Anonymous ID: db735b May 23, 2024, 7:12 a.m. No.20904126   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4344 >>4554 >>4614 >>4744 >>4766

The CFPB’s Pyrrhic Supreme Court Victory

 

The Constitution allows the Federal Reserve’s profits to fund the bureau. But the Fed has no profits.

 

May 20, 2024 1:06 pm ET

 

Sen. Elizabeth Warren took a victory lap last week after the Supreme Court struck down a challenge to the funding scheme for her brainchild, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. “When you’re as good as @CFPB is at doing its job to protect consumers, you can expect that giant banks, payday lenders, and Republican politicians will come after it and try to shut it down,” she tweeted on Friday. “But yesterday, the Supreme Court followed the law, and the @CFPB is here to stay!”

 

Not so fast. It’s true that CFPB v. Community Financial Services Association of America, a 7-2 decision written by Justice Clarence Thomas, upheld the bureau’s 2017 Payday Lending Rule. The justices held that the Constitution’s Appropriations Clause authorizes Congress to fund the bureau with profits from the Federal Reserve. But for nearly two years the Fed has been losing money because of rising interest rates. That calls into question the legitimacy of the CFPB’s funding since September 2022—and all regulations issued during that period. The CFPB’s dramatic victory may turn out to be a stunning defeat.

 

https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-cfpb-pyrrhic-supreme-court-victory-federal-reserve-18099f59?st=w0ajup4etyfbstf&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

Anonymous ID: db735b May 23, 2024, 8:42 a.m. No.20904421   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4441 >>4442

Two Alleged Members of a Transnational Money Laundering Organization Arrested for Laundering Millions of Dollars in Drug Proceeds

 

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

 

Two alleged members of a transnational money laundering organization were arrested on criminal charges related to their alleged involvement in a scheme to launder millions of dollars in illegal drug proceeds for Mexican drug trafficking organizations, including the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels (also known as CJNG).

 

Li Pei Tan, 46, of Buford, Georgia, was arrested today. Chaojie Chen, 41, a foreign national residing in Chicago, was arrested on April 18.

 

According to court documents, Tan and Chen allegedly worked for a money laundering organization that laundered millions of dollars in proceeds related to the importation of illegal drugs into the United States, primarily through Mexico, and the unlawful distribution of these drugs. Tan, Chen, and their co-conspirators allegedly traveled throughout the United States to collect proceeds derived from trafficking in fentanyl and other drugs (or to cause them to be collected). They allegedly communicated and coordinated with co-conspirators in China and other foreign countries to arrange for the laundering of these proceeds through financial transactions that were designed to conceal the illicit source of the drug proceeds.

 

According to the Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) National Drug Threat Assessment, the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels are at the heart of the fentanyl crisis in the United States.

 

Tan and Chen are charged in separate criminal complaints with conspiring to commit money laundering. If convicted, they each face a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.

 

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/two-alleged-members-transnational-money-laundering-organization-arrested-laundering-millions

Anonymous ID: db735b May 23, 2024, 8:49 a.m. No.20904442   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4455

>>20904421

 

Excellent detailed article with insight on Chinese money laundering and drugs in the US, even if it is a bit old, the story is still current.

 

How a Chinese American Gangster Transformed Money Laundering for Drug Cartels

 

Xizhi Li pioneered a new method that enriched Latin American drug lords and China’s elite. A DEA investigation found the Chinese government may have been involved.

 

Oct. 11, 2022, 5 a.m. EDT

 

In 2017, Drug Enforcement Administration agents following the money from cocaine deals in Memphis, Tennessee, identified a mysterious figure in Mexico entrusted by drug lords with their millions: a Chinese American gangster named Xizhi Li.

 

As the agents tracked Li’s activity across the Americas and Asia, they realized he wasn’t just another money launderer. He was a pioneer. Operating with the acumen of a financier and the tradecraft of a spy, he had helped devise an innovative system that revolutionized the drug underworld and fortified the cartels.

 

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Li hit on a better way to address a problem that has long bedeviled the world’s drug lords: how to turn the mountains of grimy twenties and hundreds amassed on U.S. streets into legitimate fortunes they can spend on yachts, mansions, weapons, technology and bribes to police and politicians.

 

For years, the Mexican cartels that supply the U.S. market with cocaine, heroin and fentanyl smuggled truckloads of bulk cash to Mexico, where they used banks and exchange houses to move the money into the financial system. And they also hired middlemen — often Colombian or Lebanese specialists who charged as much as 18 cents on the dollar — to launder their billions.

 

Those methods were costly, took weeks or even months to complete and exposed the stockpiled cash to risks — damage, robbery, confiscation.

 

Enter Li. About six years ago, federal antidrug agents in Chicago saw early signs of what would become a tectonic change. They trailed cartel operatives transporting drug cash to a new destination: Chinatown, an immigrant enclave in the flatlands about 2 miles south of the city’s rampart of lakefront skyscrapers.

 

Agents on stakeout watched as cartel operatives delivered suitcases full of cash to Chinese couriers directed by Li. Furtive exchanges took place in motels and parking lots. The couriers didn’t have criminal records or carry guns; they were students, waiters, drivers. Neither side spoke much English, so they used a prearranged signal: a photo of a serial number on a dollar bill.

 

After the handoff, the couriers alerted their Chinese bosses in Mexico, who quickly sent pesos to the bank accounts or safe houses of Mexican drug lords. Li then executed a chain of transactions through China, the United States and Latin America to launder the dollars. His powerful international connections made his service cheap, fast and efficient; he even guaranteed free replacement of cartel cash lost in transit. Li and his fellow Chinese money launderers married market forces: drug lords wanting to get rid of dollars and a Chinese elite desperate to acquire dollars. The new model blew away the competition.

 

“At no time in the history of organized crime is there an example where a revenue stream has been taken over like this, and without a shot being fired,” said retired DEA agent Thomas Cindric, a veteran of the elite Special Operations Division. “This has enriched the Mexican cartels beyond their wildest dreams.”

Anonymous ID: db735b May 23, 2024, 8:51 a.m. No.20904455   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20904442

 

Sauce for the Chinese money laundering and drug running article. Sorry.

 

https://www.propublica.org/article/china-cartels-xizhi-li-money-laundering