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Let me start by saying that I understand that the money in my wallet may at one time have been used in an illicit transaction.
We have a question that we need help with.
How do we show regulators and other entities that Bob in the following scenario is not laundering funds?
Bob our mild mannered engineer who works from home has done a ton of work for a new website. He has agreed to accept payment in btc- The website pays him the equivalent of 20K USD in btc. The company bought those coins from a variety of other sources that are not involved in any criminal activity, those people also got their btc from other sources that are non-criminal. Let's say we dive an additional 5 levels deep and these btc are as pure as the driven snow. And maybe some of them were used long ago in sale of endangered birds or drugs or whatever. Just like the 20 dollar bill in my wallet.
7 months later Bob cashes in!! He now has 20K USD that he wants to deposit in to his bank account. In this scenario- mean men with badges show up at Bob's house and accuse him of selling dope and that 20K is via the proceeds of a crime and they want to send Bob to the nearest house of corrections. To make matters worse, Bob's work PC was lost in a boating accident and the web company he worked with is no longer in business. No proof of the work he did.
How can we help Bob quickly show the men with badges that the btc Bob received for payment was not bad money?
And as stated in the scenario maybe some of the btc were used in illicit activity but months later good honest people have these coins and we should consider these coins as pure as the $20 in my wallet that I got from may have been used to buy cocaine 5 months ago.
I can do analysis of our intake and show the regulators that the exchanges we work with are not buying from criminals and that we are certainly not allowing it. I am hoping to be able to show that people selling directly to exchanges are not not criminals either.
Thank you!
2At least in EU, you get a receipt for made transactions and you are eglible to preverse those according to the accounting laws. It really doesn't matter what transaction method, currency, etc. you have used. Only receipt proves whre the money is coming from and you need to trace it down only one step. – Mikko Ohtamaa – 2013-08-02T18:01:27.387
Exchanges are subject to Know Your Customer regulation and that guarantees that exchange guarantees they don't take criminal money https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Know_your_customer
– Mikko Ohtamaa – 2013-08-02T18:02:00.2171
In the similar news, your cash contains trace of cocaine http://www.greencupboards.com/blog/2011/02/09/how-much-cocaine-is-on-your-dollar/ - probably doesn't help you sleep any better if you are accepting cash
– Mikko Ohtamaa – 2013-08-02T18:04:08.917This shows the importance of proper business record-keeping. If Bob has kept no records, he's going to have a problem. – David Schwartz – 2013-08-02T23:09:02.190
Mikko I appreciate your comments but in case you are working in the AML space a quick word of warning. I have built AML and ecommerce risk platforms for the biggest names in ecommerce and KYC doesn't guarantee anything. - especially in the cyberworld. And that is the problem. BTC is undeniably a wonderful thing and it appeals to my core beliefs in many ways. But bad guys will wreck any system. And leave the rest of us scrambling to protect a good system. The problem I described either gets solved OR btc will be relegated to a relatively small use case. Thank you for your discussion. – John Kay – 2013-08-05T14:06:50.023
Mikko my apologies I meant to reply to your first comment regarding the EU. That is an incredible lead and I appreciate it. I'll research that. As you probably know companies are reluctant to add an extra step to ecommerce transactions like presenting receipts. However, that gives me a few other ideas that may be acceptable to the company and the customer. You win the internet for today. – John Kay – 2013-08-05T14:12:43.530
David- Totally agree- my example is a bit sloppy and I didn't do a good job as usual of getting my point across. My general idea is any customer, any amount. It will be important for companies receiving btc to be able to show that ANY sale(s) with a person over XXXX amount as a whole or aggregate is not from illicit activity. In my example Bob was on the hot seat but exchanges will be for a huge percentage of their payments. – John Kay – 2013-08-05T14:17:04.467
To everyone that pitched in- I am very grateful. It quickly became clear to me during our movement in to the btc world that there is a large part of the community that by action and intellect shows that Regulatory agencies should not be as worried as they are- because btc has smart people that are thoroughly engaged in the process of making this work. I am older than most here and sometimes folks my age wring their hands about younger generations. I tell them I have no fear. Because these generations are better than us in so many important ways. And your impact will be great... – John Kay – 2013-08-05T14:42:30.377