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Subscribe to our news service at HERE Two businessmen have been sentenced in connection with a money laundering scheme in which €1.4 million was transferred into their shared bank account from unwitting German investors.
Wesley Williams (46), of Foxlodge Manor, Ratoath, Co Meath, was sentenced to two and a half years in prison after he pleaded guilty to one count of making a gain for himself in the scheme which took place over a decade ago. His co-accused, Silvio Rabbitte (55), was given a fully-suspended sentence of two years at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court after his counsel said he had been “duped” and ought to have known that the scheme was “too good to be true”. Rabbitte, of Woodberry Gardens, Castleknock, Dublin, pleaded guilty to one count of impeding the apprehension of Wesley Williams on dates between September 2012 and July 2014. He has no previous convictions. At a hearing on Wednesday, the court heard that Rabbitte received €350,000 after €1.4 million from German investors was transferred into an account⁰ he shared with Williams, as co-directors of a company called One-Stop Shop Catering Ltd. Detective Garda Deirdre Heneghan, of the Garda National Economic Crime Bureau, told Fiona Crawford BL, prosecuting, that a garda operation was set up in October 2012, investigating the transfer of €4 million from injured parties in Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands into Irish bank accounts. The court heard that on October 30th, 2012, four transactions totalling €420,000 came from two German accounts into the bank account of which Rabbitte and Williams were both signatories. The following month, on November 9th, a further €1 million came into the account from Germany. Det Gda Heneghan said the money was transferred by German injured parties who believed they were making an investment and that they would have access to the bank account into which they had transferred the money. None of the money was recovered, the court heard. RecordingsRabbitte was arrested and a laptop containing some phone call recordings was seized. He told gardaí that Williams owed him money and said he only had knowledge of the €420,000 coming into the account, and not the €1 million. The court heard that the guilty plea to impeding the apprehension of Williams was entered on the basis that Rabbitte signed a contract in the days before the money entered the account, which made it harder for Williams to be prosecuted and gave a “veneer of respectability” to the transaction. Mark Lynam SC, defending, said Rabbitte's culpability was on the basis of recklessness. He said Rabbitte was a successful businessman who became involved in land dealings with Williams during the Celtic Tiger era. After some initial success, these business deals started to falter, and Williams owed Rabbitte a large sum of money, defence counsel said. Williams and another associate, Simon Gold, then came to Rabbitte with a proposal that they get involved in 'trades', whereby they would receive a commission for allowing so-called investment monies to come through their account. Rabbitte got financial advice in relation to the matter and was told that if he was satisfied as to the legitimacy of the funds, then it could be done. Defence counsel said Rabbitte was told he did not need to know about the specifics of the transfer, but “from his knowledge of Mr Williams, he ought to have had a gimlet eye over the details of this”. Mr Lynam said phone recordings taken from Rabbitte's computer were from a phone he had lent to Williams, and included phone calls between Williams and Gold in which they alluded to the fact that Rabbitte was not privy to all the details of the transaction. “He was being duped about things,” Mr Lynam said, adding that Rabbitte “ought to have known this was too good to be true”. He said Rabbitte was anxious to have the money repaid and to be done with Williams. Gold (59), of Windy Ridge House, Cartontroy, Athlone, Co Westmeath was jailed for seven and a half years in 2019 after he was found guilty by a jury of money laundering, theft, deception and control of false instruments on dates between January 1st, 2010, and October 22nd, 2012. The court heard last year that he had already been released from prison. The court heard this money went back into Rabbitte's business, but that the Criminal Assets Bureau had also seized €190,000. Testimonials Mr Lynam handed in a large number of testimonials from Rabbitte's colleagues, employees, family and friends, which described how he has worked hard at his business, which has 26 employees, and that his life revolves around his family. In a letter handed into court, his wife described how she was in hospital frequently during the period in question and Rabbitte was under pressure minding his three children and managing the business. He was described as “generous to a fault”, which defence counsel said explained how Williams “insinuated himself” into Rabbitte's affairs. The court heard that Rabbitte had given the sum of €235,000 to his solicitors to be forwarded to the injured parties as a demonstration of his remorse. Paul Comiskey O'Keeffe BL, defending Williams, said his client did not have the same moral culpability as Gold, adding: “There were others at the coalface with a higher level of culpability.” Mr Comiskey O'Keeffe said Williams was married with four children and had a long history of employment in his family’s business. Williams pleaded early, has no previous convictions, and was unlikely to come to adverse attention in the future, the court heard. A letter was handed in from Williams’ father, from a family friend and from other friends and family members, praising his character and pointing out how involved he was in the care of his mother. The court heard that Williams has been attending one-to-one therapy for over two years addressing his issues of drug dependence. Judge Martin Nolan responded by saying that Williams was “at the higher end of misbehaviour” in the criminal enterprise of inducing others to part with their monies. “Williams provided the apparatus of bank accounts to get away with the money,” Judge Nolan said. He accepted that Williams had substantial mitigation, including his family responsibilities and his good record, entitling him to a 50 per cent reduction on a headline sentence of five years. Judge Nolan said he was “suspicious” of Rabbitte, whom he described as an experienced businessman who “knows the ways of the world”, but added that he could not be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of his suspicions. He ordered Rabbitte to forward the sum of €235,000 to the victims in the case. The case was listed for mention in March to deal with an allegation of theft of a €15,000 watch faced by Williams. https://www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/two-businessmen-sentenced-in-connection-with-e1-4m-money-laundering-scheme-1585875.html
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Subscribe to our news service at HERE Teenagers in secondary school, and some in third level, were paid thousands of euro to allow their bank accounts be used by a fraud gang recruiting in Co Kerry, only to be caught and convicted. While some of the younger offenders were dealt with under the Garda’s junior liaison scheme, others were convicted under anti-terrorism and money-laundering legislation.
