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Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Topic: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America? (Read 6053 times)
Simon Galloway
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #15 on:
December 30, 2015, 12:33:58 PM »
Easy to do 35 years ago and I'm sure it pretty much happened exactly like ^^ that.
Not a bad gig either, fly in with a suitcase, enjoy every possible trapping the casino can bestow upon you, only instruction is to not lose too much of it.
Nowadays, that would be a very obvious flag. Someone buying in for $1M and not giving "appropriate action" on a regular basis should/would trigger a STR.
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RED-DOG
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #16 on:
December 30, 2015, 12:37:38 PM »
Quote from: Simon Galloway on December 30, 2015, 12:20:46 PM
Pretty much covered ^^ Tom, but a few more snippets for you.
First of all, it is a decade or more since I could claim to be up to date on anything in that field, so things may definitely have changed. Lots of money laundering crimes had a theoretical jail tarif of 7 years. In theory, it was possible (not sure if it ever happened) that the AML officer for the bank/financial institution deemed to have been complicit in the crime could be held singly accountable and also face jail time. To get that, he would certainly have to have been incompetent/negligent in the extreme, but you can start to see why they weren't interested in taking any chances.
Vegas, I think anything >$5k gets you paperwork. Bank transfers of $10k+ seem to also appear on radars. I assume they are hard and fast limits above which, a certain process must be followed. A poker player winning $10k in a cash game might not cash out, he might ask for 10x $1k chips or 2 x $5k chips as a "colour up" rather than for bills. If his intent was to circumvent the reporting process, then he is guilty of some crime or other. If his intent was to get something smaller for his pocket, then he isn't guilty, as far as I am aware. How do you prove what he was up to?
Next take the market stall owner. "Everything on my barrow is £1." At the end of a busy day, and with a big barow, he now has £300 in coin. The bank want to charge him as a small business for handling that much change, and the tax man is interested in his profit. The market stall holder decides to go into the casino and feed £300 into a slot machine and get a TITO payout which he takes to the cashier. Has he now just got free coin handling services from the casino? Was he giving sufficient level of action to be considered a bona fide gambler? Did he want paying out in cash, or did he want a cashier cheque? Small beer either way, but an alert casino wouldn't put up with it for very long before feeling obliged to take action.
Next take the market owner. He owns all the stalls. He's got £5k on him in grubby fivers and tenners, walks up to a roulette table and asks for £100 chips. He might place £100 on red and win or lose, go to the cashier. Or he might place £2k on red and stay there gambling for an hour, ending up eventually with £5100. Then either way, he will go to the cashier. It is now 3 in the morning and he doesnt fancy walking home with £5k on him, so he asks for a winner's cheque. Is this a false player that has just got free note changing service (and a free dinner) or possibly intending to under-report his busines profit by £5k with an "I won at the casino" defence. Or is it a genuine player, welcomed by the casino, taking legitimate gambles and making reasonable use of the amenities provided? The ridiculous ones stand out like a sore thumb, but there are always areas of grey that people can exploit to some degree.
Next take Daniel Negreanu. Obv I have no idea of his business dealings, but as this thread was about him losing his BoA, I thought I'd bring it around. On his various tweets, he often reports his profits and his profits adjusted for swaps/pieces. From memory, he would normally do better not to swap, but that is ofc up to him. Imagine when he hits something for $2M and has to settle up with a handful of players. In theory, the paperwork from the casino should tell a reasonable story of how he came about $2M and why he now needs to spread $400K around to a few select individuals. I know from personal experience that if you sit in front of a tax accountant and try and explain how you just sent someone $5k that you never met before with no paperwork, no contract and no signatures, it is a tough one to get through. While no-one even blinks in the poker world, the poker world often forgets how removed from mainstream society it sometimes is. Placing his account under additional scrutiny costs the bank time and money, as well as having to adopt some risk that they are having their pants pulled down and at some point, they will be up in front of the beak with egg on their face after appearing to have failed to have prevented a crime. That's not to say that I think DN is guilty of any crime (ok, guilty of one or two of the crimes levelled at him by the camel perhaps..) and I'm sure I'd rather swap $10k on a handshake with DN than with the CEO of BoA. But from a BOA business perspective, it might be genuinely hard to figure out how you are going to make any money out of having this guy's account open, whilst simultaneously having to stand a level of risk that you are not comfortable with.
Simon. That's excellent. Informative and entertaining. Easily good enough for a magazine article. Thank you.
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Tal
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
«
Reply #17 on:
December 30, 2015, 01:22:34 PM »
It's also much, much harder to launder money through property than it was a decade ago. If you can't do it through property, where would you clean half a million quid next?
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Simon Galloway
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #18 on:
December 30, 2015, 01:35:15 PM »
If you want to launder a few hundred, you can do it "free" by making a variety of non-supsicious transactions.
If you want to launder a few million, you can do it Breaking Bad style at the carwash. Cost of laundering goes up.
If you want to launder a very large sum, then the cost goes up even more. The city do have a figure for how many pennies on the pound it costs to clean money on this kind of scale. And it is high.
