Anonymous ID: cda183 April 14, 2021, 10:44 a.m. No.13424598   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Report Fraud, Waste, Abuse, or Whistleblower Reprisal to the NSF OIG

Contact us to provide information about fraud, waste or abuse via:

 

Internet Form: Internet Form

E-mail: oig@nsf.gov

Phone: 703-292-7100 (business hours), or

703-328-3932 (non-business hours)

Anonymous Hotline: 1-800-428-2189

Fax: 703-292-9159

Mail: 2415 Eisenhower Avenue

Alexandria, VA 22314

ATTN: OIG HOTLINE

FAR Contracting

Reporting Form: FAR Hotline Form

The people involved in NSF programs and operations, whether NSF employees, grantees, principal investigators, or others working on NSF programs, grants, or contracts, are in the best position to detect problems. You can help the Office of Inspector General (OIG) improve management and eliminate fraud by providing information to OIG about allegations or suspicions of fraud, waste, abuse, mismanagement, research misconduct (fabrication, falsification, plagiarism), or unnecessary government expenditures.

 

If you need further information or want to discuss any allegation, please contact our office. To ensure that your concerns are appropriately addressed, it is critically important that you provide as much information as possible in support of your complaint, including:

 

Whether the complaint relates to Recovery Act funded activities,

The identity and contact information of the violator(s),

The identity and contact information of those persons who can corroborate the allegations, and

A description and location of relevant documentary and physical evidence.

While anonymous complaints are welcome, please understand that a lack of sufficient and specific information may mean that our office is unable to investigate the allegation.

 

Please note that OIG does not have authority to investigate EEO complaints. To file such complaints, contact NSF's Office of Diversity and Inclusion.

 

Further, OIG refers federal employees who believe they have been improperly retaliated against for whistleblowing to The Office of Special Counsel (OSC). OSC is an independent agency enforcing whistleblower protections and certain other actions within the Federal government. Information on filing a complaint with OSC may be found on their website at http://www.osc.gov. Please visit the Whistleblower web page for additional information on whistleblower protections.

Anonymous ID: cda183 April 14, 2021, 11:11 a.m. No.13424737   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4914 >>5270 >>5354

Office of Public Affairs

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Two Charged in High-Risk International Financial Scheme

 

Allegedly Facilitated more than $1 Billion in High-Risk Transactions Without Anti-Money Laundering Controls

 

An indictment was unsealed today in the Eastern District of New York charging two defendants with failing to maintain anti-money laundering controls, failing to file suspicious activity reports, and operating an unlicensed money transmitting business.

 

As alleged in the indictment, from 2014 to 2016, Gyanendra Asre, 53, of Greenwich, Connecticut, and Hanan Ofer, 67, of New York, New York, devised and executed a scheme to bring lucrative and high-risk international financial business to small, unsophisticated financial institutions. Asre and Ofer were trained in anti-money laundering compliance and procedures, and represented to the financial institutions that, because of their experience and training, they understood the risks associated with the high-risk business and would conduct appropriate anti-money laundering oversight as required by the Bank Secrecy Act.

 

Based on Asre and Ofer’s representations, the New York State Employees Federal Credit Union (NYSEFCU), a small financial institution with a volunteer board that primarily served New York state public employees, allowed Asre and Ofer to conduct high-risk transactions through the NYSEFCU. Asre and Ofer then caused the transfer of more than $1 billion in high-risk transactions, including hundreds of millions of dollars originating from foreign jurisdictions, through the NYSEFCU and other entities. Contrary to their representations, Asre willfully failed to implement and maintain the requisite anti-money laundering programs or conduct oversight required to detect, identify, and report suspicious transactions. This caused, among other things, the NYSEFCU to process more than a billion dollars in high-risk transactions during Asre’s tenure, without ever filing a single Suspicious Activity Report, as required by law.

 

Asre and Ofer owned and operated DDH Group LLC, a money transmitting business and money services business that conducted some of these high-risk transactions, without it being licensed or registered as required by law.

 

“As alleged, Asre and Ofer used a small, unsophisticated financial institution to process high-risk, high-dollar international transactions without the anti-money laundering procedures required by law,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Nicholas L. McQuaid of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “Today's announcement demonstrates the department's commitment to hold accountable individuals who knowingly expose the U.S. financial system and U.S. financial institutions to the risk of laundering criminal proceeds.”

 

“The defendants allegedly operated an illegal money transmitting business and took advantage of smaller financial institutions to engage in risky financial transactions, without the oversight and compliance with anti-money laundering controls they had promised,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Mark J. Lesko for the Eastern District of New York. “This office will vigorously prosecute those who deliberately avoid reporting requirements and put the integrity of U.S. financial institutions at risk.”

 

“The Bank Secrecy Act was established to protect our financial system and maintain the integrity of our banking system,” said Special Agent in Charge Peter C. Fitzhugh of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) New York. “As alleged, Ofer and Asre blatantly disregarded our laws and placed their own enrichment above all else. The defendants took advantage of a small, unsophisticated financial institution and pumped billions of dollars of high-risk transactions through it, any one of which could have left the bank in ruin. HSI New York’s El Dorado Task Force continues to protect the nation’s financial systems and working with its partners, will see to it that those seeking to exploit our laws for their own financial gain are brought to justice.”

 

Asre is charged with two counts of failure to maintain an anti-money laundering program, five counts of failure to file Suspicious Activity Reports, and one count of operation of an unlicensed money transmitting business. Ofer is charged with one count of operation of an unlicensed money transmitting business. The defendants are scheduled to be arraigned on the indictment this afternoon.

 

HSI is investigating the case.

 

Trial Attorneys Margaret Moeser and Leigh Kessler of the Criminal Division’s Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section (MLARS) and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Ryan C. Harris and Francisco J. Navarro of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York are prosecuting the case.