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Bitcoin Crime The Almighty Buck

ECB's Christine Lagarde Blasts Bitcoin's Role In Facilitating Money Laundering (bloomberg.com) 126

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde took aim at Bitcoin's role in facilitating criminal activity, saying the cryptocurrency has been enabling "funny business." "For those who had assumed that it might turn into a currency -- terribly sorry, but this is an asset and it's a highly speculative asset which has conducted some funny business and some interesting and totally reprehensible money-laundering activity," Lagarde said in an online event organized by Reuters.

The remarks, made in a conversation largely focused on the euro-area's economic outlook, show top policymakers are taking notice as a speculative fever sweeps cryptocurrency markets. Bitcoin prices have more than doubled since November and topped a record $41,000 earlier this month. Concerns over money laundering and the ability of financial firms to know the identities of their clients have been at the forefront of the cryptocurrency debate. While critics say that instruments like Bitcoin make the illicit transfer of funds easier, crypto advocates say the network of digital ledgers known as the blockchain allows money to be traced more easily than cash and can actually help law enforcement.

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ECB's Christine Lagarde Blasts Bitcoin's Role In Facilitating Money Laundering

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  • Of course! (Score:5, Informative)

    by cusco ( 717999 ) <brian.bixby@[ ]il.com ['gma' in gap]> on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @07:25PM (#60940490)

    Of course she's going to decry anything that takes business away from the incredibly profitable money laundries at Credit Suisse/First Boston, CitiCorp, Goldman Sachs, Deutschebank, etc. I really don't think she has much to worry about, there's only a trillion or so dollars in e-currencies, and the big banks launder at least twice that every year.

    • Re:Of course! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @08:05PM (#60940696)

      But no ransomware maven is going to have his victims send money to an institution that can trace it. Kidnapping died out as a crime because in modern times there is no way of organizing a money drop that can't be surveilled. But just in time, cryptocurrency came along and ransoms became feasible again.

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        Eh, ransomware is peanuts in the larger scheme of the flow of illegal funds. Over a **Trillion** dollars is laundered just through the US (we're the world's largest money laundry), half of that for drug operations. Much of the rest is from weapons sales, frauds, embezzlement, and the like. Ransomware and kidnapping is peanuts in comparison.

  • Basic smearing of the competition. He's going to find reasons to hate any pie he doesn't get a slice of.

    • It's true really. With the elimination of cash control over financial flow has increased enormously. And then they get incensed over what is not yet under their control?

  • by monkeyxpress ( 4016725 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @07:33PM (#60940538)

    How about her and her financial regulator cronies stop handing out deferred prosecution agreements to the likes of HSBC, who were caught laundering industrial quantities of Mexican drug money, and instead ban the bank from operating in western countries and stuff some of the directors in jail?

    And while they're at it how about ceasing to print industrial quantities of money to fund asset speculation while forcing austerity on the real economy?

    Like most central bankers, Lagarde is an idiot stooge, and criticising bitcoin is an easy way to pretend she is fighting for the little facilitating her wealthy mate's hoovering up of all the actual useful assets in the world.

    • ...fighting for the little guy, while facilitating...

    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Shut down international money laundering and you'll lose every large bank on the planet. Just in the US it brings in $100-$150 billion in profit every year.

      • Shut down international money laundering and you'll lose every large bank on the planet. Just in the US it brings in $100-$150 billion in profit every year.

        Not really. Money laundering has costs. Some of it is for perfectly innocuous activities like providing cannabis to willing adult users, but some of it is for human trafficking, and there's a whole spectrum in between. Laundering those funds makes those activities profitable, and they would be much reduced without easy means of doing that.

        • by cusco ( 717999 )

          Of course money laundering has costs, that's why banks charge 10-15 percent of the amount being processed in their 'private banking' departments. It's almost al profit though, as the transactions are generally programmed actions that take place in seconds without human intervention.

    • and instead ban the bank from operating

      Just what do you think would happen to the likes of *you* when this happens? It's all good and fine to expect a bank to be treated like every other business, but remember they aren't "too big to fail" because of underhanded deals with people in power, they are "too big to fail" because of the knock on effects on western economies, businesses and ordinary people. Heck you just proposed banning the company which holds 25% of the value of the largest financial economy of the Europe continent both corporate and

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        Heck you just proposed banning the company which holds 25% of the value of the largest financial economy of the Europe

        See I think we need to recognize the problem is what you just said there. The same can be said for JPM, BoA, Wells Fargo and Citi in the US. We have an identical problem in the insurance industry with the likes of AIG.