The young people were working as so-called mules to facilitate money-laundering by a fraud gang, with controlling members based in Ireland and abroad. Each student allowed between €2,000 and €65,000 to pass through their accounts, for payments of between 10 and 15 per cent of the core sums. News of the scale of the operation in Kerry first emerged in The Irish Times two years ago when it was revealed about 50 young people had been recruited by one of their peers in the community. They surrendered their bank account details, and logins, so money from online frauds could be moved and laundered through the accounts. The Kerryman newspaper on Tuesday reported the total amount that passed through the accounts of the young suspects in Co Kerry reached €1.3 million. While that sum is not large on a national scale, it is a new departure for an organised crime network in the county. The bank accounts used were with mainstream banks and other institutions allowing for accounts to be opened online, including Revolut, N26 and TransferWise. Some of the mules, aged 16-20 years, allowed more than one of their accounts to be used. Det Sgt Ernie Henderson, from the Divisional Crime Team in Kerry, said the money that passed through the accounts had been stolen in scams involving bogus texts and emails – known as vishing and smishing – to unsuspecting people and companies. This tricked them into sending money to the accounts controlled by the gang. In other cases, the scammers extracted victims’ bank account details to steal their money, by transferring it into the young people’s accounts they controlled. Det Sgt Henderson confirmed some of the young people were prosecuted under the Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Act 2010, with more than 30 Kerry-based mules already dealt with. He added this would disbar them from many opportunities, including securing visas for travel and work abroad and many other job opportunities. Det Sgt Henderson said some of the senior personnel, known as “herders”, in the gang were using Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and other platforms “recruiting people to make easy money” by allowing their accounts to be used. “In this particular operation, it was a person that was known to [the young people in Kerry] and living in the community here,” he said of the man recruiting the students in the Tralee area. “That matter is still currently under investigation for him.” https://www.irishtimes.com/crime-law/2024/01/31/kerry-based-money-mules-laundered-13m-for-fraud-gang/ Subscribe to our news service at HERE [At councilor level, this person is not likely to be a PEP in Ireland]
A former Fine Gael councillor and hotelier has been charged with money laundering of more than €2.6m. Frank Kilbride (69) appeared before Longford District Court last Tuesday following a long-running investigation by gardaí based in Cavan. Mr Kilbride was released on bail after being charged with three separate money-laundering offences and is due to appear before the same court on December 5. The defendant, of Aughakilmore, Ballinalee, Co Longford, is a well-known figure in the world of country music and has also appeared on national TV. He is a former presenter on a local radio station. Subscribe to our news service at HERE Irish prosecutors dropped money laundering and tax charges against a woman who had been due to stand trial at the Special Criminal Court, just five days after her ex-IRA partner pleaded guilty to similar tax offences.
Jennifer Dunne (38), of Richmond, Blackrock, Co Dublin, had been accused of six money laundering offences relating to three AIB accounts between January 1st, 2018, and December 31st, 2019, and a further three counts of failing to furnish tax returns between October 31st, 2018 and October 31st, 2020. At the Special Criminal Court on Tuesday, Dominic McGinn SC, for the State, told the non-jury court that certain documents had now been received by the State and that all nine charges against Ms Dunne were no longer being pursued by the Director of Public Prosecutions, in what is known as a 'nolle prosequi' application. Subscribe to our news service at HERE Do you think she saw this coming??
‘Psychic medium’ who conned man into giving her €10,000 is jailed. Debbie Paget was “an old-fashioned confidence trickster”. Jailed for a year after she got a man to give her €10,000 by telling him his dead father had told her that if he didn’t give her the money “the devil would take his soul”. Paget was criminally liable as she had taken large sums of money under threat, “even though those are supernatural threats”. The judge described the offence as “cunning and manipulative” and that Paget had “taken advantage” of Mr Byrne. Please no spirit of the law puns! Subscribe to our news service at HERE WATERFORD FOOTBALL CLUB owner Andy Pilley has been sentenced to 13 years in jail.
