Australia Sues Crown Casinos in Money Laundering Lawsuit
Australia's financial crime watchdog filed a wide-ranging
civil lawsuit against casino operator Crown Resorts Ltd on Tuesday, accusing it
of failing to assess risks of money laundering and terrorism financing at its
only two operational resorts.
The Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre
(AUSTRAC) said the company started by billionaire James Packer had failed to
meet its obligations, making its business and the country's financial system
"vulnerable to criminal exploitation".
AUSTRAC's investigation found "poor governance, risk
management and failures to have and maintain a compliant AML/CTF programme
detailing how Crown would identify, mitigate and manage the risk of their
products and services being misused for money laundering or terrorism
financing," the watchdog's CEO, Nicole Rose, said in a statement.
Crown "also failed to carry out appropriate ongoing
customer due diligence including on some very high risk customers. This led to
widespread and serious non-compliance over a number of years," Rose added.
AUSTRAC did not publish its statement of claim against Crown
but a Federal Court database showed a lawsuit filed by AUSTRAC against Crown
was filed on Tuesday.
Crown said it was reviewing AUSTRAC's statement of claim,
but that it had developed a comprehensive mediation plan and overhauled its
governance since allegations of poor due diligence surfaced at a regulatory
inquiry in 2020.
AUSTRAC began its investigation into Crown in October 2020
during the first of what would become three bruising regulatory inquiries into
Crown's governance, one for each city where it has a casino.
The inquiries prompted authorities in Sydney to suspend the
company's gambling licence - before it had opened a new resort there - while
authorities in Melbourne put Crown under government supervision.
A third inquiry, in Perth, is yet to report its findings.
The company has meanwhile replaced most of its board and
management and recommended shareholders - who include billionaire founder and
37% owner James Packer - back a $6.3 billion buyout by private equity giant
Blackstone Inc.
A Blackstone representative declined to comment.
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