Sunday, August 12, 2007

CFOEurope.com: Textron's Bell Helicopter Sold to Columbian Drug Lords

The corporate connection
Tim Reason on how drug money is finding its way to the bottom line
March 2001
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Last summer, Panamanian officials acting at the request of the US Customs Service seized a Bell model 407 helicopter belonging to Victor Carranza, a Colombian who, according to US and Colombian investigators, has ties to both drug traffickers and the Colombian right-wing paramilitaries who often protect them. But Carranza’s allegedly chequered past wasn’t the reason for the seizure. The helicopter, claimed US Customs agents, had been purchased from Bell Helicopter Textron with the proceeds from a massive Colombian cocaine and heroin operation.

Drug trafficking is a global problem and money-laundering schemes take many shapes and forms. But for companies such as Texas-based Bell, the Colombian Black Market Peso Exchange (BMPE) poses by far the greatest risk. Described by Raymond Kelly, a former US Customs commissioner, as “perhaps the largest, most insidious money-laundering system in the Western hemisphere”, the BMPE enables drug traffickers to use their profits to purchase consumer goods in the US, masking its illicit origins. According to customs officials, similar schemes can be found in countries with stable currencies that have high levels of drug consumption and trade with Colombia, other parts of Latin America and Eastern Europe. For companies, it’s a problem that goes far beyond the public relations nightmare of having their products connected with the narcotics trade, because it is a crime to knowingly accept money that is connected to drug trafficking.

And when it comes to BMPE transactions, “knowingly” is hard to assess. Law-enforcement officials around the world insist that these transactions involve obvious red flags, but many companies have accepted such payments and claim they are difficult for accounts-receivables departments to detect. The consequences are serious: companies that accept BMPE payments risk seizure of the money, forfeiture of the goods, fines, loss of their export licences and even criminal prosecution. Criminal fines range as high as $500,000 (E550,000) per violation or twice the value of the property involved. If specifically charged as individuals, company officers and employees are subject to the same fines, as well as up to 20 years’ imprisonment. Philip Morris, in New York, whose Marlboro-brand cigarettes are a favourite BMPE contraband item, instituted strict rules in March 2000, regarding acceptable forms of payment. Exceptions, the policy notes, “must be approved by the CFO and the CEO of the operating company”.

Washing machine
The process that transforms cocaine sales into a CFO headache is complex. Anxious to pocket quickly drug profits amassed in the US, drug cartels in Colombia, for example, sell the dirty dollars at a 20% to 40% discount to a Colombian-based peso broker, who pays them in pesos. With its pesos in hand, the cartel’s laundering effort is complete.

Meanwhile, the peso broker’s agents in America pick up the tainted dollars and salt them away in multiple bank accounts. In Bell’s case, according to court documents, an undercover US Customs agent, allegedly acting on instructions from indicted Colombian peso broker Armando Mogollon, picked up a suitcase containing $492,500 in Queens, New York, on January 21st 1999. The following day, he deposited the money in four phoney business accounts at a Regions Bank in Mobile, Alabama.

In Colombia, there’s a ready market among importers for these dollars. To buy dollars legally from the country’s central bank, importers must prove they have paid the necessary duties and taxes on the foreign goods they plan to buy. To evade this requirement—and get a much better exchange rate—they pay the peso broker instead. The broker then authorises his agents in the US to purchase the goods the importers have ordered. Just one day after undercover agents picked up the profits of drug sales on the streets of New York, court documents say, they received instructions from Mogollon to wire five separate payments ranging from about $60,000 to $100,000 to Bell Helicopter Textron.

Law-enforcement officials claim that, including the five payments made by undercover agents, Bell Helicopter accepted 25 third-party wire transfers and one domestic third-party cheque to pay for the $1.5m helicopter. “The 15 remitters of these 26 payments have no discernible relationship with the purchasers of the defendant’s helicopter,” note government court documents seeking forfeiture of the helicopter.

That’s a classic BMPE pattern. And although a helicopter is an unusually big-ticket item, the BMPE shows little discrimination among types of goods. Common items include computer equipment, cigarettes, liquor, electronics, home appliances, auto parts, precious metals and footwear. The same investigation that led to Bell’s bank account also resulted in seizures from the accounts of public firms including Intel, Ingram Micro, Microdata Solutions, Federal-Mogul and Merrill Lynch. “It’s the ultimate nexus between crime and commerce, using global trade to mask global money laundering,” notes Kelly.

