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12/7/2023

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Financial Institution Leaders Roundtable in Mexico City, Mexic…

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Financial
Institution Leaders Roundtable in Mexico City, Mexico
December 6, 2023

As Prepared for Delivery
Good a ernoon. I would like to start by expressing the Treasury Departmentʼs appreciation to
each of you for your commitment to combating illicit finance and for your financial
institutions' engagement with Treasury.
Through multiple transitions in U.S. and Mexican presidential administrations, the strong
relationship between Treasury and your financial institutions, solidified through regular
meetings like this one, has allowed us to discuss topics such as illicit finance typologies
involving our two countries, compliance challenges you may face, concerns related to derisking, and dollar repatriation from Mexico.
Treasury has also worked hard to exchange operational information with banks on both sides
of the border, and I know that several of the policy discussions you have had with Treasury
o icials and U.S. banks have informed concrete work we have done together. Most
importantly, our collaboration has had a meaningful impact on preventing and reducing the
flow of illicit proceeds within and between the United States and Mexico.
Going forward, we must build on this strong foundation and increase our joint e orts to
target the illicit finances of transnational criminal organizations and the networks of enablers
and service providers laundering money on their behalf.
The tra icking of illicit drugs—particularly fentanyl—has been and will remain a key focus of
our work. Drug tra icking undermines the rule of law, threatens the health of our citizens, and
poses risks to our economic and national security. By some estimates, drug tra icking alone
generates nearly $100 billion a year that flows through the U.S. financial system.
As part of a broader U.S. e ort to disrupt the illicit finance that sustains transnational
organized crime groups and to undermine their ability to launder their ill-gotten gains through
our respective financial systems, Treasury will continue to employ our sanctions authorities to
cut o narco tra ickers and their enablers from the U.S. and international financial systems.
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy1958

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12/7/2023

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at Financial Institution Leaders Roundtable in Mexico City, Mexic…

As was announced earlier today, Treasury has designated 16 individuals and two entities
a iliated with the Beltran Leyva Organization under our authority that allows us to designate
any individual or entity that engages in activities or transactions that contribute to the global
drug trade.
Since at least February 2001, the BLO has continuously imported multi-ton quantities of
fentanyl, cocaine, and methamphetamine into the U.S. from Mexico. Todayʼs designation is the
result of strong coordination between OFAC and Mexicoʼs financial intelligence unit, the UIF,
whom I would like to personally thank.
Iʼll now turn to a drug threat that has emerged over the past several years and provides drug
tra ickers a new revenue stream to finance their undermining of public safety in Mexico: the
illicit trade in fentanyl and other synthetic opioids, their precursor chemicals, and their means
of production, such as pill presses, die molds, and other manufacturing equipment.
The illicit procurement of precursor chemicals by drug tra icking organizations in Mexico
presents a key challenge for our joint e orts to disrupt the trade in fentanyl. Because many of
these chemicals have legitimate pharmaceutical uses, it can o en be di icult for investigators
to detect illicit diversion.
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https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy1958

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