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2/15/2024

Remarks by Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian Nelson on Treasury’s Efforts to Safeguard th…

Remarks by Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial
Intelligence Brian Nelson on Treasury’s Efforts to Safeguard the
U.S. Financial System from Illicit Finance
February 15, 2024

As Prepared for Delivery
Good morning. Iʼm Brian Nelson, Treasuryʼs Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial
Intelligence. My o ice is responsible for leading U.S. government e orts to counter illicit
finance and using financial tools to respond to national security threats.
From terrorist financiers to cybercriminals and drug kingpins, our work centers on
safeguarding the U.S. financial system from those who seek to corrupt it, exploit it, and use it
to hide or launder illicit proceeds.
Central to this mission is a recognition of the dangers that illicit finance threats pose not only
to our national security and the integrity of the U.S. economy, but also to the economic
opportunity a orded to hardworking, responsible Americans.
The Treasury Department is matching the gravity of these challenges with a commitment to
addressing the biggest vulnerabilities in the U.S. financial system that corrupt actors,
criminals, and other national security threats exploit to launder funds. We are undertaking a
concerted e ort to address the systemic deficiencies in the United Statesʼ anti-money
laundering and countering the financing of terrorism framework—also known as AML/CFT.
As I look forward to discussing with you this morning, over the past few days and weeks, we
have announced several major initiatives that are designed not only to close critical
regulatory loopholes and stay ahead of urgent national security threats, but also to increase
transparency, fairness, and equity across the U.S. economy.
As the worldʼs largest economy and with the most globally integrated financial system, the
steps that the United States takes to fight crime, corruption, and illicit finance will radiate
outward—helping other countries to combat these challenges and strengthening
international AML/CFT standards.
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Treasuryʼs e orts, therefore, will help us to advance prosperity and security at home, while
leading by example around the world.

ADDRESSING URGENT CHALLENGES
I am joining you all at a critical moment for U.S. national and economic security interests.
It is a moment when the fentanyl crisis—fueled by transnational networks of complicit
companies and criminal organizations—is exacting an enormous human toll in communities
across the United States, taking an estimated 70,000 lives annually. According to the DEA, the
two most sophisticated Mexican drug tra icking organizations, as well as their associates
and facilitators, operate across all 50 U.S. states and in more than 50 countries.
It is a moment when Russiaʼs brutal invasion of Ukraine, tragically on the cusp of its two-year
mark, is making clear the increasingly sophisticated ways that Russian elites and businesses
are seeking to violate U.S. sanctions—in support of Vladimir Putinʼs war machine and at the
expense of global security.
At this moment, cybercriminals continue to plunder the life savings of hardworking Americans,
and ransomware actors continue to wreak havoc on critical infrastructure—including against
a childrenʼs hospital in Chicago just this month.
Across the United States, fraudsters generate massive sums of illicit proceeds—o en at the
expense of taxpayer-funded programs and vulnerable populations. For example, frauds
against the elderly—o en referred to as elder financial exploitation—are linked to annual
losses of more than $3 billion, with the average victim losing $35,000 and the associated
proceeds o en laundered through shell and front companies, wire transfers, and money
mules.
Over the past four months, we have seen in the Middle East the consequences of terrorist
groups like Hamas and Iran-aligned militant groups continuing to access funds. Their actions
have not only taken innocent lives—including those of Americans—but also threatened
international commerce and stability.
These threats, among others, share three important themes:
1. They threaten U.S. national security and the lives of Americans.

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2. They undermine Americaʼs economic health—either by a ecting Americans and
businesses, or by eroding trust in the integrity of our financial system.
3. And they exploit vulnerabilities in the United Statesʼ AML/CFT framework to launder,
move, or store funds.
That is why we are taking such substantial steps toward closing these loopholes, in
partnership with key stakeholders, including the private sector.