        This is really a cross roads. There are three possible solutions.

        1) Do Nothing accept these institutions are just going to exist beyond the law to the degree they do now and that their leadership will have an out-sized amount of influence in society. (Its really always kind been this way)

        2) N

    • by Tom ( 822 )

      She's definitely someone who should be in jail or at least in court instead of in a public office.

      That doesn't mean what she says is false, though.

  • This is about control. The financial industry, politicians and bureaucrats thought they had it fixed with cash going by the wayside. No more anonymity plus negative interest rates. And along comes cryptocurrency to crash the party.

  • There wouldn't be a trillion dollars in crypto-currency if a whole lot of people didn't feel the need to usurp the big banking system.

    Any time there is a system that locks humans out, a secondary market will appear.

    --
    And yet the true creator is necessity, which is the mother of invention. - Aristotle

  • For legal and tax purposes, yeah, bitcoin is generally treated as an asset by governments.

    But any damn thing is a currency if enough people collectively agree that it is one.

    END COMMUNICATION

  • ... is not a crime.

    • When YOU have MY money, it is.

      And that is what money laundering is. Disguising that it came from criminal activity. Aka from stealing or generally just taking things form people.

      At least that is the implication here.
      Certainly not all the Bitcoins.
      But, let's say, a high enough statistical likeliness.

      I'd suggest thinking about how to differentiate the two.

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        Disguising that it came from criminal activity.

        Maybe I just don't want my client list perused by government officials.

        But, let's say, a high enough statistical likeliness.

        Lets ask black people how they like to be harassed for the "statistical likeliness" of committing a crime.

        Sorry. But unless you have evidence of a crime, take it to court and get a decision from the judge, the money I have is mine. Innocent until proven guilty and all that other nonsense.

      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        A lot of criminal activity is not stealing. Drug selling for instance is like any other manufacturing business in that you are producing and selling a product to willing purchasers, it just happens to be illegal.

      • by mad7777 ( 946676 )
        "Aka from stealing or generally just taking things form people."

        You just neatly summarized the concept of taxation. And that is what "money laundering" is largely about: avoiding being robbed by the state (and your friendly bank, which is pretty much the same thing).
  • Was to be able to move cash around without government oversight. Which you can do, but not at the exchanges as much anymore.

    • but an shop owner does not want be holding the bag when the price jumps and they really want to price in units with an sign saying today an unit is X btc? that can in some cases make them lose an lot if there is an big drop or they did not exchange before the drop. And servers may have law suits over tips.

  • Ledgers are just a mean of accounting a protocol so to speak. It just so happens that blockchains are just more honest version of our other financial databases. She's unhappy as the ECB adding zeros to their account is a failing strategy. Long live crypto!
  • Don't forget. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @07:54PM (#60940644) Homepage
    Driving up graphics card prices and causing shortages.
    Stolen server time to 'mine'.
    Contributing to global warming (climate change) by wasting electricity.
    Wasting news headlines.
    Such a waste of resources in general.

    -Bitwaste.
    • by JK89 ( 2038908 )
      Banks consume huge amount of electricity to operate to achieve the same task. Just think of the airmiles their employees rack up going on holiday. The high rise, air conditioned, always lit offices. Please compare apples to apples.
      • by Ed Avis ( 5917 )
        Banks and payment companies have physical offices but they handle billions of times more payment volume than Bitcoin. They are far more energy efficient. That's one reason why it doesn't cost you $50 every time you make a payment.
    • One of the big three big contributors to pollution and global warming is the car. Govs need to at least double the cost of fuel. THey also need to charge businesses that demand their workers come to the office, eg banks should be forced to send staff to their local relative to their home branch and not some far away etc.
    • by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

      Oh no, you can't play video games at an ideal FPS for cheap... what a waste.

      • So that's what you focus on from the GP's list? Were you born an idiot or did you learn that in idiot school?

