Thursday, May 17th
Last update:17-May-2012 09:29
President’s Family Benefits from Eurovision Hall
OCCRP Journalists Win Serbia’s Best Investigative Story of the Year
Azerbaijan's President Awarded Family Stake in Gold Fields
Azerbaijan Fails to Investigate Harassment of OCCRP Reporter
Balkan Countries Fail in Anti-Corruption Efforts As the U.S. government budget faces cuts across agencies, one area that will actually grow is the fight against transnational organized crime, according to the Obama administration’s new budget proposal.
The White House’s proposed Fiscal budget for 2013 has a new budget line for Transnational Organized Crime Investigations unit, which would receive $3 million in its first year.
The money would finance the International Organized Crime Intelligence and Operations Center, established in 2009 as a central node for intelligence agencies to collaborate against transnational organized crime groups operating in the U.S.
Obama’s administration asked for US$ 2 billion more for the Justice Department, bringing the total request to US$36.5 billion.
Officials from the Departments of the Treasury and Justice testified last week that organized crime groups have been ever more successful at exploiting legal loopholes to launder money from drug and weapons trafficking to the tune of billions of dollars. Jennifer Shasky, head of the Justice Department’s Money Laundering unit, said drug traffickers alone launder an estimated US$85 billion.
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