Coin Roll Hunting, Money Laundering, and you

placerman

Sr. Member
Oct 11, 2005
286
4
With the recent troubles of one of the members here I decided to investigate this a little further. I was a little surprised at what I found.


[size=13pt]Coin Roll Hunting, Money Laundering, and you[/size]


The various laws meant to catch criminals who are attempting to launder money can sometimes inadvertently get practitioners of this hobby into trouble as well.

Here is a rough explanation of the laws as I see them and how as a hunter, you can avoid these pitfalls.

Banks and many other financial institutions are required by law to report a whole range of financial transactions that could possibly be the result of an attempt to launder money.

This is by no means complete and I hope to add to it as I find things out.



First you need to understand money laundering. Here are a few web sites that to varying degrees help to explain what is going on…

http://www.wisebread.com/how-to-launder-money

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_laundering

http://money.howstuffworks.com/money-laundering2.htm

http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/2836/how-would-i-go-about-laundering-money






Miscellaneous Information

If you have ever received any money from a foreign source, you are on a watch list and your transactions will be heavily scrutinized.

If your name matches a list of suspicious persons as determined by any number of Federal agencies, your transactions will be heavily scrutinized. This list is called the Specially Designated Nationals list and contains thousands if not hundreds of thousands of names.

Your name is also very likely to be on this list if you are a Muslim… sorry Obediah.

If you make or receive calls from out of the country you are almost certainly on this list.

If you suddenly start making transactions involving thousands of dollars the bank that you do business with may or may not file a Suspicious Activity Report. This is by no means automatic and if your transaction does not amount to the required reporting limits, you will most likely not be reported.

With that said it is still possible and if you make a teller angry at you it is entirely possible that they might do this.

If you deposit or withdrawal more than 10,000 in any single day, the bank will file a Currency Transaction Report with the IRS, which can and often is forwarded to the FBI and various other Law Enforcement agencies.

There is a software program called “Know your customer” that continually analyzes your transactions and compares them to previous activity to pick out patterns. If it thinks something is going on it will report this to the management of the bank and from there, a suspicious activity report may or may not be generated.



THE BIG ONE

The big one is the Suspicious Activity Report.

If you ever have to talk with an alphabet agency over this hobby, it was almost assuredly because someone filed this report on you.

A SAR might be filed if you do any of the following…

1) Exchange one denomination of bills for another denomination of bills. This sounds pretty straightforward but a vengeful teller could interpret it as exchanging coins for cash and use it as an excuse to report you.

2) Allow someone else to deposit money into your account or if you deposit money into someone else’s account.

3) If you “frequently” make deposits of less than 3000 dollars. Frequently is BTW not defined so it could be a frequently as twice a month, twice a week, or even twice a year. I suspect it means more like several times a day but can’t be sure.

4) If you make any transaction that comes close to 10,000 dollars but does not quite breach the 10,000 dollar barrier. My guess is anything over 9000 dollars.

5) If you offer the bank teller or any other bank employee a gift or gratuity of any kind. This could be as innocent as a Christmas card…

6) If you use multiple locations of the same bank over a short period of time.

7) If it is discovered (usually not until the ABC guys get involved) that you have multiple accounts with multiple banks.




It is also worth noting that tellers generally cannot initiate one of these reports without taking it to their supervisor first. If it weren’t for this fact, I am sure there would be millions of these report filed every month.

This is where a little honesty or candidness goes a long way with the manager.






Here are the two main forms that would be used by a bank employee to “turn you in” or otherwise alert Law Enforcement to your activities. I HIGHLY suggest you read them in full to better understand them.

Currency Transaction Report
http://www.fincen.gov/forms/files/fin104_ctr.pdf

Suspicious Activity Report
http://www.fincen.gov/forms/files/fin109_sarmsb.pdf

MOST OF THE TIME, these reports are generated automatically by computers at the bank which are designed to find suspicious transactions. That is not to say so teller who is tired of lugging around bags of coins that you bring in won’t file one just to mess with you.




A few more points…

One of the biggest dangers here is the secrecy we have surrounding this.

You need to be aware that when a teller asks you about all those coins you bring in, they are not making idle chit chat. They are soliciting information as they were trained to do in order to spot suspicious activity.

You need to be aware that if you lie to them and get caught in the lie or they even suspect you of lying you can almost guarantee yourself a SAR report will be filed in your name.

If you are overtly vague in your explanation, this can also be interpreted the wrong way and cause a SAR to be filed.

In addition, if you read the SAR reports, it almost guarantees that a SAR will eventually be filed on you. The very nature of Coin Roll Hunting means that you will be performing activities that they are specifically looking for.