  • But slashdot keeps telling me bitcoins are worthless tulips!

  • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @08:07PM (#60940706)
    Given the use of it in ransomeware, etc. you have to wonder.
    • by Arethan ( 223197 )

      I doubt bitcoin was created by criminals with criminal use in mind. To me, it seems far too likely that bitcoin is just another one of tech's odd pet projects that somehow got suddenly popular and fell off the originally intended rails. It happens a lot more than we might recognize; just look at Facebook: a website built by nerds to rate women on college campus, sortable by sexual availability.

    • Given the use of it in ransomeware, etc. you have to wonder.

      Of course! How many other world-changing technologies have been invented by an anonymous pseudonym?

  • Come on, when has such a position (ECB, Federal Reserve, etc) not been filled by a Goldman Sachs mole?

  • Easy way to kill BC (Score:3, Informative)

    by AlexHilbertRyan ( 7255798 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @08:30PM (#60940830)
    Make it illegal to transfer funds between banks and BC stores.
    • Make it illegal to transfer funds between banks and BC stores.

      Sounds like a plan.

      So, are YOU going to tell Greed N. Corruption about giving up their $35,000 coins, or are you going to make someone else do it?

  • Its always those that use it for nefarious means that are to blame. This person is clearly an idiot when it comes to technology.
    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      Any new technology is going to be used for nefarious means first.
      Any technology that is new will attract less attention, methods of monitoring it take time to develop.

      Existing mature technologies already have monitoring and regulation in place, so nefarious users will always be on the look out for alternatives. Non nefarious users are less likely to embrace a new technology as they don't suffer from the existing ones as much as the nefarious users do.

  • by MrBrklyn ( 4775 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @09:57PM (#60941170) Homepage Journal

    I am not a fan of bitcoin and I certainly am not in love with its use in ghetto communities to launderer drug money, but so BE IT. The purpose of civil rights is to make government less easy. That is the core principle. There is no right for the Government to solve every crime as easy as possible. For better or worst, our lives are controlled by citizens. and should not be controlled by government, because government has proven to be the most dangerous criminal organization of them all. It is not impossible to fight crime when bitcoins are involved. It just means the cops and the FBI has to get off there chairs and actually do work. It would help if the FBI would not break any laws, themselves, and stop being a political power broken in the US government. Then they can find time to do their jobs.

  • EU, US and others should have made owning Bitcoin illegal, when they had the chance. Too late now, too many powerful people have too much invested in it. In due time, money laundering will be the least of the central bankers' problems. Just wait till the world's billionaires start keeping their wealth in crypto instead of euros and dollars, and governments can no longer finance their deficits by printing money.
    • No, billionaires are not going to keep their wealth in a crypto currency that a single hacker can permanently take away from them. Not to mention the high chance of losing much of that wealth due to crypto's extreme fluctuations in value.

      Which, by the way, is part of the reason banning bitcoin is easy. All that's necessary is for some prominent politicians to *talk* about banning it (due to money laundering, excess carbon generation, or whatever other reason) and there will be a panic as some people sell be

    • Re:Should be illegal (Score:4, Informative)

      by ledow ( 319597 ) on Thursday January 14, 2021 @05:17AM (#60942174) Homepage

      There's no need to make it illegal. That would be like making possessing flour illegal because some criminals are converting their monies to flour in order to sent it internationally and then convert it back to cash.

      What you do is exactly what they've done - implementing money laundering rules which means that banks etc. do not deal with things that they don't know the origin/destination of.

      Paypal say they're going to take Bitcoin. But only between registered Paypal users. There's a reason for that - they're an EU bank and they're required to know who their customers are so that money trails can be followed.

      Bitcoin is just a way to - quite literally - launder that information away so that source/destination are unknown. Which is the prime indicator/vector of money laundering.

      And the anti-money-laundering laws are all there. Some banks won't even let you fund an account with an online Bitcoin wallet, or accept money back from Bitcoin exchanges - they block the transaction because the entity at the other end doesn't co-operate in money-laundering investigations so they get blacklisted. I had a pittance of Bitcoin in an old wallet and the only way to get it out - after weeks of trying - and into something I could spend was to trust a random, unknown third-party off-shore website to convert it to an Amazon voucher for me. Quite literally a risk, because I'm reliant on them to take my money and return a legitimate voucher and I have no idea who they are! The only other options for me were dealing with untraceable private individuals on the basis of a 5-star rating on an untraceable website, where - again - I send them the Bitcoin and hope that they then recompense me into my bank somehow. And even then - the banks warn that things like that are dodgy and they may refuse the transaction.