Indeed, what made the Bell case particularly embarrassing was that the company had recently received an $130m contract from the US government for retrofit kits to upgrade 42 Vietnam-era Iroquois heavy-lift helicopters (“Hueys”). The State Department was donating the helicopters to Colombia as part of Plan Colombia, a massive aid programme designed to help the country combat coca growers and drug traffickers.

Crack down
Traditionally, of course, money laundering has been a problem for banks, not manufacturers. Just recently, the Bank of International Settlements weighed in on the problem with its own action plan to combat money laundering. That’s nothing new for banks. Financial institutions around the world have been required by various regulators to monitor individual account activity for years.

The rise of the BMPE as an alternative laundering channel is clear evidence that this approach worked. But law enforcement officials insist that similar tactics will not be applied to non-bank businesses. “Our focus was not to try to impose more regulation on the business community,” says Allan Doody, a US Customs special agent whose testimony in 1997 first brought the BMPE to the attention of US Congress. To date, the only similar reporting regulation for US firms has been IRS Form 8300. Companies must file this form whenever they receive payments exceeding $10,000 in cash or cash equivalents, says Matt Magnone, the former district counsel for the Internal Revenue Service in the state of New Jersey. Wire transfers, he adds, are not considered a cash equivalent.

Instead of regulations, Doody and other officials emphasise voluntary co-operation, and praise aggressive anti-money-laundering programmes at firms such as General Electric and Whirlpool. That’s probably a pragmatic approach for governments to take outside the homogeneous and highly regulated banking industry. Debra Clawson, a Whirlpool senior counsel, says the rhetoric of regulation was common in early congressional hearings, “but frankly, I think they realise they can’t do that. The distribution channels for each industry are very different”.

Doody agrees. “To come up with two or three regulations to resolve this thing would be extremely difficult,” he says.

Bank controls failed to protect Bell Helicopter, which apparently relied on them for protection when it wrote the contract for the helicopter sale with Carranza’s representative in Colombia. “We required that the money be in amounts greater than $10,000 and come from established US banks,” explains Michael Cox, a Bell spokesman. “We believed that existing US policies served to help protect us, and that the bank has a responsibility to check that.”

In court documents, Bell attorneys also note that Regions Bank should have stopped the funds long before they got to Bell’s account, “because Regions Bank knowingly transferred to Bell funds that it knew were transferred in violation of the money-laundering statutes”.

Although they wouldn’t comment directly on the pending Bell case, law enforcement officials at several federal agencies scoff at the idea that Bell could have considered this a normal transaction. “When a US company receives payment for its exports in the form of wire transfers, cheques or cash from random third parties with no connection to the underlying transaction, alarm bells should go off,” notes Kelly. “This is not how standard business deals are done.”

Indeed, while they plead for industry co-operation, the myriad federal agencies involved in drug enforcement are also taking an increasingly jaundiced view of firms that still claim ignorance as a defence.

In the know?
In October 1997, former peso broker “Ms. Doe” testified before a House banking subcommittee about the staggering number of well-known companies that had received drug money as payments. Concealed behind a screen and with her voice electronically distorted, she named such companies as Sony, Procter & Gamble, John Deere, Whirlpool, Ford, Kenworth, Johnny Walker, Swatch, Merrill Lynch, Reebok and others. “These companies were paid with US currency generated by narcotics trafficking,” she testified. “They may not have been aware of the source of this money. However, they accepted payments from me without ever questioning who I was or the source of the money.”

But when does accepting payments without question constitute participation in money laundering? This is the crux of the debate between federal prosecutors and companies. To seize payments in a firm’s bank account, “all the government has to do is prove that they are drug proceeds”, says Lester Joseph, assistant chief of the Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section of the Department of Justice in the US. Companies can sue for the return of the money on the grounds that they didn’t know its source, he notes, but “the burden of proof of ‘innocent ownership’ is on the company.” In legal parlance, that means the company had to prove it was not “wilfully blind”.

Wilful blindness, explains former assistant US attorney and money-laundering expert Betty Santangelo, now a partner at New York law firm Schulte, Roth & Zabel, “means the company showed a reckless disregard in setting up its procedures, or didn’t pay enough attention to them”. Says Joseph, “If the red flags are there and a company consciously chooses to disregard them, the government can establish knowledge.”

Not surprisingly, many companies have a sharply different view. Spokesman Cox says that attitude is exactly why Bell is fighting the seizure of its helicopter and money ($433,500) frozen in its Chase Manhattan Bank account. “We have been accused of knowingly being involved in an illegal activity,” he says. “It is a shame to have a name like Bell besmirched by something that is very malleable in its interpretation.”

