Why gold in your phone could be funding drug gangs
A gold refiner that was used by criminals to launder drug money has been allowed to sell gold into global supply chains used to make smartphones and cars.
International investigators concluded that the Dubai-based
trader Kaloti was buying gold from criminal networks.
The US Treasury was urged by law enforcement six years ago
to warn the world that it was a "primary money laundering concern".
But the warning was never given.
As a result, Kaloti has continued to sell tonnes of gold to
companies in the supply chains of Apple, General Motors and Amazon, which use
the precious metal in components. This has put firms and millions of consumers
at risk of unwittingly funding criminal activity.
The US Treasury did not respond to requests for comment.
Kaloti's representatives said it "vehemently
denied" it was knowingly involved in any crime or misconduct.
'Honey Badger'
Confidential documents seen by the International Consortium
of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and the BBC reveal the US Treasury was
urged by investigators in 2014 to issue the warning after a three-year
investigation.
Codenamed "Honey Badger" and led by the Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA), the investigation concluded that Kaloti was
involved in a scheme to transport or transfer "tremendous amounts of
illicit value through the use of gold as a commodity".
Under the scheme described in the documents, criminals
anywhere in the world could use drug money or other unlawfully obtained cash to
buy scrap gold such as second-hand jewellery and bring it to Kaloti.
In exchange for the gold, according to investigators, Kaloti
would offer bulk cash or send a wire transfer to them.
In 2014, the DEA recommended that the US Treasury should
publicly designate Kaloti a "primary money laundering concern" under
the US Patriot Act, which would have made it too risky for global banks to do
business with them, freezing the group out of the global financial system.
But the US Treasury never took action against Kaloti. Former
officials said it put off a decision on the recommendation, concerned about the
reaction of the United Arab Emirates, a key diplomatic ally, where Kaloti was
based.
When the UAE failed to act on its own initiative, the investigation
was shelved.
Suspicious activity
Kaloti did not have the chance to see or challenge any of
the evidence as they were not questioned by investigators and there could be
undisclosed reasons justifying why the report wasn't acted upon. Attempts to
obtain an explanation from the US Treasury failed to draw a response.
The investigation, which the US government has never made
public, was supported by a flood of reports of suspicious activity from banks
across the world handling Kaloti's money.
Lenders including Deutsche Bank and Barclays submitted 34
separate reports about Kaloti to the US Treasury's Financial Crime Enforcement
Network (FinCEN), highlighting as suspicious thousands of transactions from
2007 to 2015 totalling $9.3bn (£7.26bn).
In 2017 a money laundering gang was convicted in France of
laundering the proceeds of drug sales all over Europe including the UK.
Last October, BBC Panorama revealed that a company
controlled by the gang, Renade International, had sold $146m (£114m) of gold to
Kaloti in 2012 alone - part of $5.2bn of gold purchases paid for with cash.
Kaloti vehemently denies ever acting improperly and says it
has never been accused or contacted by any US authority about wrongdoing.
It says it performs full due diligence on all customers and
suppliers.
Lawyers for the firm said it had successfully passed audits
each year against all regulatory and legal standards.
Supply chain fears
The DEA-led taskforce investigating Kaloti submitted a
report of their investigation and recommended the primary money laundering
designation in August 2014.
But after the designation didn't materialise, gold sold by
Kaloti has continued to end up in major supply chains.
Apple's list of approved suppliers includes entities which
have purchased tonnes of gold from Kaloti, including Valcambi, one of the
largest gold refiners in the world, based in Switzerland.
All modern smartphones feature components made with gold,
which is a highly conductive metal.
This year the anti-corruption watchdog Global Witness
reported that in 2018 and 2019, Valcambi purchased up to 20 tonnes of gold
directly from Kaloti and a further 60 tonnes from a related entity.
A further report by the Tech Transparency Project listed two
further Swiss refiners which had purchased gold from Kaloti and were also on
Apple's list of suppliers.
Valcambi said it would not confirm or deny buying gold from
Kaloti. The company said it only purchases gold from its suppliers "where
the company can fully ensure the identification of the origin of the
gold".
In a statement, Apple said it was committed to responsibly
sourcing for its products: "If a refiner is unable or unwilling to meet
our standards, they will be removed from our supply chain. Since 2015, we've
stopped working with 63 refiners of gold for this reason.
"Several thorough and independent reviews have been
conducted since 2015, and there is no evidence that any gold from Kaloti enters
Apple products."
Kaloti is listed as being in the supply chain for General
Motors and Amazon, according to data submitted to the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the US regulator.
General Motors, which uses gold in car parts such as
catalytic converters, said it was committed to responsible sourcing of goods
used in its manufacturing and had not done business with Kaloti directly.
It said none of its suppliers had shared any compliance
issues or concerns regarding Kaloti.
Amazon said it was "committed to ensuring that the
products and services we provide are produced in a way that respects human
rights and the environment. We engage with suppliers that are committed to
these same principles.
"We expect suppliers to support our effort to identify
the origin of designated minerals used in our products."
Investigators who had worked for years to expose money
laundering linked to Kaloti describe themselves as "incredibly
frustrated" by the US Treasury's handling of the matter.
"We put a tremendous amount of work and effort over
three years into the case - we all lived and breathed it," said one of the
people on the DEA-led taskforce, speaking anonymously.
"We were very confident we had more than enough for
them to be designated. It pissed us all off."
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