|
|
|
|
|
by CPLX
3044 days ago
|
|
The article is pretty clear about this. The people who borrow the cash spend it. Often lavishly, they take it to casinos and so on. They are very wealthy people and have that kind of lifestyle, but their problem is that they can't get their money out of China. They borrow against the property by accepting this Canadian cash, and then repay the loan in China via the banking system there. Both parties need to launder money, one in one direction and one in the other, that's the obvious beauty of the scheme. |
|
1. Own property.
2. Borrow big bag of cash from Bad Guy.
3. Gamble or spend the cash.
4. Pay back the loan from clean sources.
I understand it, but I guess I have never dealt with the KYC people at a casino. I still see obvious choke points (for the conversion of drug-laden currency into gambling chips, for instance) at which Explanations Must Be Made, but perhaps there are channels that I do not know about.
Let’s just say my experiences with the KYC systems have been rigorous.