Many companies note that while they support the law, they are not in the business of enforcing it. “First and foremost, contraband is a problem of law enforcement, and the fight against it will remain a police and government function,” notes Cathy Leiber, vice-president of corporate affairs for Latin America of Philip Morris. In Spain, she adds, the government reduced cigarette smuggling “without feeling the need either to attack manufacturers or impose responsibility on them”.

Asked if he thinks finance organisations are responsible for detecting BMPE payments, Cox says: “You have to stop short of making businesses [into] law- enforcement agencies.” Even GE and Whirlpool, cited by law enforcement officials as model corporate citizens, admit that the system is challenging. “There are many cases when customers have a legitimate reason to pay by third-party cheque,” notes GE attorney Scott Gilbert, who is responsible for the company’s [anti]money-laundering programme. Whirlpool attorney Debra Clawson adds that retail appliance dealers often finance their showroom and warehouse inventories, which results in a third-party payment from the finance company. “That kind of third-party cheque is welcome, but trying to explain that to the government has gotten confusing,” she notes.

Good citizens
As members of the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers, a Washington, DC-based lobbying group, GE and Whirlpool take an active role in explaining their position to the BMPE Working Group—a consortium of law-enforcement agencies with jurisdiction over drugs and money laundering. They’ve also gone further than many companies in adopting the guidelines that result from those discussions.

GE already had a know-your-customer policy and payment restrictions in place in 1994, when executives began hearing complaints from a Colombian distributor who claimed contraband goods were undercutting his sales. A closer look at GE’s US distributors revealed that some of them were violating provisions of their contracts that prohibited export of GE products. “We found some violations, and either educated, warned, or, in some cases, terminated dealer agreements,” notes Gilbert.

Compliance came at a price. “There was a significant reduction of sales in the south Florida market,” he says. Between 1995 and 1999, he says, GE’s compliance programme caused a 20% to 25% market-share loss in south Florida. While some of the lost sales were unauthorised exports, he says, “to some extent, we also lost domestic sales by talking to [distributors] about the need for their own internal controls. I think we tried their patience.”

Compliance policies are far from foolproof. The investigation that led US Customs to Bell Helicopter’s bank account also turned up $47,840 in payments to Federal-Mogul, a Michigan-based auto-parts maker. Spokeswoman Lisa Weber says Federal-Mogul has had formal policies and safeguards in place for years, and audits them on a regular basis. “Money laundering is a major problem,” she says. According to court documents, Federal-Mogul co-operated with the government’s investigation, but it still fought the government’s seizure, noting in court documents that it “has an established history of the same or similar financial transactions ... and that all such transactions represent legitimate business transactions”.

Ironically, co-operating with the government doesn’t eliminate a company’s risk of prosecution, particularly in the multi-agency world of drug enforcement. “No matter what the Treasury Department says, the Department of Justice still tries to make cases,” says Santangelo. “You have one part of the government trying to work with you and another part of the government trying to prosecute you.”

Smuggler’s blues
Of course, the US government is not the only one involved here. With rebel guerrillas controlling a Switzerland-size chunk of the country and their economy in a shambles, Colombian officials take a dim view of US companies’ claims that they cannot help stop the estimated $5 billion in contraband goods that flow through the BMPE. With total legal imports in 1998 of $15 billion, contraband accounted for a full 25% of all imports. In 1998, this cost the Colombian government a precious $840m in taxes and tariffs.

“We have guerrillas surrounding the city and terror bombings here in Colombia, but we won’t give up this fight. We are just asking the international community to help us. As long as drug dealers can launder their money, they will continue their operations,” says Enrique Giraldo, chief of international investigations for DIAN, Colombia’s customs agency. “Companies should be more concerned about their payment operations,” he adds. “Why do they want to wait until they’re in court to be concerned about this?”

Giraldo agrees with the 1999 testimony of DIAN’s former director, Fanny Kertzman, who told Congress: “The Colombian government believes that many of the multinational companies perfectly know the mechanism described above [the BMPE], and are aware of the fact that their products finally enter Colombia.” Recently, however, companies such as Seagrams, United Distillers & Vintners and Philip Morris have signed agreements with DIAN promising to help shut down rogue dealers if DIAN provides documentation and serial numbers about seized goods. That’s a breakthrough, he says, although it’s too early to see results.

Philip Morris signed such an agreement in March 2000. But just two months later, a New York law firm filed a lawsuit on behalf of 25 Colombian states and the city of Bogota, claiming Philip Morris knowingly conspired with smugglers for more than 20 years.

