1、 https:/crsreports.congress.gov Updated January 4, 2022Money Laundering in the U.S. Real Estate SectorGlobal Trends and Domestic Concerns Money laundering and other financial crimes in the real estate sector take many forms and continue to challenge real estate, financial institution, law enforcemen
2、t, policymaker, and regulatory stakeholders. Global scrutiny of the real estate markets vulnerability to money laundering has grown in recent years. An issue Congress may consider is how to balance the money-laundering risks posed by the real estate sector against differing views on how to implement
3、 appropriate oversight. According to various sources, real estate money-laundering (REML) schemes can involve a wide range of domestic and transnational criminals, including drug cartels and human traffickers, international terrorists, and foreign kleptocrats (corrupt high-level officials). The purc
4、hase of real estate, often combined with methods to conceal a purchasers identity and source of funds, can allow criminals to integrate ill-gotten proceeds into the legal economy or park illicit wealth abroad. Although real estate transactions often intersect with financial institutions that are sub