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In addition, the bill incorporates, a number of other provisions, modifications and amendments to the Financial Privacy Act and the Federal rules of evidence. I think this will be discussed more fully by Mr. Walker.

That really gives you an overview, I think, of the proposed legislation that we have submitted. We think it is comprehensive. We think it gets at the problem from a number of different angles. We would hope that the subcommittee and the committee and the Congress would consider this very carefully. I think it is something that we have a lot of common ground on here. The work that has been done on this by the Organized Crime Commission and by the Congress, I really think, demonstrates that all of us recognize the scope of the problem, the nature of the problem. We are all trying to find a solution to this problem. It really is a question of how comprehensive an approach do you want to take in dealing with this issue.

The scope is comprehensive. It is a very pervasive problem. I think the scope demands that the solution be equally comprehensive. We would urge the Congress to take a very careful look at this and, of course, urge expeditious passage.

Thank you very much.

[Statement of Jay B. Stephens follows:]

Department of Justice

STATEMENT

OF

JAY B. STEPHENS ASSOCIATE DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL

BEFORE THE

SUBCOMMITTEE ON CRIME
COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

CONCERNING

MONEY LAUNDERING LEGISLATION

ON

July 24, 1985

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee, I am pleased to be here today to present the views of the Department of Justice on one of the biggest problems presently facing law enforcement, the laundering of money derived from criminal activity. Let me initially express my appreciation for the Subcommittee's willingness to tackle this difficult subject as indicated by the fact that this is the third hearing you have held on money laundering this year.

As the Subcommittee knows, money laundering -- the process by which one conceals the existence, illegal source, or illegal application of income and then disguises the source of that income to make it appear legitimate -- is big business. Just big nobody knows for sure because drug rings and organized cri families don't prepare annual reports, but the Treasury Department has estimated that Americans spend more than $80 billion each year to buy illegal drugs. Sales of $80 billion would make the illegal drug trade a bigger operation than all but one of the Fortune 500 companies, larger even than General Motors. And that is just from drug trafficking. In a recent Wall Street Journal article which supported the Administration's money laundering bill that I will be describing in a minute it was estimated that somewhere in the neighborhood of $150 billion is generated each year by drugs, gambling, and vice in general.

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The Attorney General summed up the problem when he recently described money laundering as "the life blood of the drug syndicates and traditional organized crime." Unfortunately, this problem has grown in size and complexity. More people are

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involved, there is more money being laundered, and the schemes to

wash "dirty money" are now often so sophisticated that they involve an intricate web of domestic and foreign bank accounts, shell corporations, and other business entities through which funds are moved by high speed electronic fund transfers.

Perhaps even more disturbing is the increasing willingness of professional persons such as lawyers, accountants, and bankers at all levels from tellers to senior officials to become active participants in money laundering. While some criminal organizations still wash their own illegally generated money by such relatively crude methods as one of their members' smuggling a suitcase full of currency out of the country for deposit in an offshore bank, a number of drug rings and other criminal syndicates now hire professionals to launder the money produced by their operations.

Consequently, this Administration has determined that what is needed is new legislation to directly prohibit the laundering of money. Today the Subcommittee has before it five bills that would create such an offense, and I will be discussing those parts of them that deal with money laundering and related offenses. They are H.R. 1367, H.R. 1474, H.R. 1945, H.R. 2785, and H.R. 2786. The last two are identical bills that were submitted by the Department of Justice just last month. The Administration strongly supports these two bills on which the Treasury Department provided considerable assistance. Before discussing them, however, I think it would be helpful to review some of their background.

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As you know, on July 28, 1983, the President established the Commission on Organized Crime. Among its other responsibilities, the Commission was charged with reporting to the President from with a final report to be submitted by March 1,

time to time 1986

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and with making recommendations concerning any legislative changes needed to better combat organized crime and to improve the administration of justice. In October of 1984, the Commission issued an interim report to the President and the Attorney General dealing specifically with money laundering. Entitled The Cash Connection: Organized Crime, Financial Institutions, and Money Laundering, the report graphically illustrated the problem and set out draft legislation designed to deal with it. The suggested legislation contained a new money laundering offense in title 18, amendments to the Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act in title 31, and Amendments to 1/ the Right to Financial Privacy Act located in title 12.

The Department of Justice and the Treasury Department have thoroughly reviewed the proposals drafted by the Commission on Organized Crime and analyzed them in light of our experiences in

1/ The Commission recommended other measures, such as a new bank bribery statute and an amendment of the federal wiretapping statute (18 U.S.C. 2510 et seq.) to allow law enforcement authorities to seek court orders authorizing the interception of communications involving criminal violations of the Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act, which were enacted as part of the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 (P.L. 98-473). Moreover, a number of its recommended amendments to the Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act, such as greatly increased fine levels and the addition of an attempt provision, were also enacted as part of the Comprehensive Crime Control Act.

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