I wouldn't recommend you launder and money though, as it is naughty.
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RED-DOG
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #19 on:
December 30, 2015, 03:24:43 PM »
Quote from: Simon Galloway on December 30, 2015, 01:35:15 PM
If you want to launder a few hundred, you can do it "free" by making a variety of non-supsicious transactions.
If you want to launder a few million, you can do it Breaking Bad style at the carwash. Cost of laundering goes up.
If you want to launder a very large sum, then the cost goes up even more. The city do have a figure for how many pennies on the pound it costs to clean money on this kind of scale. And it is high.
I wouldn't recommend you launder and money though, as it is naughty.
Do you have any suggestions about how to get hold of the money in the first place?
TIA.
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SuuPRlim
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #20 on:
December 30, 2015, 05:39:49 PM »
It's just part of the game innit.
Try to keep big transactions to a minimum. Skrill and Neteller are very good.
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Simon Galloway
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #21 on:
December 30, 2015, 06:03:38 PM »
Quote from: RED-DOG on December 30, 2015, 03:24:43 PM
Do you have any suggestions about how to get hold of the money in the first place?
TIA.
You strike me as a man with experience Tom. Tikay is a man with money. Why don't you arrange to meet?
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RED-DOG
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #22 on:
December 30, 2015, 06:11:37 PM »
Quote from: Simon Galloway on December 30, 2015, 06:03:38 PM
Quote from: RED-DOG on December 30, 2015, 03:24:43 PM
Do you have any suggestions about how to get hold of the money in the first place?
TIA.
You strike me as a man with experience Tom. Tikay is a man with money. Why don't you arrange to meet?
If I had Tony's money I'd burn mine.
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mikeymike
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #23 on:
December 30, 2015, 08:54:14 PM »
Interesting topic
About a year ago i opened an account with a well known UK high street bank - i opened it with the branch manager and informed her that it was purely for my poker playing enjoyment and would have no other use apart from my poker losses and wins.
There has been a healthy amount gone into this account and each time i have made a withdrawal the cashiers do not bat an eyelid -. This was a simple cash account which they have now upgraded to a premier account.
My business account is held at another bank and occasionally i draw out large sums of cash (10k+) to pay sub contractors and suppliers - never been asked any questions.
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doubleup
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #24 on:
December 30, 2015, 09:27:03 PM »
Quote from: arbboy on December 30, 2015, 12:31:09 PM
Quote from: tikay on December 30, 2015, 12:25:54 PM
Steve Wynn's casino Empire - some say - was founded on laundering Mafia money.
Mafia guy arrives from New York or Chicago with $1 milly in small denom grubby bills, changes it into chips, gambles low variance High Low or Red Black on Roulette for 2 days & cashes in for £900,000 in clean money.
Repeat that regularly, & it all adds up. Tough to prove though.
Numerous betting shops only remain open because of drug dealers using FOBT's to clean their money. There was an interesting article a few months ago about it. They are happy to bet red/black and zero and iron out 2.7% to 'clean' their money. None of the big firms would comment on it but privately they all know it goes on and are more than happy to take the cut of their illicit trade providing the service.
I love using FOBT's to empty my bell's bottle (does anyone still have a bell's bottle to collect their coins in? I have had one since a kid) of coins twice a year and turn them into notes. Given how little these shops accommodate my betting business i get a sick amount of pleasure from ploughing £300 of coins of all denominations down to 5p's into a machine then having one spin for £1 then cashing out straight after and turning my coins into clean crispy notes. Not exactly money laundering but great entertainment to certain betting shop manager types who make it their business to refuse your business.
http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/nov/08/gambling-machines-drug-money-laundering-bookies
Sorry that is bollocks. Look at my post on the three stages of money laundering. They may be trying to say that they won the money gambling on FOBTS, but the truth is that simply isn't going to wash if the issue comes to court. A large amount of money will never be legitimised by that route.
The Proceeds of Crime Act added a new (and idiotic imo) definition of money laundering. It said if you used the cash proceeds of criminal activity for any purpose at all that was an offence of money laundering.
The drug dealer buying a pizza is money laundering. The drug dealer getting in a taxi is money laundering etc etc. So play a FOBT is also obviously money laundering. Its now an addon charge for virtually any crime involving money.
Cue journalists with an agenda (Guardian article), cue Sheldon Adelson and his cronies (the US patriot act had the same definition) - oooh online gambling is rife with money laundering, it must be shut down. Errr no somewhere like Ebay is absurdly easy to launder money in comparison.
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arbboy
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
«
Reply #25 on:
December 30, 2015, 10:14:16 PM »
Quote from: doubleup on December 30, 2015, 09:27:03 PM
Quote from: arbboy on December 30, 2015, 12:31:09 PM
Quote from: tikay on December 30, 2015, 12:25:54 PM
Steve Wynn's casino Empire - some say - was founded on laundering Mafia money.
Mafia guy arrives from New York or Chicago with $1 milly in small denom grubby bills, changes it into chips, gambles low variance High Low or Red Black on Roulette for 2 days & cashes in for £900,000 in clean money.
