Pubdate: Wed, 07 Nov 2001 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Authors: Jennifer Clark, Alessandra Migliaccio Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) Special Report: Aftermath of Terror ITALY GRAPPLES WITH THE STEEP CHALLENGE OF UNRAVELING MAFIA, TALIBAN FINANCES ROME -- Italy's financial police face a huge challenge unraveling the money trail from the Mafia's illegal drug trade to find the strand that leads back to the Taliban in Afghanistan. "You'd need a crystal ball to tell how much of the money generated from the Mafia's illegal activities can be traced back to the Taliban," said Sandro Senatore, head of the Guardia di Finanza's operations to combat money laundering. "There's no way to tell until you get to the very end of the money trail." With the U.S. bombing of Afghanistan entering its fifth week, new urgency is being applied to efforts to strangle the financial network that supports Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network and provides the Taliban with money from the drug trade. U.S. authorities believe Mr. bin Laden and al Qaeda are behind the Sept. 11 terror attacks and that the Taliban provided shelter and training to al Qaeda terrorists. About 70% of the world's opium is produced in Afghanistan, some of which is shipped through Italy in the form of heroin. From Italy, Albanian gangs or the Mafia deliver the drug to markets across Europe and the U.S. So far, investigations haven't turned up any direct links between terrorists and the Italy's organized crime groups "Investigations into Mafia-related money laundering are under way as we speak, and if something related to terrorism turns up we'll jump on it," Mr. Senatore said. If they find that link, Italy's finance police will be able to act quickly and assertively, thanks to a recently approved package of laws allowing investigators to seize assets they believe tied to terrorism. The finance police are following up a series of tips on terrorist-related financial networks, said Mr. Senatore. He said he couldn't provide any further details. His unit, working with stock-market regulator Consob, has already turned up possible financial links between terrorist groups and a Milan-based Islamic center described by the U.S. Treasury as al Qaeda's main base in Europe. Money trails aren't new to the Guardia, whose members can often been seen carrying sub-machineguns. In 1995, its antimoney laundering unit followed one particularly complex trail all the way -- from trucks carrying drugs in the region around Naples to money laundering in some of the country's main banks. "It was a big case for us. In particular there was one large bank of national importance involved," said Mr. Senatore, declining to provide more details. "We arrested several directors of the banks. The trials are still in progress." Among the most impressive gains are those in the fight against the Mafia, which intensified in the early and mid-1990s, after the murders of prominent anti-Mafia judges Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino. Subsequent investigations in conjunction with Italy's other police corps resulted in the arrests of many well-known mafiosi, including top boss Toto Riina, known for conducting his business out of a bunker. In the early 1990s, several tough anti-Mafia laws were introduced, enabling police to seize assets before an indictment is handed down and making it possible for police to access data normally protected by privacy laws. Last month, two antiterrorism laws passed by the government extended the provisions of the anti-Mafia laws to include terrorism-related crimes. The Guardia's years of experience in cracking money trails will come in handy when trying to track down terrorist-related finance networks, Mr. Senatore said. "With respect to other countries, Italy has an edge, not so much because of its laws, although some of them are ahead of norms in other countries, but because of its investigative techniques," he said. "Both the police and the magistrates are used to concentrating on this type of phenomenon, first, terrorism in the 1970s, then the Mafia in the 1980s." Operations often start with a tip from an informer, or sometimes in the case of the Mafia, a former clan member turned state witness. From there, wire taps and bank checks begin, and if something looks suspicious, undercover operations may follow. The new decrees also call for the creation of a Financial Intelligence Task Force that combines the efforts of the Guardia, the Bank of Italy, the Treasury Ministry, and the Secret Service. Established as a special financial border patrol by the King of Sardinia in 1774, the Guardia now has a force of roughly 64,000 men and women fighting tax evasion, fraud, contraband, money laundering, drug trafficking and other financial crimes. A visit from a Guardia agent strikes fear into the hearts of Italian businesspeople, since the finance police have the power to seal offices for weeks while inspectors comb through stacks of books and tax audits to look for irregularities. The Guardia carried out checks on more than 1,300 people and 236 companies in 2000 alone. The result: 480.5 billion lire (248.2 million euros or $224 million) of real estate, and 11.90 billion lire of liquid assets were seized. When Schengen accords freed up the movement of populations within Europe, much of the Guardia's original land border patrol duties ended, but it still patrols the seas, particularly the strip of Adriatic that separates Italy from Albania. It is there in the speedboats, which sometimes smuggle drugs and, occasionally, refugees, where the money trail links Italy and Afghanistan. This Balkan route starts with opium sold in Afghanistan, carried across Turkmenistan and the Caucasus into Turkey, where the substance is processed into heroin, according to Mr. Senatore. From Turkey the drug goes to Albania and through the hands of local organized-crime figures before being smuggled into Italy. The Italian Mafia ships it to other European countries. "Drug trafficking plays a big role in terrorists' finances," Mr. Senatore said. But drugs are not all that connects organized-crime members with terrorists. A certain sophistication in covering their financial tracks distinguishes both types of criminals. "It is not a coincidence that terrorist money goes through Switzerland and Mafia money also goes through Switzerland," Mr. Senatore said. "It's not like these people take their money and invest it in bonds -- that would be too simple." Given the complexity of networks involved, exchange of information becomes essential, with every country holding a different piece of the puzzle. In 2000 there were 1,630 exchanges of information between the Guardia and other organizations like the European Commission Anti-Fraud Office, on issues connected to money laundering, and 2,049 exchanges on drug-related issues. But at a time when cross-border competition is crucial, Italian magistrates have complained that a law passed on Oct. 3 by Italy's center-right government is making it more complicated to carry out cross-border investigations. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake