Anti Money Laundering

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BSP briefer on the Ai

A Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas briefer on the Anti-Money Laundering Act of


2001

1. What is money laundering?

Money laundering is an act or series or combination of acts whereby proceeds of an unlawful


activity, whether in cash, property or other assets, are converted, concealed or disguised to make
them appear to have originated from legitimate sources. One way of laundering money is
through the financial system. Republic Act No. 9160, otherwise known as the Anti-Money
Laundering Act of 2001 (AMLA), as amended, defined money laundering as a scheme whereby
proceeds of an unlawful activity are transacted or attempted to be transacted, thereby making
them appear to have originated from legitimate sources.

2. What has the Philippine government done to curb money laundering?

The government enacted Republic Act (R.A.) No. 9160 (The Anti-Money Laundering Act of
2001), which took effect on 17 October 2001. Certain provisions of AMLA were amended
by R.A. No. 9194(An Act Amending R.A. 9160) effective 23 March 2003. It has also issued the
Revised Implementing Rules and Regulations (RIRR) implementing R.A. No. 9160, as amended.

3. What are considered unlawful activities under the AMLA, as amended?

There are 14 unlawful activities or predicate crimes covered by the AMLA. These are, in the
order enumerated in the law:

Kidnapping for ransom


Drug offenses
Graft and corrupt practices
Plunder
Robbery and extortion
Jueteng and masiao
Piracy on the high seas
Qualified theft
Swindling
Smuggling
Electronic Commerce crimes
Hijacking, destructive arson and murder, including those perpetrated against non-
combatant persons (terrorist acts)
Securities fraud
Felonies or offenses of a similar nature punishable under penal laws of other countries
4. How is money laundered through the financial system?

Placement involves initial placement or introduction of the illegal funds into the financial
system. Financial institutions are usually used at this point.

Layering involves a series of financial transactions during which the dirty money is passed
through a series of procedures, putting layer upon layer of persons and financial activities into
the laundering process. Ex. wire transfers, use of shell corporations, etc.

Integration the money is once again made available to the criminal with the occupational and
geographic origin obscured or concealed. The laundered funds are now integrated back into the
legitimate economy through the purchase of properties, businesses and other investments.

5. Why is Money Laundering a problem?

Money laundering allows criminals to preserve and enjoy the proceeds of their crimes, thus
providing them with the incentives and the means to continue their illegal activities. At the same
time, it provides them the opportunity to appear in public like legitimate entrepreneurs.
Organized crime, through money laundering, is known to have the capacity to destabilize
governments and undermine their financial systems. It is thus a threat to national security.

6. What are the salient features of the law?

It criminalizes money laundering, meaning it makes money laundering a crime, and


provides penalties for its commission, including hefty fines and imprisonment.
It states clearly the determination of the government to prevent the Philippines from
becoming a haven for money laundering, while ensuring to preserve the integrity and
confidentiality of good bank accounts.
It creates an Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC) that is tasked to oversee the
implementation of the law and to act as a financial intelligence unit to receive and
analyze covered and suspicious transaction reports.
It establishes the rules and the administration process for the prevention, detection and
prosecution of money laundering activities.
It relaxes the bank deposit secrecy laws authorizing the AMLC and the Bangko Sentral
ng Pilipinas access to deposit and investment accounts in specific circumstances.
It requires covered institutions to report covered and suspicious transactions and to
cooperate with the government in prosecuting offenders. It also requires them to know
their customers and to safely keep all records of their transactions.
It carries provisions to protect innocent parties by providing penalties for causing the
disclosure to the public of confidential information contained in the covered and
suspicious transactions.
It establishes procedures for international cooperation and assistance in the apprehension
and prosecution of money laundering suspects.

7. What is the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC)? What are its powers?

The AMLC is the Philippines financial intelligence unit, which is tasked to implement the
AMLA. It is composed of the Governor of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) as Chairman &
the Commissioner of the Insurance Commission (IC) and the Chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) as members. The AMLC is authorized to:

Require and receive covered or suspicious transaction reports from covered institutions.
Issue orders to determine the true identity of the owner of any monetary instrument or
property that is the subject of a covered or suspicious transaction report, and to request
the assistance of a foreign country if the Council believes it is necessary.
Institute civil forfeiture and all other remedial proceedings through the Office of the
Solicitor General.
Cause the filing of complaints with the Department of Justice or the Ombudsman for the
prosecution of money laundering offenses.
Investigate suspicious transactions, covered transactions deemed suspicious, money
laundering activities and other violations of the AMLA.
Secure the order of the Court of Appeals to freeze any monetary instrument or property
alleged to be the proceeds of unlawful activity.
Implement such measures as may be necessary and justified to counteract money
laundering.
Receive and take action on any request from foreign countries for assistance in their own
anti-money laundering operations.
Develop educational programs to make the public aware of the pernicious effects of
money laundering and how they can participate in bringing the offenders to the fold of
the law.
Enlist the assistance of any branch of government for the prevention, detection and
investigation of money laundering offenses and the prosecution of offenders. In this
connection, the AMLC can require intelligence agencies of the government to divulge
any information that will facilitate the work of the Council in going after money
launderers.
Impose administrative sanctions on those who violate the law, and the rules, regulations,
orders and resolutions issued in connection with the enforcement of the law.
8. What are the covered institutions?

Banks, offshore banking units, quasi-banks, trust entities, non-stock savings and loan
associations, pawnshops, and all other institutions, including their subsidiaries and
affiliates supervised and/or regulated by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP)
Insurance companies, holding companies and all other institutions supervised or
regulated by the Insurance Commission (IC)
Securities dealers, brokers, pre-need companies, foreign exchange corporations,
investment houses, trading advisers, as well as other entities supervised or regulated by
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

9. What are the Customer Identification Requirements KYC (Know Your Customer
Rule)?

Covered institutions shall:

Establish and record the true identity of their clients based on official documents.
In case of individual clients, maintain a system of verifying the true identity of their
clients.
In case of corporate clients, require a system verifying their legal existence and
organizational structure, as well as the authority and identification of all persons
purporting to act in their behalf.
Establish appropriate systems and methods based on internationally compliant standards
and adequate internal controls for verifying and recording the true and full identify of
their customers.
10. What are the Record-Keeping Requirements?

All covered institutions shall:

Maintain and safely store all records of all their transactions for five years from the
transaction dates;
Ensure that said records/files contain the full and true identity of the owners or holders of
the accounts involved in the covered transactions and all other identification documents;
Undertake the necessary adequate measures to ensure the confidentiality of such files;
Prepare and maintain documentation, in accordance with client identification
requirements, on their customer accounts, relationships and transactions such that any
account, relationship or transaction can be so reconstructed as to enable the AMLC and/or
the courts to establish an audit trail for money laundering;
Maintain and safely store all records of existing and new accounts and of new
transactions for 5 years from October 17, 2001 or from the dates of the accounts or
transactions, whichever is later;
Anent closed accounts, preserve and safely store the records on customer identification,
account files and business correspondence for at least 5 years from the dates they were
closed;
If a money laundering case based on any record kept by the covered institution has been
filed in court, retain said files until it is confirmed that the case has been finally resolved
or terminated by the court; and
Retain records as originals in such forms as are admissible in court
11. What are covered transactions?
Transaction in cash or other equivalent monetary instruments involving a total amount in excess
of P500,000.00 within one business day.

12. What are suspicious transactions?

Transactions, regardless of the amount involved, where the following circumstances exist:

a. there is no underlying legal or trade obligation, purpose or economic justification;

b.the client is not properly identified;

c. the amount involved is not commensurate with the business or financial capacity of the client;

d. taking into account all known circumstances, it may be perceived that the clients transaction
is structured in order to avoid being the subject of reporting requirements under the Act;

e. any circumstance relating to the transaction which is observed to deviate from the profile of
the client and/or the clients past transactions with the covered institution;

f. the transaction is in any way related to an unlawful activity or offense under this Act that is
about to be, is being or has been committed; or

g. any transaction that is similar or analogous to the foregoing.

13. What are the reporting requirements?

Covered institutions shall report to the AMLC all covered transactions and suspicious
transactions within five working days from occurrence thereof, unless the Supervision Authority
(the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the Securities and Exchange Commission, or the Insurance
Commission) prescribes a longer period not exceeding ten working days. Should a transaction be
determined to be both a covered transaction and a suspicious transaction, it shall be reported as
suspicious transaction.

14. How is reporting done?

The reports on covered and/or suspicious transactions shall be accomplished in the prescribed
formats and submitted within five business days from occurrence of the transactions in a secured
manner to the AMLC in electronic form, either via diskettes, leased lines, or through internet
facilities. The corresponding hard copy for suspicious transactions shall be sent to AMLC at the
5th Floor EDPC Building, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Complex, Manila, Philippines. All
pawnshops should coordinate with the AMLC thru tel. nos. 523-4421, 521-5662 or 302-3979 on
reporting requirements, procedures and deadlines.

15. Are there sanctions for failure to report covered or suspicious transactions and non-
compliance with R.A. 9160, as amended?

Sanctions/penalties shall be imposed on pawnshops that will fail to comply with the provisions
of R.A. 9160, as amended.

16. What are the sanctions for failure to report covered or suspicious transactions?

Any person, required to report covered and suspicious transactions failed to do so will be
subjected to penalty of 6 months to 4 years imprisonment or a fine of not less than P100,000.00
but not more than P500,000.00, or both.

17. Are there confidentiality restrictions on the reporting of covered transaction and/or
suspicious transaction?

When reporting covered transactions or suspicious transactions to the AMLC, covered


institutions and their officers and employees, are prohibited from communicating, directly or
indirectly, in any manner or by any means, to any person, entity, the media, the fact that a
covered or suspicious transaction report was made, the contents thereof, or any other information
in relation thereto. Neither may such reporting be published or aired in any manner or form by
the mass media, electronic mail, or other similar devices. In case of violation thereof, the
concerned officer, and employee, of the covered institution, or media shall be held criminally
liable.

18. What are the other offenses punishable under the AMLA, as amended?

a. Failure to keep records is committed by any responsible official or employee of a covered


institution who fails to maintain and safely store all records of transactions for 5 years from the
dates the transactions were made or when the accounts were closed. The penalty is 6 months to 1
year imprisonment or a fine of not less than P100,000.00 but not more than P500,000.00, or both.

b. Malicious reporting is committed by any person who, with malice or in bad faith, reports or
files a completely unwarranted or false information regarding a money laundering transaction
against any person. The penalty is 6 months to 4 years imprisonment and a fine of not less than
P100,000.00 but not more than P500,000.00. The offender is not entitled to the benefits of the
Probation Law.

c. Breach of Confidentiality. For this offense, the penalty is 3 to 8 years imprisonment and a fine
of not less than P500,000.00 but not more than P1 million. In case the prohibited information is
reported by media, the responsible reporter, writer, president, publisher, manager, and editor-in-
chief are held criminally liable.

d. Administrative offenses. The AMLC, after due investigation, can impose fines from
P100,000.00 to P500,000.00 on officers and employees of covered institutions or any person
who violates the provisions of the AMLA, as amended, the Implementing Rules and Regulations,
and orders and resolutions issued pursuant thereto.

News about Anti-Money Laundering:

Banker warns vs knee-jerk moves to stop money laundering

MANILA A systematic rather than a piece-meal solution is needed by the


Philippines to address cracks in the financial system that may further be exploited by prospective
money launderers, according to a veteran banker.

Alberto Villarosa, chair of the Security Bank and a former president of the Bankers
Association of the Philippines (BAP), has warned against going from one extreme to another
in terms of policy-making even as the banking system assesses the consequences of the recent
Bangladesh cyber-heist proceeds from which slipped through the country.

From my personal standpoint, not reflective of BAPs view, we should be careful from
going into one extreme to another from (having to) tighten rules regulations so much that you
choke business, Villarosa said.

Its like counting, you may be too fixated on counting the beans that you forget to
generate the beans in the first place, he said.

When asked about the proposed amendments to laws to give more teeth to the Anti-
Money Laundering Council, expand the coverage of the Anti-Money Laundering Legislation and
ease bank secrecy laws, he called these very complex issues. He noted that when the bank
secrecy act was enacted years ago and applied to the foreign currency deposit unit (FCDU)
framework, there were certain reasons for it.

The dilemma now is whether the rules of the game must be changed in reaction to recent
problems, according to Villarosa.
In February, some $81 million in dirty money stolen by cyber-hackers from the central
bank of Bangladesh was wired to the Jupiter branch of the Rizal Commercial Banking Corp.
This is now the subject of an ongoing probe by the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee chaired by
Sen. Teofisto TG Guingona III. Villarosa said easing the bank secrecy law should depend on
certain circumstances that would trigger opening up of bank accounts. Its difficult to put in a
hard rule on that, he said. You dont want it to be the subject of a witch-hunt.

At the end of the day, he said it would be all about making sure that banks would
safeguard risks, processes and compliance. But we have to balance the business needs, he
said. Like in rearing children, if parents became too restrictive on the kids, the more they would
become problematic, Villarosa said.Its a systemic solution, he said. Its looking at the entire
financial system which includes the banks and non-banks as well. SFM

References:

Abadilla, D. D. (2016, April). Banker warns vs knee-jerk moves to stop money


laundering ... Retrieved July 2, 2016, from http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/781875/banker-
warns-vs-knee-jerk-moves-to-stop-money-laundering

Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. Retrieved July 2, 2016,


from

http://www.gov.ph/2012/02/21/bsp-briefer-on-anti-money-laundering-act-of-2001/

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