HONING OUR UNDERSTANDING OF ILLICIT F INANCE RISK
The Treasury Departmentʼs e orts are rooted in our constantly evolving understanding of the
illicit finance risks that the United States faces—our assessments of who and what our
biggest risks are, how these threat actors move or launder funds, and what regulatory
loopholes and financial blind-spots they are exploiting to do so.
To highlight these risks, last week Treasury published three national risk assessments for
money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing. From North Koreaʼs e orts
to exploit the U.S. financial system to fund its nuclear program, to human tra ickers
concealing their activities through front companies, these assessments shine light on the
ways that key threat actors are seeking to operate under the radar.
These studies aim not only to inform U.S. government e orts to address threats and
safeguard the U.S. financial system, but also to help the private sector stay ahead of illicit
activity and stay attuned to the biggest risks a ecting their customers and their bottom lines.

ENHANCING CORPORAT E T RANSPARENCY
A recurring risk that we are focused on is the misuse of corporate structures to launder or
conceal funds. Anonymous companies are a favorite tool for bad actors seeking to conceal
their activities and their funds. Across our risk assessments, we have identified numerous
cases involving criminals and U.S. adversaries seeking to operate with anonymity using
opaque corporate structures.
To address the critical vulnerability of corporate anonymity, last month, Treasuryʼs Financial
Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, launched a beneficial ownership filing system
pursuant to the Corporate Transparency Act. Under this new framework, many companies
operating in the United States are now required to report information to FinCEN about their
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beneficial owners—in other words, the real people who own or control them. FinCEN stores
this information in a secure, non-public database. With this information, we can better support
law enforcement and other partners in untangling networks of shell companies run by
criminals, and work to hold them accountable.
It is not only international malign actors like drug tra ickers, Russian oligarchs, and Iranian
agents exploiting shell companies, but also home-grown criminals—like fraudsters, tax cheats,
and corrupt o icials—who use these tools to illicitly enrich themselves at the expense of their
fellow Americans. For example, last year, seven individuals were indicted for an alleged
conspiracy involving e orts to steal the identities of accountants and taxpayers, file 371 false
tax returns, and claim more than $100 million in refunds.
Moreover, fraudsters have used shell companies to facilitate their exploitation of innocent
American victims, and corrupt o icials have hidden bribes and misappropriated funds through
anonymous LLCs.
Accordingly, FinCENʼs e orts to promote corporate transparency will both keep our countryʼs
financial system safe and protect everyday Americans.

PREVENT ING T HE AB USE OF T HE RESIDENT IAL REAL
ESTAT E SECTOR
Another major vulnerability involves the abuse of certain segments of the U.S. residential real
estate sector. Although 80 percent of the residential real estate market has long been subject
to stringent AML/CFT requirements, a range of national security threats—from foreign
kleptocrats to drug kingpins—have been able to exploit certain regulatory gaps and
anonymously park and launder their ill-gotten gains through all-cash purchases of U.S. real
estate. They have leveraged the stability, size, and value of the U.S. housing market for their
own nefarious gain, investing in an appreciating asset by hiding their wealth in Miami villas,
Manhattan penthouses, and suburban neighborhoods.
To address these regulatory gaps, last week, FinCEN issued a proposal to increase
transparency into certain non-financed transfers of U.S. residential real estate. This proposal
builds on years of information collected through FinCENʼs residential real estate Geographic
Targeting Order program, which requires reporting on certain residential estate transactions
in specified geographic areas of the United States. Our proposed rule aims to equip our law

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enforcement and national security partners with a lasting tool to help curb the flow of illicit
proceeds through the residential real estate market across all of America.
Criminal exploitation of the real estate market does not just enable illicit activity, it can also
be deeply unfair to everyday Americans. At a time when many American cities are grappling
with limited housing supply and record-high prices, criminals are able to buy homes
anonymously. Many of the properties they purchase sit vacant for years—functioning not as
homes, but as vehicles for storing and hiding ill-gotten wealth. Without action, this can
exacerbate housing market manipulation and corrode our neighborhoods, towns, and cities.
FinCENʼs proposal aims to bring transparency to the sector and remedy the existing
regulatory gaps that allow illicit actors to exploit the U.S. residential real estate market.