I suppose if you were open with the tellers and manager about what you were doing, and they were OK with it, and fully understood what was going on, and you never came close to triggering any of the automatic reports, you would never have to worry about having to talk to an LEO, but in reality, the law of averages means we will most likely eventually get “interrogated” if we do this long enough.



For that, I have reposted my addendum to CRH post here….



1) Be prepared to eventually be asked to file taxes on this “hobby”.

I suggest keeping detailed files on your mileage, when, where and how much coins you move, and how much silver or otherwise collectible coins you find.

For many if not most of us, it would be very easy to justify much more in expenses than we ever made from these endeavors, but this is a moot point if you cannot prove these facts.

For example, if in 2009, you found 200 ounces of silver halves, and 250 NIFC coins, and you drove 100 miles per week in pursuing this hobby, your “income” would be perhaps around 75 cents per NIFC coin, and whatever the spot price of silver was for the year. NOTE: it might be worthwhile to have a “few” receipts for silver sold at a coin dealer or perhaps on eBay to prove this. If you then deducted from this 50 cents per mile driven, as well as any other legitimate expenses, your profit from this endeavor would very quickly become a loss for tax purposes.

The fact that you collected coins other than just silver coins could work in your favor to prove that you were not some kind of “hoarder” of silver and were simply a coin collector. This would possibly be useful, as coin collecting is considered by many if not most to be a legitimate hobby while “hoarding” silver might someday be less than legal.

Owning a loupe, up to date red books, etc would mesh well with the fact that you are a coin collector and not a hoarder.

It works heavily in our favor that the IRS does not generally like for people to claim “hobby” expenses on their taxes. There are many rules for this, most if not all of which are meant to discourage people from claiming these expenses on their taxes.

Here are a few interesting articles on this…

http://www.businessknowhow.com/money/taxhobby.htm

http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=172833,00.html

Basically the IRS doesn’t want to hear about hobby income or losses unless you make a profit 3 out of the past 5 years. Something to consider.




2) Expect to eventually be questioned by either a bank manager or some form of law enforcement.

What you tell the banks is your business, and for the most part, you are not required to tell them the truth, but telling less than the truth might eventually get you in some kind of trouble. In my opinion, it is best to either be very vague about it or just find a bank that accepts the truth.

You are NOT allowed to lie to law enforcement. Either tell the truth or don’t tell them anything. This is your right (currently) per the US Constitution.

In preparing for this day, it is paramount that you be prepared. If you intend to speak to them, you should have documentation to prove most, if not everything you say.

They can and probably will try to scare you, and ask you questions to try to trip you up, or make vague or not so vague threats. Be prepared for this and remember that you can terminate the interrogation at any time by invoking your 4th amendment rights.




3) What if at some point in the future, you are asked to turn in your silver?

Don’t laugh, this could easily happen and it would be played as the “patriotic” thing to do, as well as to turn in your neighbors who “might” have some silver in their possession.

The fact that you were able to provide some form of receipts for silver sold in the past would go a long way in “proving” that you sold the majority of your silver, or perhaps even all of it.

A collection of business cards from individuals who buy and sell coins at flea markets and coin shows (and pay in cash) would go a long way in “proving” that you sold all your silver long ago.

You could easily state that you sold ALL your silver to make the down payment on a house, or perhaps some other large purchase.

Also keep in mind that if you try to insure your coins against loss, you are basically advertising the fact that you have that much silver to insure.

In addition, numerous posts about large amounts of silver coins found while Coin Roll Hunting would not mesh well if you claimed to only have found 1/4th of what you reported online. Basically for this last part, we all need to curb our enthusiasm.



4) DO NOT store your silver or anything valuable in a safe deposit box. Many hundreds of these boxes were sold by the state of California several years ago, and the former owners have been forced to sue the state for Billions of dollars in losses. As more and more states face budget woes, they will certainly be viewing your safe deposit boxes as sources of income.

In addition, you might want to read up on the 1933 gold seizure. Because of this, banks were required to go through your safe deposit box, and turn in any gold item to the government, and the former owner of this gold was given paper money for it, which was almost immediately worth less….




5) Read up on the history of money laundering.

Seriously, only by having a good general idea of how this works will you be able to avoid being accused of doing it.

Avoid operating near or being associated with the gambling industry at all costs. If there is a bank in a town with a casino in it, do not go there.

Don’t make multiple deposits of coin, rolled or bagged, at different banks on the same day. Ideally make just one or two deposits per week.

Read up on the reporting requirements for large cash transactions and act accordingly. Be aware that to “structure” your deposits to avoid this can be suspicious in itself, therefore do not deposit more than the “limit” in any given week, no matter how many banks you use for dumps.
 

