From: Peter F Cassidy <pcassidy@world.std.com>
To: Duncan Frissell <frissell@panix.com>
Message Hash: 1830cdf6c0e2a8a3245a357d291d9f48305e1064d190da4b9f74c327fda43a3b
Message ID: <Pine.3.89.9509131257.A17575-0100000@world.std.com>
Reply To: <199509131549.LAA22502@panix.com>
UTC Datetime: 1995-09-13 16:15:56 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 13 Sep 95 09:15:56 PDT
From: Peter F Cassidy <pcassidy@world.std.com>
Date: Wed, 13 Sep 95 09:15:56 PDT
To: Duncan Frissell <frissell@panix.com>
Subject: Re: Software vs Money Laundering
In-Reply-To: <199509131549.LAA22502@panix.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.3.89.9509131257.A17575-0100000@world.std.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
On Wed, 13 Sep 1995, Duncan Frissell wrote:
> At 10:48 AM 9/13/95 -0400, John Young wrote:
>
> > Can artificial intelligence be used to combat crime by
> > ferreting out money laundering? Officials at law
> > enforcement, defense and intelligence agencies like to
> > think so. They have suggested creating a sophisticated
> > computer program to screen records of the more than
> > 700,000 electronic money transfers involving U.S.
> > institutions each day and to flag suspicious ones for
> > further investigation. By using AI, they hope to stop
> > some of the $300 billion in profits from drug deals and
> > other illegal activities that they estimate is laundered
> > world-wide each year. But in a report issued yesterday,
> > the congressional Office of Technology Assessment says
> > any such plan would face considerable obstacles.
> > [Cyberian Joel Reidenberg, an OTA advisor, is quoted.]
> >
>
> Not the least of which is that money launderers can use "AI Software" to
> generate a stream of real and dummy money transfers that emulates "normal"
> money transfers. Not to mention the fact that monopoly money transfer
> networks that can be surveilled by the Feds (FEDWIRE and SWIFT) are not long
> for this world. They will be replaced by encrypted, open, net-based systems.
The article failes to point out that this system - actually one much
larger in scope already exists as Treasury's FINCEN system, headed by a
former Army AI expert. FINCEN sifts all the bank transfer manifests and,
last I looked, had stuck tentacles into other agency's databases to
further collate and refine its focus - now toward locating potential
targets. FINCEN was only supposed to be marshalled for Justice
Department investigations of suspected money laundering. Next, it'll be
used to auto-author warrants and indictments. . .
Return to September 1995
Return to “Peter F Cassidy <pcassidy@world.std.com>”