18/02/2004

UK firms unprepared for anti-money laundering laws, warn PwC

Tens of thousands of UK businesses face stringent anti-money laundering regulations from 1 March this year, according to analysis by the Forensic Services division of accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers.

The new rules are designed to strengthen the UK’s financial system against financial crime. However, they involve a substantial increase in the number and type of businesses subject to anti-money laundering regulations.

For the first time, retailers of high-value goods such as car dealers, jewellers, auctioneers, fine art dealers and yacht brokers will need to comply with regulations whenever a transaction involves a total cash payment of more than £10,000. Estate agents and casino operators will also be included in the new regulatory regime. The law will also affect professional services firms, including accountants, law firms, and insolvency and tax advisers.

PwC predicts that a large number of businesses may be unaware of the requirements and some may find difficulty in complying, particularly those lacking a professional or supervisory body. However, failure to comply and report on possible proceeds of crime could be costly. Failure to report carries a penalty of up to five years’ imprisonment and/or a fine.

Andrew Clark, partner in the Investigations and Forensic Services practice at PwC, said: “The extension of anti-money laundering laws leaves fewer loopholes for criminals to exploit. It will provide valuable additional information to the police, and prosecutions should rise. However, many businesses affected by the regulations for the first time will face up an up-hill task to comply. Failure to do so may result in damage to company reputations and, possibly, in prosecution and imprisonment.”

Under the new regulations companies will have to:
  • Introduce suitable training for all staff to recognise potential money laundering, as well as provide guidance on how to report suspicions to the authorities;
  • Establish internal procedures appropriate to prevent money laundering;
  • Appoint a Money Laundering Regulations Officer (“MLRO”);
  • Maintain identification procedures for those with whom they do business;
  • Maintain records of identification and of all transactions for at least five years from the date the business relationship ended.
PwC also said that the companies concerned will also be required to adopt reporting procedures which require anyone in the firm providing relevant business who, in the course of business, knows or suspects (or has reasonable grounds for knowing or suspecting) that a transaction (or advice) involves money laundering to report the matter to the MLRO.

(SP)

Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

26 June 2015
20 Arrested In Major Police Operation Across Cardiff
Twenty people have been arrested in Cardiff following a large-scale police operation targeting suspected forced labour, money laundering, theft and abstraction of electricity.
15 January 2014
British Tax Fugitive Arrested In Cyprus
One of the UK's most wanted tax fugitives, 46-year-old Michael Voudouri, has been arrested in Cyprus. In 2012 Voudouri, from Bridge of Allan in Stirlingshire, failed to appear for a sentencing hearing at the High Court in Glasgow after pleading guilty to money laundering linked to VAT fraud.
17 February 2012
Standards Announced For Money Laundering
A new set of standards aimed at combating money laundering, terrorist financing and the proliferation of "weapons of mass destruction" has been announced. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), said it had agreed a new set of standards and was highlighting the need for member countries to promote their implementation.
22 June 2010
Drugs Gangster 'Laundered' £10m
The last member of a drug dealing gang which supplied cocaine and laundered nearly £10m has been convicted at Kingston Crown Court. The 35-year-old man, Behar Dika, an Albanian national of Hendon in north west London, was found guilty of conspiracy to supply class A drugs (cocaine) and money laundering.
10 September 2009
Construction Industry Bosses Arrested
A total of 21 people were arrested yesterday in dawn raids by HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) officers investigating a multi million pound construction industry fraud.