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Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami Saturday 18 th August 2012.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami Saturday 18 th August 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami Saturday 18 th August 2012

2 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Crime is conduct prohibited by law  Law tends to be organised on a national basis but financial crime, such as money laundering, can be international in nature, i.e. perpetrated across national borders  International bodies have to cooperate with one another in order to control financial crimes which spread across borders

3 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Protection provided to people at work when raising proper concerns about civil or criminal offences  Elements: 1. Qualifying disclosure 2. Made in good faith 3. Made to the appropriate person  A worker has the right not to be subjected to ‘any detriment by any act, or any deliberate failure to act’ by his employer as a result of having made a protected disclosure  As such dismissals for having made protected disclosure is automatically unfair dismissal

4 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Worker must reasonably believe that the information disclosed relates to one or more of the following elements (thus opinions or rumours do NOT qualify) : - A criminal offence has been committed (or is being committed or is likely to be committed) - Someone has failed (or is failing or is likely to fail) a legal obligation placed upon him - A miscarriage of justice has occurred (or is occurring or is likely to occur) - Health & safety of someone has been (or is being or is likely to be) damaged - The work environment has been (or is being or is likely to be) damaged - Information relating to the above has been (or is being or is likely to be) deliberately concealed

5 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Intention of the worker must be honest and not as a result of anger, retaliation, payback or some other personal motive  Disclosure must be made to one of the following persons: - Internally to the employer or responsible person - To a legal adviser - To a Minister (for public servants) - To the prescribed person/regulator (e.g. Financial Services Authority, etc.) - To any other persons if it is reasonable given the circumstances & if disclosure is made in good faith (e.g. to the media or police)

6 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Established under the Fraud Act 2006: 1. Fraud by false representation - Dishonesty - False representation of fact/law - Intention to make a gain or to cause loss (or risk thereof) 2. Fraud by failing to disclose information - Dishonestly failing to disclose information - Legal duty to disclose such information - Intention to make a gain or to cause loss (or risk thereof)

7 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami 3. Fraud by abuse of position - Occupying position whereby safeguarding financial interests of someone else - Dishonestly abusing of that position - Intention to make a gain or cause loss (or risk thereof)  Maximum penalty is 10 years’ imprisonment and an unlimited fine

8 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Insider Dealing is the statutory offence of dealing in securities (e.g. shares) while in possession of inside information as an insider, the securities being price-affected by the information if made public  The Criminal Justice Act 1993 contains the rules on insider dealing which is a crime because of its potential to destroy public confidence in the stock exchange  To prove insider dealing, s52 CJA 1993 provides that prosecution must prove that possessor of insider information: 1. Dealt in price-affected securities on a regulated market, or 2. Encouraged another to deal in them on regulated market, or 3. Disclosed the information other than in the proper performance of their employment, office or profession

9 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Dealing is acquiring or disposing of (or agreeing to acquire or dispose of) relevant securities whether directly or through an agent or nominee or a person acting according to direction (s55 CJA 1993)  Offence if individual having information as insider encourages another person to deal in price-affected securities in relation to that information  They must know or have reasonable cause to believe that dealing would take place  Irrelevant whether: - The person encouraged realises securities are price-affected - The inside information given to that person - Any dealing takes place; offence is for the act of encouragement

10 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Inside information is ‘price sensitive’ information relating to a particular issuer of securities that are price-affected (s56 CJA)  Inside information must, if made public, be likely to have a significant effect on the price and must be specific or precise  Example of specific information: - Information that a takeover bid would be made by a specific company  Example of precise information: - Details of how much would be offered for shares

11 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Under s57 CJA 93, a person has information as a primary insider if (a) it is (and they know it is) inside information, and (b) If they have it (and know they have it) from an inside source  The information may have been obtained from an inside source: (i) Through being a director, employee or shareholder of an issuer of securities (ii) Through access because of employment, office or profession  If obtained through any one of those two categories, individual with information is a secondary insider

12 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  This term is not exhaustively defined by statute, leaving final determination to the Court  Information is made public if: - Published under rules of regulated market - In public records (e.g. Notices in London Gazette) - Can readily be acquired by those likely to deal - Derived from public information  Information may be treated as made public even though: - Can only be acquired by exercising diligence or expertise - Communicated only to a section of public - Acquired only by observation - Communicated only on payment of a fee or published outside UK