Pilley – who also owns Fleetwood Town – had already been found guilty on fraud and money-laundering charges relating to the mis-selling of energy contracts. https://www.thesun.ie/sport/football/10983586/waterford-owner-andy-pilley-jail/ Subscribe to our news service at HERE Interesting #financialcrime typology for training purposes around 'easy money to be had' and the corruption of a younger 'technically savvy' generation.
In this case, Adam Gray, just 20 years old has been charged with 21 counts of unlawful use of a computer and attempted theft following an alleged #cryptocurrency fraud. Readers might recall that a few years ago Conor Freeman (21) was jailed for role in $2 million cryptocurrency theft identified by US Homeland Security as part of online group. Freeman, jailed in Ireland, pleaded guilty to knowingly engaging in the possession of the proceeds of crime — namely 142.75682712 Bitcoin. Today (01 July 2023) that amount of bitcoin would be worth a hefty $4.35mn. Not often is there media about dishonestly operating a computer “with the intention of making gain for yourself or another or causing loss to another”. There is clearly more to the facts of this story than is currently in the public domain. Mr Freeman was also charged with three counts of dishonestly operating a computer to make a gain. Adam Gray, just 20 years old has been charged with 21 counts of unlawful use of a computer and attempted theft following an alleged cryptocurrency fraud. It is alleged that at a place unknown within the Ireland the accused dishonestly operated a computer, or caused it to be operated “with the intention of making gain for yourself or another or causing loss to another”. Mr. Gray is also charged with five counts of attempted theft from different people, at locations in Dublin. The attempted theft charges related to a total of €1,249 while the amount of money alleged to have gone through the account was €8,136, the court heard. Conor Freeman case (November 2020) This is a very interesting case. Freeman was jailed in November 2020. In addition to pleading guilty to knowingly engaging in the possession of the proceeds of crime — namely 142.75682712 Bitcoin, he also pleaded guilty to stealing $100,000 in cryptocurrency from Darran Marble on May 15th 2018, stealing cryptocurrencies with an approximate value of $1,921,335, from Seth Sharpiro on May 16th, 2018, and stealing cryptocurrencies with an approximate value of $167,622.22 from Micheal Templeman on May 18th, 2018. He also entered guilty pleas to three counts of dishonestly operating a computer to make a gain on dates between May 15th and May 18th, 2018. He has no previous convictions.
Adam Gray links:
Conor Freeman link
Subscribe to our news service at HERE Chilimbar Vasile of 13A Eagle Valley, Sarsfield Road, Wilton, Cork pleaded guilty to the count stating that on September 24, 2019, proceeds of criminal conduct namely the money was credited to an AIB account in another name, knowing or being reckless as to whether it was the proceeds of crime.
Garda Kelleher said the sum of money, in the AIB account in question, was €228,274. The father-of-eleven who controlled an AIB bank account in another man’s name — when €228,000 passed through it over four years — had no explanation for this money except that he sold The Big Issue. Subscribe to our news service at HERE This report by the EBA which finds that money laundering and terrorist financing risks in payments institutions are not managed effectively refers to "New client typologies are also emerging, such as platforms and marketplaces, which, by creating additional layers, seem to increase the overall ML/TF risk level.". The report is a good read for any bank or financial institution involved with payments and especially for Money Laundering Compliance Officers (in Ireland the equivalent being PCF-52 role holders).
Also interesting to read at page 16 of 28 that "The EBA found that not all supervisors are doing enough to manage ML/TF risks in the sector effectively.". https://complireg.com/blogs--insights/eba-report-on-money-laundering-terrorist-financing-risks-associated-with-payment-institutions 20230615 - Man who robbed church collection boxes in Cork to be sentenced for money-laundering15/6/2023 Subscribe to our news service at HERE CCTV on accused's phone showed huge house in Romania where a large volume of notes and coins in multiple denominations were being counted on a kitchen table, court heard.
A 57-year-old man who used a wire hook to fish money out of church collection boxes was caught in a money-laundering investigation with live CCTV coverage from a huge house in Romania where a large volume of notes and coins in multiple denominations were being counted on a kitchen table. The CCTV was on Chilimbar Vasile’s phone and it covered his own property in Romania where he also had three powerful cars, Detective Garda David Kelleher said at the sentencing hearing. Describing the extensive scale of the Romanian property, it was established through Interpol enquiries there was no mortgage against the house, which is owned by the defendant. In January 2021, Vasile was caught with an AIB bank card for an account in someone else’s name and in an examination of the account over the previous four years it was established that over €228,000 had passed through it. He had no visible means of income and told investigating gardaí his money came from selling The Big Issue and begging. The father of 11 children was in receipt of €455 a week in disability allowance and had also received a total of €164,000 in rent allowance over a number of years while living in Cork. He was convicted previously of stealing from church collection boxes at locations that included Carrigtwohill, Cloyne and Dungarvan. He was faced sentencing on Thursday for money-laundering in Cork in respect of a sum of over a €250,000 in a bank account. www.irishexaminer.com/news/courtandcrime/arid-41163277.html |
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