“The suit is wholly without merit,” responds Philip Morris’s Leiber. “The factual allegations of the complaint contain falsehoods, fabrications, distortions and misleading half-truths... We certainly do not engage in and have not engaged in ‘smuggling activities’, ‘money laundering’, ‘wire fraud’ or ‘mail fraud.’ Nor do we do business with so-called peso brokers.”

Despite this heated protest, Philip Morris products frequently turn up in money laundering and smuggling cases. In her testimony before Congress, Kertzman noted that if all the cigarettes arriving in Aruba and Panama—both notorious trans-shipment sites for contraband bound for Colombia—were consumed locally, “each Panamanian or Arubian—men, women and children—would have to smoke ten packs of cigarettes per day”. And one of the firms that had its money seized in the Carranza case was Panamanian company Marlex—a former distributor of Philip Morris products. “Philip Morris terminated its sales to Marlex in 1997,” notes Leiber, “and has taken steps since the end of 1998 to assure that Marlex is not supplied with any products that we sell to our customers.”

First line of defence
Ultimately, the first line of defence for any company is its employees, who must balance a natural desire to make sales and please the customer with the seemingly remote possibility that they will suddenly find themselves awash in cocaine money. That’s exactly what happened to salesman Dwayne Kahl at GE’s Louisville, Kentucky-based appliance division. His delight at landing a $40,000 sale of air conditioners quickly turned to suspicion when the payment arrived. “I had requested a certified cheque,” he says, “and they sent me about 35 money orders. I was really confused. I’d never had that happen.”

Kahl turned to his risk manager, David Purdie, who called the customer. “[He] answered on a cell phone [at what] sounded like a dock,” says Purdie. “He was very short, very abrupt.” Thanks to GE’s anti-money-laundering policy, Purdie asked only a few questions before he hit the mute button and told Kahl they couldn’t accept the sale.

Kahl and Purdie now star in GE’s corporate integrity training video, which not only emphasises GE’s formal know-your-customer and acceptable-payment policies, but also encourages employees to report any concerns about suspicious activity. “We walk away from business, I’m sure, every day around the world,” Keith Sherin, GE’s CFO, notes in the video. “And that’s OK.”

A fistful of pesos
The Colombian Black Market Peso Exchange (BMPE) was formed more than 50 years ago, not to launder drug money, but to offer Colombian importers in need of US dollars an alternative—technically illegal but widely tolerated—to the Colombian Central Bank exchange, which enforced import duties and tariffs. There are six basic steps to laundering drug money through the BMPE:

1. Colombian drug cartels smuggle narcotics into the US, where they are sold for dollars at profits as high as 5,000%.

2. With the dollars in safe houses in the US, the Colombian cartels contact a peso broker (or cambista).

3. The cambista sends his agents in the US to collect the dirty dollars and pays off the drug cartel in Colombian pesos—minus a steep discount of as much as 20% to 40%.

4. The cambista then instructs his contacts in the US—known to law-enforcement officials as “smurfs”—to deposit the money in banks in amounts less than $10,000, to avoid triggering suspicious activity reporting requirements.

5. Colombian importers place orders for US goods, but make their payments in pesos to the cambista. The broker instructs his smurfs to pay for the goods with dollars in their bank accounts, typically via money order or wire transfer, and often with multiple payments.

6. The goods are typically smuggled into Colombia via trans-shipment points such as Panama, Aruba, or even Europe or Asia, then sold in contraband markets in Colombia known as “San Andrecitos”.

An ounce of prevention
Here are some suggestions from company executives and law-enforcement officials about how to guard against the Black Market Peso Exchange and other money laundering schemes:

Red Flags. Beware of commercial customers that have no interest in price discounts, or that lack normal business infrastructure and credit history. Beware of individual consumers making large purchases inconsistent with personal use (three washing machines, for example).

Payment Restrictions. Prohibit cash or wire-transfer payments from third parties, or payments through travellers’ cheques, foreign bank drafts or money orders not drawn on the account of the entity that made the purchase. Payments in cash or money orders should raise red flags.

Know-Your-Customer Rules. Investigate and document the legitimacy of customers, particularly commercial resellers and distributors.

Distributor Contracts. Prohibit distributors from selling goods for export, and audit and enforce these contract provisions (particularly in high-risk regions like southern Florida).

Training and Reporting. Explain to employees how money laundering works, and provide them with a channel to report suspicious transactions. Educate customers (such as retail dealers) on your payment restrictions and policies, and provide them with information to help them comply.

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