Greg sits down with Zahra Sunderani, a seasoned expert in the Anti-Money Laundering (AML) sector, to discuss the critical role of adverse media in safeguarding businesses, especially in the real estate industry. They delve into the concept of adverse media, its importance, and practical approaches to implementing effective checks. Zahra shares compelling examples of how adverse media has uncovered significant criminal activities and discusses the broader implications for businesses.
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Hello, Zarha, welcome to The Know your compliance
podcast.
Thank you for having me.
Yeah, very, very excited to have this
conversation with you. We I want to introduce you a little bit,
give you a bit of a background. Give our guest a little bit of a
background as to who you are and why you're on our show today. So
I'll say that Zahra comes, joins, joined the really trusted
team about three and bit months ago now, and Zahra comes with a
bunch of different credentials and experience that was really
important for for the really trusted team. And one of the
main reasons we're really excited to have her join our
team some of Zara's previous work in the anti money
laundering space has been with one of the local credit unions
here and one of the local FinTech companies that are both,
I should say, for our guests, we're based in Vancouver,
actually, funnily enough, I realized this last night, Zahra
and I are On the minority of the really trusted team as being
local Vancouverites.
Yeah, it seems like, it seems most people live
outside of Vancouver, which is, which makes sense, which makes
sense well,
and not only are live outside of our from Vancouver,
like there's very few, there's, there's, there's, we're a
minority. It turns out we are a
minority. No, that's true. Whenever people ask
me where I'm from, and I say Vancouver, I'm usually, the
response is usually, no, no, no, no, no. I mean, when, when did
you move here? At what point did you
right? Yeah, yeah. So Zara's previous work has been as
an AML supervisor analyst, pick AML and add a title to it, and
we did the same thing to her. Zahra is our AML Operations
Manager. So, so there you go. So really, welcome to the podcast.
Happy to chat with you today. Sarah, yeah, awesome. Happy to
be here now. I wanted today to talk a little bit about adverse
media. It's something that's become topical within the real
estate sector, where we do most of our work right now, and it's
something that I'm increasingly having conversations about with
people even outside of the real estate sector, as being kind of
a really important piece of the puzzle. So why don't we start
very basic. Why don't you give me, like, a 32nd description for
people who may not have heard before, what is adverse media
and what does it do? Why is it important? I guess, yeah,
so adverse. I mean, if you look up adversing
Google, basically just the word negative, it's the idea. And
then media is any kind of articles or really anything
related to media, video, anything that's kind of online
that is potentially negative about somebody. And so whenever
we think of adverse media, we think of, you know, articles
that break on people who have committed crimes or whatever
that is. And so the practice of adverse media is just doing that
actual work, going and actually finding those articles to match
with the individuals that you're doing business with, and that's
adverse media, and that's
adverse media. So really it's and I guess in terms
of framing this for people new to the AML space, it's probably
the piece of the KYC that know your Well, for us, it's know
your compliance, but in that AML land, well, it's the Know Your
client regulations, and it's the way of getting a bit more of the
KYC information outside, from an outside source, from an external
source. Would that be?
Yes, that's absolutely correct, because
there's information that you obtain from whoever you're doing
business with that they voluntarily give you, and
totally fair if they find that that information is what they
want to give you, that's fair. There's very much outside
sources, which could include, say, a Twitter or x now, or
whatever it is that they might not necessarily think it should
be shared or or it just might not even come to mind, or
potentially they don't want to share it whatever it is. It
could be whatever. And so yes, it's absolutely just extra
information that you could get that is publicly available that
might impact how you do business with this individual
totally. So that's a great kind of built foundation
place to start. And I think there's a couple of things that
come to mind that are that some of our guests are probably going
to want us to delve into. So the first thing that I get pushed
back on occasionally is, well, I may enter blank here, whether
you're a realtor or a mortgage broker or a jewel dealer or
anything, I don't want to have to research my clients. Why
should that be my obligation? And I guess let's try and let's
try and trot through that a little bit, because I understand
the perspective, certainly, but
I think I do too. I mean, it's, and I've
heard this too, right? I I am this. I am not a, like, you
know, private investigator. I'm not a criminal investigator. I'm
not somebody that's supposed to be like, should I be that nosy,
essentially, should I be that nosy into my clients doing? The
reason why, unfortunately, you have to is, is because it's in
law, it's, it's literally in law, it's, it's part of our
laws. And because it's part of that laws, our laws, a lot of
entities, a lot of businesses, business types, are now having
these obligations where they do have to fulfill that. And the
example that I always give whenever somebody gives me push
back on this is, hey, at some point, when these laws came into
place, where people were depositing their funds into a
bank account, at some point, there was probably some pushback
where clients were not wanting to give all of that information
for just opening up a bank account because it's their money
at the end of the day. But at some point, enough bank
accounts. Sorry, enough banks, or whatever it is, the people
who are opening the banks had done it to the point where it
was normalized, and then consumers are now expecting