Upvote 0

Tattooguy67

Sr. Member
Sep 26, 2009
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This seems like some good info, thank you for taking the time to post this! 1 thing i am somewhat foggy on is the warning about casinos and gambling, can you go into more detail on that please? thanks.

Chuck.
 

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OP
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placerman

Sr. Member
Oct 11, 2005
286
4
Tattooguy67 said:
This seems like some good info, thank you for taking the time to post this! 1 thing i am somewhat foggy on is the warning about casinos and gambling, can you go into more detail on that please? thanks.

Chuck.

I'm still learning this myself so forgive me if I don't know for sure, but it seems that some money launderers will use casinos to launder their ill gotten gains.

Im not quite 100% sure how this would be done however.
 

giddyup99

Greenie
May 16, 2009
13
0
This is fantastic information.

Laundering money through a casino is as simple as buying a pile of chips at a casino with your dirty money, walk around for a few hours - hit the roulette wheel for a bit; then cash out at the window. Some casinos are required to report certain transactions, but most tribal casinos are not.
 

golden silver

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Oct 22, 2007
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ny, Thanks for posting this. You have put some work into this. But suddenly our simple hobbie does not seem so simple. It seems like anyone who does this for a period of time can be under the watchful eye of big brother. Thanks again.

golden silver
 

timbobwey

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Mar 16, 2009
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This stuff is kind of scary, I mean it could happen to any of us. I don't think I go through enough on a weekly basis to get looked at, but you never know. Some people on this forum have hit some nice silver hauls though, I could see them getting talked to.
The thing I don't get is what if you don't even want to sell your silver?? Why would it be against the law just to keep it?? Maybe pass it on to your kids or something down the road?? I think it should be up to us what we do with our silver, we are the one's who search and find it. It's not our fault that our government didn't know better than to make coins out of silver just to bite them in the ass down the road because it was worth more all along.
I can't beleive all of this interrogation stuff could really happen, but it could. I know I'm gonna keep coin roll hunting, I just have fun doing it. Honestly, how many people are going get rich off of it? No one. It's a hobby that pretty much pays for itself after you look at gas money, and time spent searching. The gain isn't that great.
 

GMan00001

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Dec 19, 2006
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placerman said:
THE BIG ONE

5) If you offer the bank teller or any other bank employee a gift or gratuity of any kind. This could be as innocent as a Christmas card…

For all of you who thought buying donuts for tellers was a good thing... :laughing7:
 

mistergee

Silver Member
Jan 8, 2008
3,370
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Placerman...thanks for the extensive info. you did alot of homework there. however you failed to list the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970. i took this info from Treasurehunters post in reply to GS's post on his run in with the feds.
http://forum.treasurenet.com/index.php/topic,293366.0.html
this is an excerpt from that post.
"The BSA regulations require all financial institutions to submit five types of reports to the government. (not an exhaustive list of reports)

FinCEN Form 104 Currency Transaction Report (CTR): A CTR must be filed for each deposit, withdrawal, exchange of currency, or other payment or transfer, by, through or to a financial institution, which involves a transaction in currency of more than $10,000. Multiple currency transactions must be treated as a single transaction if the financial institution has knowledge that: (a) they are conducted by or on behalf of the same person; and, (b) they result in cash received or disbursed by the financial institution of more than $10,000. (31 CFR 103.22)
so if your trying to stay under that $10,000 mark it may not work as you could have several transactions treated as a single transaction pushing you over the mark.
thanks again for the great info. :thumbsup:
 

DigginThePast

Gold Member
Dec 31, 2008
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timbobwey said:
The thing I don't get is what if you don't even want to sell your silver?? Why would it be against the law just to keep it?? Maybe pass it on to your kids or something down the road?? I think it should be up to us what we do with our silver, we are the one's who search and find it. It's not our fault that our government didn't know better than to make coins out of silver just to bite them in the ass down the road because it was worth more all along.

Tim - There is currently no law against owning the silver.

The Government did know better, that is why they stopped minting coins for circulation made of precious metals. First gold went away, then silver (at this time our currency became completely worthless excepting our faith of it), copper nearly wholly taken out of pennies and I'd be willing to bet that nickel will be next.

They are not worried about any of us removing the silver from circulation. They are worried about money laundering schemes and of course receiving "their cut (income taxes)" when/if it is sold for a profit.
 

dasherhunting

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I only usually go twice a week but spread it out to several branches of same cu. One has a coin counter the other takes them by rolls so as not to put to much at the tellers and usually only couple hundred at a time unless doing halves then 500. at a time. hmmmmm
 

mrbelvetron

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Jun 15, 2004
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With all the posts and everything being discussed lately about this topic, maybe I can throw in a law enforcement perspective.