SAF EGUARDING F INANCIAL SERVICES
Another one of our current priorities involves the misuse of the U.S. investment adviser sector
by illicit actors. While many key players in the financial services sector—like banks, brokerdealers, and mutual funds—have, for decades, implemented regulations to identify and
prevent money laundering and illicit financial activity, the investment adviser sector as a
whole has not been consistently or comprehensively subject to these foundational AML/CFT
obligations.
As recent Treasury analysis has found—including in an illicit finance risk assessment for the
investment advisers sector published this week—illicit actors have moved massive amounts of
funds through witting and unwitting investment advisers.
In one instance, as part of the infamous 1MDB corruption scheme, investment funds
laundered approximately $150 million to acquire interests in various companies owned or
a iliated with an SEC-registered private equity firm.
Separately, billions of dollars belonging to sanctioned Russian oligarchs and elites have been
managed by U.S. investment advisers—in violation of U.S. sanctions and in support of Russiaʼs
war in Ukraine.
Additionally, foreign state actors have also used surreptitious investments in private funds
managed by U.S. investment advisers to gain access to sensitive and emerging U.S.
technologies—undermining American innovation and economic competitiveness.

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Remarks by Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian Nelson on Treasury’s Efforts to Safeguard th…

To curb this illicit activity, earlier this week, Treasury issued a proposal to apply AML/CFT
Compliance Program and Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) filing obligations to certain
investment advisers. These measures would be critical to helping prevent misuse of this
sector and stopping illicit financial activity in its tracks and protecting U.S. businesses from
these threats.
This proposal would also help to harmonize regulatory obligations for advisers with existing
obligations that already apply to banks, broker-dealers, mutual funds, and others. It would
also help us to advance a level regulatory playing field across the financial services sector—so
that no firm gets an unfair advantage.

SEEKING PRIVAT E SECTOR F EEDB ACK
As we work to address these systemic vulnerabilities in the U.S. financial system, getting
feedback from our stakeholders, including the private sector, is critical. We are committed to
ensuring that these initiatives both keep our country safe and advance fairness and
opportunity. That is why—across all of our work—we will continue to make it a priority that
regulatory obligations are clear, streamlined, and reasonable.
We recognize that it is most o en those in the private sector that are on the front lines of
identifying illicit activity and helping us stop it. That is why we assign so much value to
hearing from the private sector. As part of the rulemaking process, there is a public comment
period, and we are looking forward to engaging with key stakeholder groups and making sure
their voices are heard.
The U.S. financial system is a pillar of the United Statesʼ economic health, and a driver of
growth and opportunity across our country. The same traits that make it such an asset to us
—its size and stability, its dynamism, and its centrality to global commerce, to name a few—
also make it appealing to illicit actors.
Addressing the gaps in our AML/CFT regime will help prevent bad actors from operating
across the United States and protect Americans from harm. These e orts—assessing illicit
finance risk, enhancing beneficial ownership transparency, and preventing the misuse of the
residential real estate and investment adviser sectors—reflect our commitment to
safeguarding the U.S. financial system. These e orts are not just priorities for the Treasury
Department, they are also key goals for the President, who called on us to advance these

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initiatives when he published the first-ever U.S. Strategy on Countering Corruption in the first
year of his administration.
We will continue to take action to identify and mitigate vulnerabilities in other parts of our
financial system as well. This work helps advance U.S. economic and national security, while
bolstering U.S. leadership and international standards relating to countering money
laundering, terrorist financing, and illicit finance.
We are committed to ensuring that the benefits of the U.S. financial system extend to all
Americans—through better jobs, equitable and fair markets, and economic prosperity—while
also protecting it from those who seek to exploit it.
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