Repeat that regularly, & it all adds up. Tough to prove though.
Numerous betting shops only remain open because of drug dealers using FOBT's to clean their money. There was an interesting article a few months ago about it. They are happy to bet red/black and zero and iron out 2.7% to 'clean' their money. None of the big firms would comment on it but privately they all know it goes on and are more than happy to take the cut of their illicit trade providing the service.
I love using FOBT's to empty my bell's bottle (does anyone still have a bell's bottle to collect their coins in? I have had one since a kid) of coins twice a year and turn them into notes. Given how little these shops accommodate my betting business i get a sick amount of pleasure from ploughing £300 of coins of all denominations down to 5p's into a machine then having one spin for £1 then cashing out straight after and turning my coins into clean crispy notes. Not exactly money laundering but great entertainment to certain betting shop manager types who make it their business to refuse your business.
http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/nov/08/gambling-machines-drug-money-laundering-bookies
Sorry that is bollocks. Look at my post on the three stages of money laundering. They may be trying to say that they won the money gambling on FOBTS, but the truth is that simply isn't going to wash if the issue comes to court. A large amount of money will never be legitimised by that route.
The Proceeds of Crime Act added a new (and idiotic imo) definition of money laundering. It said if you used the cash proceeds of criminal activity for any purpose at all that was an offence of money laundering.
The drug dealer buying a pizza is money laundering. The drug dealer getting in a taxi is money laundering etc etc. So play a FOBT is also obviously money laundering. Its now an addon charge for virtually any crime involving money.
Cue journalists with an agenda (Guardian article), cue Sheldon Adelson and his cronies (the US patriot act had the same definition) - oooh online gambling is rife with money laundering, it must be shut down. Errr no somewhere like Ebay is absurdly easy to launder money in comparison.
I totally agree with you it is bollocks but it happens and the betting firms are quite happy for it to happen and turn a blind eye to it.
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EvilPie
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #26 on:
December 31, 2015, 12:36:10 AM »
Quote from: mikeymike on December 30, 2015, 08:54:14 PM
Interesting topic
About a year ago i opened an account with a well known UK high street bank - i opened it with the branch manager and informed her that it was purely for my poker playing enjoyment and would have no other use apart from my poker losses and wins.
There has been a healthy amount gone into this account and each time i have made a withdrawal the cashiers do not bat an eyelid -. This was a simple cash account which they have now upgraded to a premier account.
My business account is held at another bank and occasionally i draw out large sums of cash (10k+) to pay sub contractors and suppliers - never been asked any questions.
Why on earth would you pay suppliers and sub-contractors in cash? You're just asking for trouble doing that if you run a legitimate business. I can't understand anyone dealing in cash unless they have something to hide or they're trying to avoid tax somewhere or the other. That's why it gets looked in to, it just looks suspicious. If it's not you doing something wrong then it's the supplier or sub-contractor.
The bank might not care but you can guarantee HMRC will when they come knocking at your door.
When I got investigated there was one cash transaction for the whole year and they were all over it wanting precise details. That was £1500, I'd hate to have to explain £10k+
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SuuPRlim
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
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Reply #27 on:
December 31, 2015, 01:37:38 PM »
Paying in cash doesn't mean that you're doing it off the books necessarily ofc.
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SuuPRlim
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
«
Reply #28 on:
December 31, 2015, 01:46:42 PM »
Quote from: mikeymike on December 30, 2015, 08:54:14 PM
Interesting topic
About a year ago i opened an account with a
well known UK high street bank
- i opened it with the branch manager and informed her that it was purely for my poker playing enjoyment and would have no other use apart from my poker losses and wins.
There has been a healthy amount gone into this account and each time i have made a withdrawal the cashiers do not bat an eyelid -. This was a simple cash account which they have now upgraded to a premier account.
it's not the BBC btw you can tell us which one
I have a Natwest account I've had for over 15 years, 6 figures goes in and out in all sorts of transactions from all sorts of places and they are absolutely fine with me. I had an account at barclays barely did anything and they snap shut down, had an offshore account with Lloyds which they closed down but didn't close my personal account which I just take the piss with tbh with the Xfers i do. HSBC wouldn't even open me an account.
Natwest have closed down 3 people I know, 3 other people I know have said how great HSBC are to them, one friend of mine with Barclays says they are the nuts...
I think it's utterly random good/bad luck all this, you can help your cause my keeping big Xfers to a minimum, try not to move too much money for no need and just be a bit smart about it, but I gave up ruling my financial activity around trying to keep the banks happy because I realized they are just as likely to cut me no matter what i do.
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horseplayer
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Re: Nolan Dalla: Who’s the Greater Financial Risk — Negreanu or Bank of America?
«
Reply #29 on:
December 31, 2015, 03:36:26 PM »
A lot of it is who happens to looks at your account at any bank
If they have the time to do an aml report (very lengthy dull and usually filled in during a lunch break) or some who just presume anyone who gambles is dodgy
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