ABSTRACT

The role played by legal professionals in the laundering of criminal proceeds generated by others has become a priority concern for authorities at national and international levels. This ground-breaking book presents an in-depth empirical analysis of the nature of lawyers’ involvement in the facilitation of money laundering and its control through criminal justice and regulatory mechanisms. It is based on qualitative research combining analysis of cases of lawyers convicted of money laundering offences with interviews with criminal justice practitioners, members of professional and regulatory bodies and practising solicitors, and analysis of relevant national and international legislative and regulatory frameworks.

The book demonstrates the complex and diverse nature of lawyers’ involvement in laundering activity, and shows that their actions and the decisions they take must be understood in relation to the specific situational contexts in which they occur. It provides significant new insights into the criminal justice and regulatory response to professional facilitation of money laundering in the UK, raising questions about the effectiveness and appropriateness of the response and the challenges involved. The book develops a framework for future research and analysis in this area, and proposes a range of potential strategies for controlling the facilitation of money laundering.

Lawyers and the Proceeds of Crime is essential reading for those researching money laundering, white-collar crime or organised crime, and for practitioners and policy makers concerned with preventing the facilitation of money laundering.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|17 pages

Framing the research

‘Organised crime’ or ‘white‑collar crime’?

chapter 4|22 pages

The nature of ‘facilitation’

Diversity, complexity and context

chapter 5|24 pages

Opportunity and vulnerability

Factors influencing lawyers’ involvement in money laundering

chapter 6|21 pages

On the ‘borders of knowingness’

Understanding complicity, knowledge and intent

chapter 9|21 pages

Understanding and controlling the facilitation of money laundering

A research and policy agenda