I posted this in the Trafficking Sticky, but I don't know how many people read it, so am posting some exerpts here because I think everyone should be aware of this technology. You can read the whole article in the Sticky.
Canada’s financial watchdog has sent more than 100 disclosures to police in the past year on human trafficking in a quiet new initiative that targets traffickers by following their money.
Project Protect is a partnership between the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FinTRAC), financial institutions and law enforcement that is using money trails to detect and investigate traffickers.
Banks’ anti-money laundering arms are starting to red flag suspicious accounts, based on indicators such as multiple motel bookings, large expenditures at drug stores and frequent ATM deposits in the middle of the night. They report suspicious activity to FinTRAC, which in turn notifies law enforcement.
In the year since the project was launched, FinTRAC has made 102 disclosures to police across Canada under the Project Protect label. By comparison, in the year before, there were 19 such trafficking-related disclosures.
Those who work to counter human trafficking say following the money trail can help back up a victim’s story and potentially reveal other people who are being exploited. It may also, eventually, help secure convictions, which are still rare for this crime.
In December, FinTRAC released an operational alert to 31,000 businesses, partners and police that included a lengthy list of indicators that point to signs of trafficking. Red flags include payments for online escort ads, frequent hotel and motel bookings along with air and rail purchases, frequent large purchases at pharmacies and lingerie shops, payment in bitcoin and frequent deposits or withdrawals between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m., along with banking activity at ATMs in different cities or provinces.
It’s not just banks getting on board. Accounting firms are, too. Grant Thornton LLP joined the project a year ago, and has produced two reports for clients in different sectors on the financial red flags for trafficking. “There’s been a strong response to stop this; we need to eradicate this and get this out of our communities,” said Jennifer Fiddian-Green, partner and anti-money laundering expert, who went to Winnipeg this month to train credit unions on what to watch for.
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Although the technology was developed to help identify potential victims of trafficking, the same red flags could identify a SP who's working voluntarily, and this data could alert your bank, your accountant and Law Enforcement about the type of work you're doing. It could also flag banking activity of prolific pooners who pay for expensive hotel rooms, lingerie, condoms, etc. for consensual pay for play, frequently.
So if you don't want people to know you're an escort or client who sees them, be really careful how you do your banking and how you pay for stuff like hotel rooms and ads.
Canada’s financial watchdog has sent more than 100 disclosures to police in the past year on human trafficking in a quiet new initiative that targets traffickers by following their money.
Project Protect is a partnership between the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FinTRAC), financial institutions and law enforcement that is using money trails to detect and investigate traffickers.
Banks’ anti-money laundering arms are starting to red flag suspicious accounts, based on indicators such as multiple motel bookings, large expenditures at drug stores and frequent ATM deposits in the middle of the night. They report suspicious activity to FinTRAC, which in turn notifies law enforcement.
In the year since the project was launched, FinTRAC has made 102 disclosures to police across Canada under the Project Protect label. By comparison, in the year before, there were 19 such trafficking-related disclosures.
Those who work to counter human trafficking say following the money trail can help back up a victim’s story and potentially reveal other people who are being exploited. It may also, eventually, help secure convictions, which are still rare for this crime.
In December, FinTRAC released an operational alert to 31,000 businesses, partners and police that included a lengthy list of indicators that point to signs of trafficking. Red flags include payments for online escort ads, frequent hotel and motel bookings along with air and rail purchases, frequent large purchases at pharmacies and lingerie shops, payment in bitcoin and frequent deposits or withdrawals between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m., along with banking activity at ATMs in different cities or provinces.
It’s not just banks getting on board. Accounting firms are, too. Grant Thornton LLP joined the project a year ago, and has produced two reports for clients in different sectors on the financial red flags for trafficking. “There’s been a strong response to stop this; we need to eradicate this and get this out of our communities,” said Jennifer Fiddian-Green, partner and anti-money laundering expert, who went to Winnipeg this month to train credit unions on what to watch for.
****************************
Although the technology was developed to help identify potential victims of trafficking, the same red flags could identify a SP who's working voluntarily, and this data could alert your bank, your accountant and Law Enforcement about the type of work you're doing. It could also flag banking activity of prolific pooners who pay for expensive hotel rooms, lingerie, condoms, etc. for consensual pay for play, frequently.
So if you don't want people to know you're an escort or client who sees them, be really careful how you do your banking and how you pay for stuff like hotel rooms and ads.
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