From: nobody@soda.berkeley.edu
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: fdda363ba5bde0f175f3e9b5cde9f3cda43b191d6dbdbb5ca9ef2edc523e269d
Message ID: <199403281402.GAA18286@soda.berkeley.edu>
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UTC Datetime: 1994-03-28 14:02:24 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 28 Mar 94 06:02:24 PST
From: nobody@soda.berkeley.edu
Date: Mon, 28 Mar 94 06:02:24 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Communications Law 302
Message-ID: <199403281402.GAA18286@soda.berkeley.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
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Does anyone know what happened to the banks lovely sytem a while
back when New York account holders found out that withdrawls were
made twice on their accounts?
What happened, did someone actually get creditted with the
corresponding debits, or was this another case of an operator
putting up a tape twice?
--
As an aside, I remember an old wire from some years ago when
$58Million was held up by the US with co-operation of European
authorities.
In case anyone is interested the following was the reult of the
legal wranglin'. and is dated 11/93. Forget Clipper, and check
out how else they're stickin it to ya.
In short they 'seized' data packets, at an intermediary remailer.
They have made information seizable **EGADS**
--
AN PTS2096146
HL U.S. WINS MAJOR VICTORY ON WIRE SEIZURES
DL ESTIMATED INFORMATION UNITS: 4.7 WORDS: 569
DD 11/01/93
SO * Money Laundering Alert (MLAL)
Alert International, Inc
Vol. 5, No. 2
LP When operatives of the Santacruz-Londono Cali drug
cartel were arrested in June 1990 in Luxembourg, a
flurry of wire transfers flew from hundreds of cartel
bank accounts in Europe. Anticipating the transfers,
Luxembourg authorities asked other countries to freeze
the money linked to those accounts
TX Of the $58 million seized worldwide, $12 million was
frozen in New York City banks which had served as
"intermediary banks" in the wire transfers. The role of
those banks was to credit the accounts of certain
correspondent Colombian banks who would then notify the
beneficiaries that the funds were available.
The banks were instructed by DEA agents to attach
all funds on deposit in the names of Cali cartel
associates, including "all related entities and
individuals," and to say which transfers were
destined for beneficiaries in Colombia.
Two groups of Colombian clothing exporters filed
claims to about $6.5 million of the seized funds saying
the money was legitimately earned. They also sued the
New York banks for loss of use of their funds and for
violation of the Right to Financial Privacy Act and the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA). Their
suits against the banks were dismissed. After a two-month
trial last year, the jury found that 18 of the 22
accounts seized were forfeitable.
Now, in a case of great importance to the emerging
wire transfer battles between the government and the
movers of dirty money, the key federal appellate court
which rules on issues arising from the New York financial
center has given a resounding victory to the government.
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that wire
transfers that pass through intermediary banks can be
seized even without "alleging facts sufficient to show
that specific property is tainted." All the government
must show are "facts sufficient to support a reasonable
belief that (it) can demonstrate probable cause for
finding the property tainted," the court said.
By naming the intermediary banks and the
beneficiaries, the U.S. described the property with
"reasonable particularity." Moreover, the U.S. did not
need a warrant for the seizures because the law permits
the Justice Department to seize property when it has
"probable cause to believe" it is subject to civil
forfeiture, said the court.
"Because the (transfers were) fungible and capable
of rapid motion due to modern technology,...exigent
circumstances were present here," said the court,
dismissing the claimants' assertions that their
constitutional rights had been violated.
Likewise, there was no violation of the Right to
Financial Privacy Act, said the court, because the
claimants did not maintain "accounts" at the banks.
The ECPA also provided no relief to the claimants because
that law deals with the use of "devices" to "intercept"
communications. Here, no devices were used and there was
no interception, said the court.
The court also ruled than an EFT at an intermediary
bank is "clearly a seizable res (thing) under the forfeiture
statutes" and that only a "nexus" and not a "substantial
connection" between seized property and illegal drug
activity must be shown by the government to
show probable cause.
The case has far-reaching implications since a
majority of international wire transfers pass through
intermediary banks, many of them in New York.
(U.S. vs. Daccarett, Docket Nos. 92-6229 and 6259,
2nd Cir. Ct of App., September 10, 1993).
---Richard M. Lucas, CPA, is a consultant for the
Philip Manuel
Resource Group and a former IRS Special Agent.
COPYRIGHT 1993 by Alert International, Inc.
I0607 * END OF DOCUMENT.
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