MARYLAND FEDS SEIZE MORE ONLINE GAMBLING FUNDS
30 October 2009
$365 366 taken from two Atrium Financial
Group bank accounts
The Maryland-based federal task group pursuing cash
processors suspected of facilitating online gambling
transactions (see previous InfoPowa reports) has struck
again, according to the Baltimore City Paper.
The
newspaper is closely monitoring the task force's
activities, especially in regards to seizure warrants
applied for through the courts and appearing on court
records.
In the latest discover, the newspaper
reports that the seizure of $365 366.69 from two bank
accounts in the name of Atrium Financial Group (AFG) is
the latest move by enforcement officials.
According to a court affidavit published by the
newspaper, Delaware-based AFG is alleged to disburse
money to online gamblers, including those using
GoldenCasino.com.
Unlike earlier seizures, the
Atrium Financial action is supported by an affidavit
that was not sealed. The 13-page sworn statement by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) special agent
Augusta Ferenec, who is based in New Orleans, La., was
signed on September 4 by U.S. District Court magistrate
judge Beth Gesner, with the warrant filed in court
records on October 22.
Ferenec's affidavit,
claims the investigation leading to the AFG seizures
dates back to July 14, 2008, when Louisiana State Police
officers opened an "undercover gambling account" with
GoldenCasino.com, gambled online and later requested a
payout.
The first check—from a Canadian company
called Interco Finance Corporation (IFC) - bounced.
Eventually, a second check came, this one from AFG.
Thus, the investigation claimed to have established that
GoldenCasino.com was using both IFC and AFG as payment
processors for its online gambling patrons.
Ferenec explains in the affidavit that a fourth business
- Con-Tex Converters in Canada - entered the picture as
investigators followed the global money trail.
For instance, an AFG account with Mercantile Bank
received wire transfers between December 2008 and
January 2009 amounting to more than $1.5 million. The
money came from a Con-Tex bank account in Cyprus and a
combined Con-Tex/IFC bank account in Canada.
During the same timeframe, Ferenec's affidavit
continues, AFG cut 1 473 checks from that account, at
least two of which went to people in Maryland. In August
2009, investigators talked to one of the Maryland
recipients, who admitted the proceeds had come from
online gambling.
In all, Ferenec's affidavit maps
out a total of nearly $6.3 million wired internationally
by either Con-Tex or IFC to AFG bank accounts in the
U.S. The AFG accounts, which the affidavit says have all
been closed by the banks due to suspicions that the
money was tied to illegal gambling, were held with
Mercantile, Sovereign Bank, Wachovia Bank, National City
Bank, and TD Bank North.
The international wire
transfers from Con-Tex and IFC were the sole sources of
funds in the AFG accounts, the affidavit explains.
The two AFG bank accounts targeted for seizure are
with Fifth Third Bank and Wilmington Savings Fund
Society.
The Fifth Third account, from which
$124 028.88 was seized, received about $3.3 million in
wire transfers from Con-Tex and IFC between December
2008 and June 2009, the affidavit explains. Nearly 4 000
checks were cut from the account, totaling about $3.1
million disbursed to people in the U.S.
During
July and August 2009, 35 of those checks were issued to
Maryland residents. The amount of money entering AFG's
Wilmington Savings account is not specified in the
affidavit, which explains that about 575 checks were cut
from the account, one of which was mailed to a Texan who
"confirmed to the bank that the check was the proceeds
of online gambling."
Ferenec's affidavit says
it's likely that money will continue to enter the
targeted accounts "for a period of time" after the
warrants are executed, because those involved "will be
unable to promptly stop the flow of funds or inform all
of their contacts of this investigation." Therefore,
Ferenec requests that the warrant order the banks to
allow the deposits to continue, but not any attempted
debits, and that "ICE be allowed to periodically remove
such funds" during a 21-day period after the warrants
are executed.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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