Moral Tone’s employers face difficult questions
about Venezuelan drug monies
Those slightly dense British politicians convinced that American
attacks on our banks involved in drug-money laundering were motivated by
envy may be in for a few jolts in the next few weeks, I hear. The first
of these comes in the shape of US regulators being on the verge of
filing such charges against that most un-British of banks (save for the
presence of Tony Blair) JP Morgan.While the extent of the inquiry taking place into JPM is for the moment vague, I’m told the liabilities could be gigantic. Morgan has already gone public to say it expects ‘heightened scrutiny’ of its compliance with laundry regulations. But I understad that, in turn, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is about to confirm it will examine Morgan activities and failures in detecting the use of its bank to render grubby drug money clean.
This new investigation does not, apparently, involve Colombia, but rather Venezuela. Although the Venezuelan government has trumpeted one major blow after another against drug traffickers, recent investigations suggest that the claims are exaggerated. And poor diplomatic relations with President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, mean that the reach of American drug agents is limited in the region.
In September 2011, Barack Obama signed a memorandum designating Venezuela as a country that failed to meet international obligations to fight drug trafficking. He cited a federal report that concluded that the country was “one of the preferred trafficking routes out of South America” and had a “generally permissive and corrupt environment.”
Both events were attacked by London Mayor Boris Johnson and British Chancellor George Osborne. How we Brits wish the gobby end of the Conservative Party would engage brain before tongue.
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