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Drimnagh Credit Union has been fined €125k for creating 'unacceptable risk' of money laundering

The organisation was also found to have made ‘prohibited payments’ to some directors.

DRIMNAGH CREDIT UNION has been fined €125,000 for breaching several laws, including those relating to money laundering and terrorist financing.

The credit union was found to have seven different breaches under two separate laws. All the breaches were admitted by the credit union.

Five of the breaches related to regulations for preventing money laundering and the financing of terrorism, where it was found that the credit union did not have the right procedures in place to properly check suspicious customers and transactions.

The other two breaches related to prohibited payments made to directors, and the credit union’s failure to properly record officers’ expenses.

The anti-money laundering laws were introduced in July 2010. An investigation by the Central Bank found that Drimnagh Credit Union broke the regulations five times in the years to September 2015.

The regulatory body said that the breaches “represent significant and widespread failings in Drimnagh Credit Union’s anti-money laundering/countering of the financing of terrorism”.

‘Wholly inadequate’

The Central Bank’s director of enforcement, Derville Rowland, said that Drimnagh Credit Union also had no policies relating to the new laws in place for the first 11 months.

“When such policies and procedures were adopted, almost a full year after they should have been introduced, they were wholly inadequate in key areas such as customer due diligence (and) suspicious transaction reporting,” she said.

“The failure to apply adequate measures to members and to scrutinise their transactions meant that it was unable to properly fulfil its statutory obligations to monitor (and) identify potentially suspicious activity and created an unacceptable risk of money laundering and terrorist financing.”

Separately, two breaches of the Credit Union Act were revealed between August 2013 and November 2014. The Central Bank said that the breaches related to:

  • Prohibited payments to certain directors and a board oversight committee member of Drimnagh Credit Union
  • Failings in Drimnagh Credit Union’s systems of control in relation to the claiming, recording and approving of officers’ expenses.

Rowland said that these two breaches showed that there was a “lack of robust systems of control” at the financial institution.

“(It) meant that Drimnagh Credit Union was failing in its primary purpose, to safeguard and protect members’ funds,” she said.

“This is highly concerning behaviour and breaches of this nature will not be tolerated by the Central Bank.”

Anti-money laundering

In a statement, Drimnagh Credit Union said that it “co-operated fully with the Central Bank in this process and the investigation is now closed”.

It said it can assure members “that their savings and deposits are not affected in any way by this, and that they can continue to do business with the credit union in the usual way”.

Regarding the breaches identified, it said: “The credit union has taken steps to rectify these matters including the repayment of monies owed.”

Breaches at Drimnagh Credit Union, which has just over 7,300 members, were first identified by the Central Bank’s anti-money laundering division in 2014.

Following these inspections, an investigation was launched in December 2015 by the Central Bank’s enforcement division that resulted in the €125,000 fine.

Bray Credit Union was also recently found to have breached the Criminal Justice Act, resulting in the Central Bank hitting it with a fine of €98,000.

Written by Paul O’Donoghue and posted on Fora.ie

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    Mute David Sheridan
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    Jan 28th 2012, 9:24 AM

    That can’t be right? Only 620 Irish millionaires? That tells me that the vast majority of millionaires are under the radar and therefore paying less than 30% income tax if any!

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    Mute hjGfIgAq
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    Jan 28th 2012, 9:31 AM

    Yep, just 620 apparently. It was over 1,000 in around 2007/2008 but has dropped dramatically cos of the recession. My possibly dodgy attempt at early-morning maths tells me that that means 0.1% of the Irish population is a millionaire.

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    Mute David Sheridan
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    Jan 28th 2012, 9:42 AM

    Christine,according to this there was 20,400 Irish millionaires in 2007?
    http://www.independent.ie/national-news/number-of-irish-millionaires-soars-2230552.html

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    Mute hjGfIgAq
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    Jan 28th 2012, 9:53 AM

    Yeah, I’d be a tad wary of that figure because it comes from a private company. The 620 figure came from Michael Noonan so it’s Department of Finance figures for the number of millionaires in Ireland which is more reliable.

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    Mute Stephen Doyle
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    Jan 28th 2012, 9:57 AM

    Lol department of finance having reliable figures, good one

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    Mute Gill Jones
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    Jan 28th 2012, 1:24 PM

    Christine you’ll have to give your self comment of the week for the Noonan & Dept of finance gag!! Classic

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    Mute Sheila Murphy
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    Jan 28th 2012, 2:28 PM

    lol Stephen Doyle; they’ve probably lost 3.6 of them ;-)

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    Mute Chris Mcdonnell
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    Jan 28th 2012, 10:09 AM

    Noonan reliable and figures are not three words that go together in any sentance.
    The man tells jokes and like most jokes he makes them up to suit himself.
    Des bishop had more chance of getting finance figures right than that clown noonan. Any figures noonan give are all from the Cardiff school of accounting and should be treated as the nonsense they are

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    Mute Anthony O Donnell
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    Jan 28th 2012, 11:05 AM

    I am a billionaire and don’t pay any taxes at all ,pathetic little millionaires , bloody peasants were stealing from my bins again last night ,i let the hounds loose it was great sport to see them running after the peasants up my mile long drive, great exercise for them.

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    Mute Stephen Doyle
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    Jan 28th 2012, 9:49 AM

    #EXPLOSIVES see the gardai are investing in new explosives, makes a change from investigating i suppose

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    Mute Nicola Coffey
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    Jan 28th 2012, 12:56 PM

    Very glad that over two hundred Divers have/are travelling to Cork to help recovery of the two remaining fishermen. I hope it works, to give those families some closure on this dreadful tragedy.

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    Mute Jenn Kirby
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    Jan 28th 2012, 10:11 AM

    #MILLIONAIRES A small thing but… if 42 percent of millionaires pay more than 30 percent tax, then 58 percent pay less than 30 percent tax. So it’s not “Almost half of Ireland’s millionaires pay less than 30 per cent income tax” it’s more than half of Ireland’s millionaires…

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    Mute Martin Mullen
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    Jan 28th 2012, 10:29 AM

    There’s a big difference between millionaires in terms of income earned, and millionaires in terms of property owned/inherited. Could this explain the difference?

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    Mute David Sheridan
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    Jan 28th 2012, 11:47 AM

    Ah I think you have a point there Martin. I imagine that the national lottery alone, create at a guess, 50ish millionaires a year and that’s tax free..

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    Mute Kerryspirit Chris
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    Jan 28th 2012, 7:18 PM

    I just read that and thought it should be the cover of The Journal…so brillian!!
    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=219635911459662&set=a.142394652517122.31257.142390589184195&type=1&theater

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    Mute Myles Tierney
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    Jan 28th 2012, 1:51 PM

    How many of those 600 plus millionaires actually reside full time in Ireland?

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    Mute Fingal
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    Jan 28th 2012, 1:52 PM

    Re the contraband found in prisons can someone tell me why they dont just bring in screening between visitors and prisoners?

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