DISCLAIMER!!! I work for a medium-sized department sandwiched dead center in a large metropolitan area. While I deal with fraud cases on a regular basis, none have been money-laundering issues, to my knowledge. This is just to provide some insight to anyone that may deal with an alphabet (which it will almost 100% of the time be FBI, DHS, or Treasury) or other agency questioning you about your activities.

Honesty goes longest way. I know the majority of folks on hear are independant, intelligent people who know there rights and don't want to be bothered by gummint. I don't either. Being on my side of things though, I see suspicious activity on a daily basis that could swing either innocent (but oddball or eccentric, which many, including my wife, see our hobby as) or illegal. Without investigating, I would never know until I got a call later in the shift and then would have to know, crap, I saw those guys earlier and blew it off. It happens with my street level experience and with any level of law enforcement.

While investigating our hobby seems stupid and a pain in the a$$, once the activity is reported, it has to be investigated. Once you are determined to be on the level, you're good to go.

All that considered, it is an individuals responsibility to know his/her civil rights. If you get talked to by an investigator tell them whats going on. Explain the ins and outs (trust me it's no secret), and be able to document your acctivities. It is very doubtfull that any inquiry will go any farther than that. If you are asked to consent to a search your home, it's your choice. I would personnaly tell them to pound sand (politely of course), but know that if there is enough to begin an investigation that reaches the point of actually talking to you, they've probably got enough for a warrant anyway, they're just trying to gauge your attitude and cooperativeness.

A typical agent has so many cases going at a time that unless you look like an actual criminal they are not going to waste their time and effort on you, coin roll hunter. If questioned, accept the fact that you will be asked repetative questions over and over by possibly more than one investigator. It's a standard questioning technique that vets a persons honesty, and since we're all being honest about our intentions,then the answers should all click. My mom always told me that if you always tell the truth you don't have to remember your story.

Sorry if that was a bit rambling, it's 6 in the am and I get off at 7 so my thoughts are on the weekend, not my typing.
 

obediah

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Maybe I should change my avatar, but the name is not Arabic but of Hebrew derivation; my real name is a very strong German one actually. "Obediah" is a Biblical name that means "servant of God."
 

Darth Walker

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Jan 10, 2009
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All comes down to the Bank knowing the customer and understanding the nature of the business.
If they know that Golden Silver is just recycling the money and they also know that the he does that
all the time then the bank is acting stupid. A teller in my bank told me that there is a crh that goes
every week to dump $2000 in half's. The teller also told me that the customer explained that
he gets boxes of half's at other banks, looks for collectible half's, and returns the ones he does not like to my bank. Of course, this teller is not interested in CRH and I find it difficult and undersand you guys Resistance to revealing the secrets to tellers or bank managers. But this teller and the manager understands this guys business and there is not a problem.

SAR= Suspicious Activity Report can happen if the banker does not understand your business and can be solved buy just the manager talking to the customer. Most of the SAR does not proceed.

TCR= Transaction Currency Report this is to the IRS and has to be done above certain amount of cash
so if your money is legit then there is not problem. This is not a bad thing. It is just the law.

If you have done nothing wrong then there is nothing to fear.

Darth Walker

DW
 

mrbelvetron

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Jun 15, 2004
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Exactly what Darth Walker said about the CRH at his bank.

Before opening my account with my dump bank, I sat down with a manager and explained exactly what my needs and activities were and the approximate amount I would be dumping on a monthly basis.

No problems and they have been nothing but helpful.
 

GMan00001

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When tellers ask where I got all the change, I always tell them the truth. Myabe not all the details, but at least the high level fact that I am a coin collector and I look through it to pick out coins for my collection. Sometimes they start asking about interesting things I've found, but usually they could care less.
 

dunc

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Apr 7, 2009
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Banks are only supposed to report if you withdraw $10,000, not deposit. If that was the case they would be doing it constantly. Also, any suspicious behavior is suppose to be reported. Withdrawing $10,000 in change and depositing it a week later is suspicious if the bank doesn't know you.
 

Silver Stripe

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Jul 8, 2007
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So I guess I shouldn't have been telling them I get the coins by cleaning out wishing wells! Now ya tell ME. HH all, Mark
 

Ju8vP3t

Hero Member
dunc said:
Banks are only supposed to report if you withdraw $10,000, not deposit. If that was the case they would be doing it constantly. Also, any suspicious behavior is suppose to be reported. Withdrawing $10,000 in change and depositing it a week later is suspicious if the bank doesn't know you.

I'm not so sure about that, if you walk into a bank and deposit $10k in cash or coin, I think you can feel sure you'll be reported in some fashion...
 

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