Current:Home > NewsAustralian police charge 7 with laundering hundreds of millions for Chinese crime syndicate -前500条预览:
Australian police charge 7 with laundering hundreds of millions for Chinese crime syndicate
View
Date:2025-04-18 12:37:26
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australian authorities have charged seven people with helping launder hundreds of millions of dollars for a Chinese crime syndicate.
Police said Thursday the arrests came after a 14-month investigation that involved multiple Australian agencies and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. They said it was the most complex money laundering investigation in the nation’s history.
Police said a money remittance chain in Australia with a dozen outlets, the Changjiang Currency Exchange, was being secretly run by the Long River money laundering syndicate.
They said the chain legitimately transferred billions of dollars from regular customers, but hidden among those transactions were illegal transfers of 229 million Australian dollars ($144 million) in crime proceeds over the past three years.
They said they became suspicious about the company during COVID-19 lockdowns in Sydney.
“While most of Sydney was a ghost town, alarm bells went off among our money laundering investigators when they noticed Changjiang Currency Exchange opened and updated new and existing shopfronts in the heart of Sydney,” said Stephen Dametto, an assistant commissioner with the Australian Federal Police.
“It was just a gut feeling – it didn’t feel right,” Dametto said in a statement. “Many international students and tourists had returned home, and there was no apparent business case for Changjiang Currency Exchange to expand.”
More than 300 officers on Wednesday conducted 20 raids around the country and seized tens of millions of dollars worth of luxury homes and vehicles.
The four Chinese nationals and three Australian citizens made their first appearance in a Melbourne court on Thursday.
“We allege they lived the high life by eating at Australia’s most extravagant restaurants, drinking wine and sake valued in the tens of thousands of dollars, traveling on private jets, driving vehicles purchased for A$400,000 and living in expensive homes, with one valued at more than A$10 million,” Dametto said.
Police said the syndicate coached its criminal customers on how to create fake business paperwork, such as false invoices and bank statements. They said some of the laundered money came from cyber scams, the trafficking of illicit goods, and violent crimes.
Dametto said the syndicate had even purchased fake passports for A$200,000 ($126,000) each in case their members needed to flee the country.
“The reason why this investigation was so unique and complex was that this alleged syndicate was operating in plain sight with shiny shopfronts across the country – it was not operating in the shadows like other money laundering organizations,” Dametto said in his statement.
veryGood! (3932)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- How to keep dust mites away naturally to help ease your allergies
- What can we learn from the year's most popular econ terms?
- Shannen Doherty says she learned of ex's alleged affair shortly before brain tumor surgery
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Jury acquits officer in Maryland county’s first police murder charge in shooting handcuffed man
- Slow down! As deaths and injuries mount, new calls for technology to reduce speeding
- Cougar struck and killed near Minneapolis likely the one seen in home security video, expert says
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Aaron Rodgers defends Zach Wilson, rails against report saying Jets QB was reluctant to start again
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Lupita Nyong'o and Joshua Jackson Fuel Romance Rumors With Latest Outing
- The US is poised to require foreign aircraft-repair shops to test workers for drugs and alcohol
- Heavy fighting across Gaza halts most aid delivery, leaves civilians with few places to seek safety
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Social Security's most important number for retirement may not be what you think it is
- Watch this lone goose tackle a busy New York street with the help of construction workers
- Bank of England will review the risks that AI poses to UK financial stability
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Archie, the man who played Cary Grant
Sharon Osbourne lost too much weight on Ozempic. Why that's challenging and uncommon
Actors vote to approve deal that ended strike, bringing relief to union leaders and Hollywood
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Denny Laine, singer-guitarist of The Moody Blues and Wings, dies at 79 after 'health setbacks'
Turkey’s Erdogan tends to strained relationship with EU with ‘win-win’ trip to neighbor Greece
'The Wicker Man' gets his AARP card today, as the folk horror classic turns 50