Liberty Reserve money-laundering case: Five questions answered

Preet Bharara, US attorney for the Southern District of New York, describes a chart showing the global interests of Liberty Reserve, during a news conference in New York, Tuesday, May 28, 2013. Arthur Budovsky,the founder of Liberty Reserve, was indicted in the United States along with six other people in a $6 billion money-laundering scheme described as 'staggering' in its scope, authorities said. (Richard Drew/AP/FIle)

Before being effectively shut down, Liberty Reserve was a digital currency service, similar in function to PayPal, that allowed for anonymous monetary transactions on the Web. Unlike traditional banks and legitimate online commerce sites, Liberty Reserves users could set up accounts using fake names and unverified personal information all they needed was an e-mail address. It was, prosecutors say, designed as a way for criminals to process money quickly, conveniently, and undetected. If Al Capone were alive today, this is how he would be hiding his money, said Richard Weber, head of the criminal investigation division of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), at a New York press conference that involved members of the Justice and Treasury departments, Secret Service, and Homeland Security.

The company was incorporated in Costa Rica in 2006 and operated essentially as a black market bank Manhattan US attorney Peet Bharara said at the press conference. Over a seven-year span, Liberty Reserve allegedly hosted about 55 million transactions totaling $6 billion related to criminal activity, including credit card fraud, identity theft, investment fraud, child computer hacking, child pornography, and even narcotics trafficking, Mr. Bharara said.

Read the original post:

Liberty Reserve money-laundering case: Five questions answered

Related Posts

Comments are closed.