Last Updated: Tue Aug 21, 2012 09:16 am (KSA) 06:16 am (GMT)

U.S. seizes $150 million from Lebanese bank in laundering scheme

U.S. authorities say the money seized linked to a scheme by Hezbollah to launder proceeds from drug trafficking and other crimes. (Reuters)
U.S. authorities say the money seized linked to a scheme by Hezbollah to launder proceeds from drug trafficking and other crimes. (Reuters)

U.S. authorities on Monday announced the seizure of $150 million allegedly linked to a scheme by the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah to launder proceeds from drug trafficking and other crimes.

The money came from an American bank account used by the Beirut-based Lebanese Canadian Bank (LCB) to conduct U.S. currency transactions, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara and Drug Enforcement Administration chief Michele Leonhart said.

Washington considers the Shi’ite militant group a terrorist organization and accuses Syria and Iran of providing its weaponry.

Monday’s seizure concerns a December 2011 money laundering and forfeiture complaint filed in U.S. federal court in New York that targeted the bank and two other Lebanese financial institutions with alleged ties to Hezbollah.

“As we alleged last year, the Lebanese Canadian Bank played a key role in facilitating money laundering for Hezbollah controlled organizations across the globe,” Leonhart said in a statement.

U.S. prosecutors then alleged that the LCB, the Hassan Ayash Exchange Company and the Ellissa Holding Company knowingly participated in a scheme in which money from various individuals and companies in Beirut was sent from Lebanon to purchase used cars in the United States. The cars were then sold in West Africa, and Hezbollah-linked groups would help smuggle the proceeds into Lebanon, authorities said.

“Cash from the sale of the cars, along with proceeds of narcotics trafficking, were then funneled to Lebanon through Hezbollah-controlled money laundering channels,” the U.S. Attorney’s office said at the time.

Hezbollah refuted the charges, saying they were “another attempt to tarnish the image of the resistance in Lebanon,” but U.S. prosecutors said there was no doubt about the institutions’ ties to the militant outfit.

“Our relentless pursuit of global criminal networks showed that the U.S. banking system was exploited to launder drug trafficking funds through West Africa and into Lebanon,” Leonhart said Monday.

“DEA and our partners are attacking these groups and their financial infrastructure, while establishing clear links between drug trafficking proceeds and terrorist funding,” she added.

Bharara said: “Money is the lifeblood of terrorist and narcotics organizations, and while banks which launder money for terrorists and narco-traffickers may be located abroad, today’s announcement demonstrates that those banks and their assets are not beyond our reach.

“We will use every resource at our disposal to separate terrorists and narco-traffickers, and the banks that work with them, from their illicit funds, even those hidden in foreign accounts.”

Washington considers Hezbollah to be a terrorist group. U.S. officials say that it has become increasingly involved in the drug trade, facilitating the distribution and sale of cocaine in West Africa.

The United States earlier this month hit Hezbollah with sanctions as a penalty for supporting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

Hezbollah’s arsenal makes it the most powerful military force in Lebanon and the issue of its weaponry is considered one of the most destabilizing factors in the country.

Hezbollah considers its weapons to be a legitimate safeguard against Israel, but the Lebanese opposition believes the government, and not a Shi’ite militia, should be the arbiter of the nation’s arms and defense policy.

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