13 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Under s53 CJA 93, an individual has defence regarding dealing and encouraging others to deal if it can be proved that: - They did not expect there to be a profit or avoidance of loss - They had reasonable grounds to believe that the information has been disclosed widely enough to ensure no one would be prejudiced. - They would have done what they did even if they did not have the information  An individual has defence regarding disclosure of information if they can prove that: - They did not expect any person to deal - Although dealing was expected, profit or avoidance of loss was not expected

14 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Maximum penalties given by CJA 93 are seven years’ imprisonment and/or an unlimited fine  Transaction/contracts remain valid and enforceable  If insider dealing involves a director, he is in breach of his fiduciary duty and is liable to account to company for any secret profit made

15 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Fraudulent Trading - Occurs where the business of a company in liquidation has been carried on with intent to defraud creditors or for any fraudulent purpose (instigated by any individual) - Civil penalty imposed by s213 Insolvency Act 1986: liable for the debts of the company in insolvency - Criminal aspect (s993 CA 06) is introduced when business was carried out for the purpose of any kind of fraud - Required to prove ‘actual dishonesty’ - Knowledge alone is not enough to make someone a party. They must have taken some active step in fraudulent trading

16 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Money laundering is the term given to attempts to make the proceeds of crime appear legitimate (respectable)  Covers any activity by which the apparent source and ownership of money representing the proceeds of income are changed so that he money appears to have been obtained legitimately  The money laundering process involves three phases: - Placement - Layering - Integration

17 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  There are three categories of criminal offences in the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002: a) Laundering (s327) - Acquisition, possession or use of proceeds of criminal conduct, or assisting another to retain the proceeds of criminal conduct and concealing, disguising, converting, transferring or removing criminal property. - This relates to its nature, source, location, disposition, movement or ownership of property b) Failure to report by an individual (s330) - Failure to disclose knowledge or suspicion of money laundering (suspicion is more than mere speculation, but falls short of proof or knowledge)

18 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami c) Tipping off (s333) - Disclosing information to any person if disclosure may prejudice an investigation into drug trafficking, drug money laundering, terrorist related activities, or laundering the proceeds of criminal conduct  ‘Criminal property’ defined by s3 as property which the alleged offender knows (or suspects) constitutes or represents being related to any criminal conduct  Criminal conduct is any conduct that constitutes or would constitute an offence in any part of the UK

19 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  In relation to laundering, an individual may have a defence if they make disclosure to the authorities: - As soon as possible after the transaction - Before the transaction takes place  Alternatively, if they can show there was reasonable excuse for not making a disclosure  In relation to failure to report, the person who suspects money laundering must disclose this to a nominated money laundering reporting officer within their organisation or directly to the National Criminal Intelligence Service  In relation to tipping off, it is also an offence if the person making disclosure to NCIS also tells person at the centre of their suspicion of the disclosure. It is a defence if that person did not know that tipping off would prejudice an investigation

20 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  The Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 sets out the following penalties in relation to money laundering: (a) 14 years’ imprisonment and/or unlimited fine, for knowingly assisting in the laundering of criminal funds (b) 5 years’ imprisonment and/or unlimited fine, for failure to report knowledge or the suspicion of money laundering (c) 2 years’ imprisonment and/or unlimited fine, for ‘tipping off’ a suspected launderer

21 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  Enacted in order to: - Enable suspicious transactions to be recognised and reported to law enforcement agencies; and - To ensure that if a client comes under investigation in the future, a relevant person can provide part of the audit trail  Mainly concerns customer due diligence, record-keeping procedures, training, supervision and enforcement

22 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami - Control systems in place to monitor possible money laundering activities - A Money Laundering Reporting Officer (MLRO) responsible for oversight of anti-money laundering activities and reporting to Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) - Internal reporting procedures for staff to voice suspicion - Anti-money laundering training given to all staff who handle transactions that may involve money laundering - Adequate record on clients (e.g. Copy of evidence of identity and evidence of applicant’s identity must be kept for five years)

23 Lecturer: Rowin Gurusami  There is legal requirement for organisations to take the following actions: - Set up procedures and establish accountabilities for senior individuals to take action to prevent money laundering - Educate staff & employees about potential money laundering - Obtain satisfactory evidence of identity where transaction is for more than £10,000 (KYC – checking the Office of Foreign Assets Control's Specially Designated Nationals list ) - Report suspicious circumstances - Not to alert persons who are or might be investigated for money laundering - Keep records of all transactions for five years


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