Bribery in AML
Bribery in AML- Brief Overview
- Bribery is the offering, giving, receiving, or soliciting of something of value to improperly influence the decisions of individuals.
- Key typologies include procurement fraud, licensing and permitting bribes, customs and tax evasion facilitation.
- Common red flags involve unexplained payments, round-dollar transfers, or excessive commissions.
- Citadel365 helps detect risks related to bribery through its transaction monitoring, screening, and customer risk assessment.
Understanding Bribery Within Global AML and Anti-Corruption Frameworks
Bribery refers to the offering, receiving, giving, or soliciting of something valuable to unfairly influence someone’s decisions or actions. It involves cash payments, gifts, favours, or the promise of future benefits.
International standards, including FATF guidance, require financial institutions to implement a risk-based approach to detect, prevent, and report bribery-related risks and financial misconduct.
Bribery Risk Typologies and Common Abuse Patterns
The risk typologies and common abuse patterns in bribery are as follows:
- Public sector bribery involves abusing government projects, public funds, and contracts for personal gain, such as kickbacks, licensing, and permits, whereas private sector bribery involves private companies and individuals, such as paying for contracts, insider deals, and favourable treatment.
- Some common typologies include procurement fraud (bribing officials or companies to win contracts), licensing and permitting bribes (paying bribes to get permits or approvals), and customs and tax evasion facilitation (bribing tax officials to avoid duties, taxes, or inspections).
- Cross-border bribery risks involve using intermediaries, agents, and shell companies, often to avoid detection and obscure the beneficial ownership.
- These typologies are linked to money laundering stages, placement, layering, and integration, as bribe payments enter the financial system through banks, are layered by transferring them into multiple accounts to obscure the origin, and finally, the proceeds are re-entered the financial system as legitimate ones through investment, real estate, or luxury goods.
Red Flags and Suspicious Indicators of Bribery
Common red flags and suspicious indicators of bribery include:
- Transactional red flags associated with bribery involve unexplained payments (frequent payments with no clear business reasons), round-dollar transfers (paying whole round numbers, instead of exact amounts to avoid detailed scrutiny), or excessive commissions used to channel bribe payments, facilitation payments, or other improper inducements.
- Customer and behavioural indicators, including politically exposed persons (PEPs) and high-risk jurisdictions, pose a high risk of bribery.
- The third-party risk signals involve consultants, lobbyists, or offshore entities, acting as middlemen and used to obscure the purpose or fund flows.
- The presence of these red flags requires financial institutions to report the suspicion by filing a STR/STR to ensure regulatory compliance.
Regulatory Expectations and Enforcement Trends on Bribery
Regulatory expectations and enforcement trends on bribery are as follows:
- Global and local regulators treat bribery as a predicate offence for money laundering and, within the AML enforcement actions, target both financial institutions and individuals.
- Regulators expect companies to implement anti-bribery and corruption (ABC) programs that are aligned with AML controls, including Policies and Procedures, staff training, and transaction monitoring to prevent bribery risks.
- Failure to comply with regulations will result in penalties, remediation requirements, and personal liability risks.
- Financial institutions must implement risk-based approaches to prioritise high-risk activities, maintain audit trails and proper documentation to support Regulatory Reporting.
Addressing Bribery Risk Through Citadel365 AML Controls
Citadel365 helps in addressing bribery risk by implementing AML controls to identify and monitor bribery-related financial crime.
Integrating Anti-Bribery Controls into AML Programs
Know how integrating anti-bribery controls into AML programs helps in reducing risk exposure:
- Customer due diligence supports risk-based onboarding, which helps in early detection of corruption-related risks.
- Ongoing monitoring helps in continuous review of unusual payment behaviour, use of counterparties and intermediaries to detect new evolving risks of bribery and corruption.
- Strong governance and framework ensure that all the investigations are documented, risk is escalated, and decisions are supported by audit trails, enabling confident regulatory reporting.
Bribery FAQs for AML and Compliance Professionals
Bribery is classified as a predicate offence under AML laws because it involves illegal proceeds that may be laundered to disguise their origin.
The most common financial red flags associated with bribery include unexplained payments, round-dollar transfers, or excessive commissions.
Financial institutions manage bribery risks involving PEPs by implementing EDD, continuous monitoring, applying a risk-based approach, and reporting suspicious transactions.
Transaction monitoring supports bribery risk mitigation by detecting unusual patterns such as unexplained transfers, excessive commissions, and round-dollar payments.