It's not just "terrorism" they are looking out for but also drug money laundering. Here is a story about a local jewelry store that got popped last month for that.
Metro jeweler gets jail time, fine for money laundering
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Atlanta Business Chronicle
An owner of jewelry stores at Atlantic Station and Merchandise Mart/America's Mart will spend six years in jail, must pay $1.6 million and will forfeit his condominium for his scheme to launder drug money.
Toros Seher, 39, of Atlanta was convicted in February by a federal jury of concealing illegal drug proceeds among legitimate sales made, among other places, at Chaplin's and Chaplin's Midtown. On Wednesday, U.S. District Court Judge Timothy C. Batten sentenced Seher to six years in jail.
Trades and businesses must report cash transactions in amounts of more than $10,000 to the IRS using specific forms. An indictment handed down by a federal grand jury on July 26, 2006, charged Seher, Chaplin's, and Chaplin's Midtown with failing to file these forms and money laundering.
On the same day, the IRS executed search and seizure warrants at those two stores owned and/or operated by Seher, his partner's Alpharetta, Ga., residence, and his Atlantic Station condominium. The IRS seized about $6 million in jewelry from the two retail locations.
Undercover IRS agents pretended to launder drug proceeds with Seher's guidance at Chaplin's in the Merchandise Mart/America's Mart in downtown Atlanta and Chaplin's Midtown in Atlantic Station. Cooperating defendants and witnesses provided other historical information regarding Seher's money laundering.
According to witnesses, from 1997 to as late as 2002, Seher assisted drug dealers in laundering their dirty money by concealing that money among funds generated by a business' legitimate sales. In many cases, Seher accepted cash from drug dealers at an unnamed location in amounts that exceeded $10,000 and were as much as $200,000 for a single transaction.
Seher continued these practices at Chaplin's and Chaplin's Midtown. Starting in April 2005, IRS undercover agents made three purchases in cash exceeding $10,000 from Seher, for a wedding set, a Rolex watch and two diamond bracelets. Audio and video tapes show Seher advising the undercover agent to "use any name and address" when filling out the forms and making "choking gestures" to suggest the agents were saying too much regarding the source of the money, which was illegal narcotics trafficking.
Seher also told the undercover agents to make payments of less than $10,000 to disguise cash transactions and avoid filling out required IRS forms. Evidence at trial showed that Seher did not report these cash transactions and knew that the jewelry sales were being used to launder money from drugs.
"Businesses cannot turn a blind eye when drug dealers try to use them to launder their dirty money," said U.S. Attorney David Nahmias. "Businesses who try to conceal drug money within their legitimate revenues are gambling with the law and risk losing everything. Here, the defendant lost two stores, a home, more than six million dollars -- and his freedom. In the end, money laundering does not pay."
|