Examples of good practice
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Examples of poor practice
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Ensuring files contain a customer overview covering risk assessment, documentation, verification, expected account activity, profile of customer or business relationship and ultimate beneficial owner.
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Failing to give due consideration to certain political connections which fall outside the Money Laundering Regulations 2007 definition of a PEP (eg wider family) which might mean that certain customers still need to be treated as high risk and subject to enhanced due diligence.
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The MLRO (and their team) have adequate oversight of all high-risk relationships.
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Poor quality, incomplete or inconsistent CDD.
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Clear processes for escalating the approval of high risk and all PEP customer relationships to senior management or committees which consider AML risk and give appropriate challenge to RMs and the business.
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Relying on Group introductions where overseas standards are not UK-equivalent or where CDD is inaccessible due to legal constraints.
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Using, where available, local knowledge and open source internet checks to supplement commercially available databases when researching potential high risk customers including PEPs.
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Inadequate analysis and challenge of information found in documents gathered for CDD purposes.
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Having clear risk-based policies and procedures setting out the EDD required for higher risk and PEP customers, particularly in relation to source of wealth.
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Lacking evidence of formal sign-off and approval by senior management of high-risk and PEP customers and failure to document appropriately why the customer was within AML risk appetite.
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Effective challenge of RMs and business units by banks’ AML and compliance teams, and senior management.
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Failing to record adequately face-to-face meetings that form part of CDD.
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Reward structures for RMs which take into account good AML/compliance practice rather than simply the amount of profit generated.
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Failing to carry out EDD for high risk/PEP customers.
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Clearly establishing and documenting PEP and other high-risk customers’ source of wealth.
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Failing to conduct adequate CDD before customer relationships are approved.
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Where money laundering risk is very high, supplementing CDD with independent intelligence reports and fully exploring and reviewing any credible allegations of criminal conduct by the customer.
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Over-reliance on undocumented ‘staff knowledge’ during the CDD process.
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Understanding and documenting complex or opaque ownership and corporate structures and the reasons for them.
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Granting waivers from establishing a customer’s source of funds, source of wealth and other CDD without good reason.
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Face-to-face meetings and discussions with high-risk and PEP prospects before accepting them as a customer.
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Discouraging business units from carrying out adequate CDD, for example by charging them for intelligence reports.
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Making clear judgements on money-laundering risk which are not compromised by the potential profitability of new or existing relationships.
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Failing to carry out CDD on customers because they were referred by senior managers.
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Recognising and mitigating the risk arising from RMs becoming too close to customers and conflicts of interest arising from RMs’ remuneration structures.
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Failing to ensure CDD for high-risk and PEP customers is kept up-to-date in line with current standards.
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Allowing ‘cultural difficulties’ to get in the way of proper questioning to establish required CDD records.
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Holding information about customers of their UK operations in foreign countries with banking secrecy laws if, as a result the firm’s ability to access or share CDD is restricted.
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Allowing accounts to be used for purposes inconsistent with the expected activity on the account (e.g. personal accounts being used for business) without enquiry.
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Insufficient information on source of wealth with little or no evidence to verify that the wealth is not linked to crime or corruption.
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Failing to distinguish between source of funds and source of wealth.
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Relying exclusively on commercially-available PEP databases and failure to make use of available open source information on a risk-based approach.
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Failing to understand the reasons for complex and opaque offshore company structures.
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Failing to ensure papers considered by approval committees present a balanced view of money laundering risk.
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No formal procedure for escalating prospective customers to committees and senior management on a risk based approach.
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Failing to take account of credible allegations of criminal activity from reputable sources.
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Concluding that adverse allegations against customers can be disregarded simply because they hold an investment visa.
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Accepting regulatory and/or reputational risk where there is a high risk of money laundering.
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