is addressing the issue far
too late in the process, and that banks should regularly screen their entire
client base to avoid association with dubious individuals in the first place.
"A TM tool has never once identified a terrorist," said Dr Pell. "The foiled
Heathrow terror plot was funded for less than £100,000, and every single
transaction looked normal and therefore went undetected by the TM systems at the
banks involved."
Dr Pell concluded that relying entirely on TM tools for compliance with
anti-money laundering legislation equates to waiting to catch criminals in the
act of doing something wrong before admitting to their existence.
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