Investigators

Six ways asset recovery professionals can use social networks to advance their cases and careers

By: 
David Quinones
Date: 
11/28/2011
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Relevant

Connect with IAAR's Social Networks

You’ve been told about the importance of social networks ad nauseum, but between casework, your personal life and actual in-person networking, finding the time to tend to these profiles can be demanding. However, any asset recovery* and financial crime professional trying to build a name in the field – even if your position precludes you from being prominent – should know the basics.

Looking for clues when there are none: Part II – How criminals obscure their identities through nominees and other unwitting abettors

By: 
Don C. Semesky, Jr.
Date: 
11/03/2011
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About the Author

Don Semesky is a member of the IAAR Advisory Board and the former Chief of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Office of Financial Operations in Washington, DC. He will be a featured speaker at the IAAR 3rd Annual Conference on Nov. 17-18, 2011, at the Planet Hollywood Resort in Las Vegas.

The traditional mindset of investigators when it comes to the use of nominees by the subjects of their investigations is connected to the ownership of assets; and that only trusted individuals or companies, that they can exercise some type of dominion and control over, will be used to hold title to their assets.

Digital sleuth shares top strategies for the computer age

Author: 
Steve Rambam
President and CEO, Pallorium Inc.
Date: 
02/22/2012

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This was recorded on September 26, 2011.  Expert digital investigator Steve Rambam of Pallorium Inc. spoke with IAAR editor David Quinones about the modern world of virtual investigations, mobile devices, the death of privacy and what it means for asset recovery* professionals.

Follow the money, find the fraud

By: 
Tracy L. Coenen, CPA, CFF
Date: 
09/19/2011
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Forensic accounting has been around for decades, but only in the last 10 years have people become aware of the profession on a wide scale. In this article, originally appearing in the Wisconsin Law Journal, IAAR expert speaker Tracy L. Coenen gives her best practices to tracing frauds. Download now...

The big News Corp. asset recovery question: Are foreign corruption charges coming?

By: 
David Quinones
Date: 
07/28/2011

While the News of the World phone hacking investigation is still in its early stages, the possibility of parent company News Corp. being forced to make restitution to victims, families, shareholders and even the UK and US governments through civil and criminal litigation, and the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, is very real.

Citigroup seeks dismissal of Madoff bankruptcy trustee’s $430 million suit

By: 
IAAR Staff
Date: 
07/27/2011
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Citigroup Inc. asked a bankruptcy judge to throw out a $430 million lawsuit brought by the Trustee in the Bernard Madoff bankruptcy*. The trustee doesn’t allege and can’t claim that Citigroup defendants had actual knowledge of the insolvency* of Madoff’s firm or that any transfer they received was made with a fraudulent purpose, the New York-based bank said in a filing yesterday in U.S. Bankruptcy* Court in Manhattan.

Apartheid asset recovery challenge illustrates retaliation is the norm for corruption-fighters in South Africa

By: 
David Quinones
Date: 
07/18/2011

What does a declassified British security service's report have to do with the South African government's utter lack of political will to pursue corruption proceeds? Many onlookers are saying it is indicative of an endemic problem experienced by those who try to recover assets on behalf of the country. Meanwhile, billions of dollars in potential restitution hang in the balance.

Investigating corruption? Get ready to be investigated yourself.

Pending EU asset preservation order is a potent weapon that almost wasn't

By: 
David Quinones
Date: 
07/13/2011
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After surviving an early attempt to blunt the legislation, the soon-to-be-released European Order for the Preservation of Assets and its sister law, the European Order for the Disclosure of Assets, could be effective in the cross-border fight to take back assets, if they are enacted.

Swiss block Syrian assets worth $32 million

By: 
IAAR Staff
Date: 
07/05/2011
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Switzerland has blocked Syrian assets worth 27 million Swiss francs ($32 million), Swiss news agency SDA reported on Sunday, citing a Swiss newspaper report that the Swiss Secretariat for Economics (SECO) confirmed. The news agency said SECO declined to comment on whether the assets of President Bashar al-Assad had been frozen. Reuters, Sunday, July 3, 2011

UK Bribery Act, Day 1: Podcast with a key architect of the Act

Author: 
Charles Monteith
Counsel, White & Case
Date: 
07/01/2011

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After months of debate, acrimony and delay the UK Bribery Act was finally put into force today, and while the business system as we know it in London has not collapsed, there is still anxiety in the air. IAAR Editor David Quinones caught up with White & Case's Charles Monteith, former Head of Legal and Operational Assurance at the UK Serious Fraud Office and the only individual to contribute to the drafting of every section of the Act, to discuss the potential impact of the legislation. How will it affect you? What do you need to know?

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