      And what people miss - money laundering isn't about drug-dealers and smugglers. Those people could pay in stolen jewellery or melted down gold or weapons. Currency is probably the antithesis of their operation.

      It's tax evasion that they're worried about. And if there's one thing you don't want to be investigated for, hounded for, subject to audit for, etc. then it's tax evasion. That's how they got Capone, remember.

      Bitcoin will just roll on, alternatives will come and go, people will trade and barter in anything that's available - including Bitcoin - but at the end of the day you either have to find someone willing to put their name to transactions and provide services which are visible to banking, tax authorities, etc. and subject to money-laundering, or you have to deal on what is effectively a black market and trust.

  • I think bitcoin isn't blasted enough for facilitating global warming. It's ability to indefinitely disguise money laundering is dubious at best, as all transactions are logged permanently, in a way that makes them implicitly identifiable (even if expensive to do so).

    • > I think bitcoin isn't blasted enough for facilitating global warming.

      Legacy financial systems use at least two orders of magnitude more energy than Bitcoin. Way more than aluminum even. And that's not counting all the wasted man-hours.

      If you care about the planet you want Bitcoin to replace legacy finance.

      • > I think bitcoin isn't blasted enough for facilitating global warming.

        Legacy financial systems use at least two orders of magnitude more energy than Bitcoin. Way more than aluminum even.

        Given the size of the average bank in the US, I'd certainly say so.

        And that's not counting all the wasted man-hours.

        If you care about the planet you want Bitcoin to replace legacy finance.

        Unfortunately what you call "wasted" man-hours, millions around the world call that employment. MOAR humans, means MOAR jobs.

      • Legacy currencies facilitate far far more than two orders of magnitude more transactions than Bitcoin.

      • by Moloth ( 2793915 )

        Wait... how much does it cost the fed to bring billions of dollars into existance vs bitcoin mining billions of dollars. I think bitcoin wastes way more juice.

  • Bitcoin can't be used to launder money, that's Deutsch Bank's job! Won't someone think of those poor fraudulent accountants???
  • Oh, speculating. Speculating, money laundering ... and very little else.
  • I'm highly skeptical of this claim. I don't think you have any idea how many bitcoin mining farms are out there.

  • Any time central banks want to limit people's use of cash they roll out money laundering in the same way that QAnon and others roll out paedophilia when they want to smear opponents.

    Lagarde (the destroyer of Argentina's economy) is unhappy about cash because it prevents her and other banks from levying negative interest rates on normal savings. Basically, they worry that if they start charging people for saving then they will simply take their money out and stuff it under the mattress because 0% interest is

  • Malware uses obviously, due to rogue nations it allows almost trivial criminal money transfers.

    Anyone who pretends cryptocurrency does not massively facilitate crime is a liar or an idiot.

  • Has anyone considered that the AML 'problem' is just a wool screen? I think the real problem for Lagarde, is that investors have an alternative to pile into as opposed to: 1. Equities (either failing or becoming overpriced) 2. Currencies (probably being printed in bulk) 3. Gold that is in demand, expensive, and I presume largely now held/sold by Central banks? What are your thoughts on this?
  • Obviously it's an attempt to make dumb people believe Bitcoin was bad because bad people use it. But it doesn't need a lot of thinking for anyone to realise that criminals use the Euro, too, and it doesn't make the Euro bad. Criminals then love sports cars and when criminals love Bitcoin might Bitcoin be in fact as great as sports cars! ...

    Either is she trying to bank on the stupidity of people or she doesn't understand crypto currencies and doesn't know their disadvantages. It creates a weak picture of som

  • I'm hearing these days that BTC is a hedge against inflation, similar to gold. Let's look at this, inflation rates can devalue money by 2-3% in the last decade: https://www.usinflationcalcula... [usinflatio...ulator.com] And worst case ~15% in the last 50 years. BTC can lose that in a day.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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