those questions. So if you don't get those questions that are
that nosy, you're probably wondering why this bank is not
asking you that, and it's probably a bit sketchy, and so
you should go to the bank next door. I guess my push to that
is, it's, it's relatively new, but at some point it won't be,
it'll be the total, the total expectation whenever somebody is
doing business with
you, yeah. And I mean, I think the the continuing
line there becomes, and I guess where I yeah, I mean the
continuing line. And I'm mostly steel Manning this argument, by
the way, I generally agree that I actually have a slightly
different view before I get down that path. I have a slightly
different perspective on it, which is, as a business, I don't
think most businesses want to conduct business with criminals,
whether you know there be that a human trafficking ring, a drug
smuggling ring, whatever it is I think, like, when I think about
my business, I wouldn't want it affiliated with all of that
stuff, and Not not out of like, mostly out of like. I just don't
think that that's something I want to be involved in in any
way, shape or form. And I guess, from a risk management point of
view, to me, there's actually a case to be made for businesses
doing this, just on that level alone, if we, if we strip away
the regulatory obligation, which there clearly is as well, by the
way, and you've made a great case for there. Now, of course,
the where I wanted, the the next conversation, though, about that
is, is this a slippery slope? Is it, at what point are we
intruding into our clients lives so much that it's an
unreasonable amount of of due diligence or an unreasonable
amount of investigation? Is where the next challenge comes
up frequently in these conversations,
yeah, and that's a really good question. I
mean, I think, I mean, yeah, it's a really good question. I
think that if there's precedence that other entities, other
businesses, are able to do it, then I think generally the
common stance is that you also can, and you also should,
because the wheel has been invented, and all you're doing
is just using the wheel truly, truly right? It's not, it's not
something that is completely, completely brand new. And so I
think that's the perspective. But you bring up something that
is interesting, because at some point it could get to that point
where it is, it is actually crossing that line. And I would
imagine that there would be enough pushback that it'll start
to claw back a little bit
interesting. That's a that's a interesting point that
I I'm not sure I'd consider the what the clawback looks like.
And I guess we're is certainly within the real estate sector.
We're still so new to adverse media. I had a conversation a
couple months ago with a managing broker who was very
proud to tell me that, you know, they do adverse media. They
check every now and then to make sure there's nothing being said
about their business in a bit negative
and unfair, though fair. Of course I would
if I wasn't, if I wasn't someone that was that was well versed in
anti money. Latter I also would that is literally the definition
of adverse media, which is negative, so good and so true.
But no, it is. Yeah, I do think that there's going to be some at
some point, because it is true, like the government is asking a
lot of businesses to do a lot of work because they can't handle
it. They can't do it themselves. So it is this one way of just
being able to safeguard, basically, the economy in
Canada, yeah, the
financial system of our country. Yes, yeah. Now, in
your experience, can you think of an example where adverse
media has has played a role? What do you have a good story
you could tell us about where adverse media has been really
kind of interesting?
Yeah? I mean, I, I want to use, I'll, I'll
talk about one. But I also want to use other ones that are not
as almost like, like big the big stories are fun and they're
juicy, but I think, yeah, they also can take away from the idea
that it does, it's just really commonplace sometimes. So, so
maybe, maybe I'll talk about two, but the first one is one
that is just really common. You already touched about it, which
is just trafficking in general. So whether that be sex
trafficking, the most recent one, actually today was a fin
track publication about migrant workers. And so human
trafficking, 100 100% the number of times that I and so yes, from
previous roles, I've done a lot of financial crime. And so I'm
looking through accounts and just making sure that, hey, is
there anything that's off, or any indicators for money
laundering? With, with the indicators that with, with, with
what you can see. Sometimes the picture is just not there to
complete what you think you might be seeing. And so there
was this one, one case where it was one person that we were able
to just do an adverse media and when we say do an adverse media
search, we just mean just basically going to Google or
Bing or defect or whatever, whatever browser use, and
literally just type their name, potentially with their city. And
things can come up absolutely and so it ended up being that
this person had actually been sex trafficked. So the
individual that I was looking at was one of the victims, but the
name in that article that was also noted was the person that
was actually trafficking that individual through that article,
we then went back, found that one account in our system that
we were doing business with, and it was, I think it was like, it
was like over 250 separate accounts that they had created
with different names and different aliases that money was
flowing in, in and out of all of those accounts where, then that
that ended up being 250 STRS just from that one adverse media
publication that we saw. So I guess, I guess. What I want to
say about that is that you might, you might think, Oh, hey,
you know I, I know my client, you know, I know the people that
they that they hang out around, whatever it is, but it there are
so many links that we actually don't really know, just just
because we know them in person, that there might be online that
you would have just never known. Had you not doing that, had you
not completed that search. And I
mean that that person hadn't told you that he was
human trafficking. That's odd. That's hard to believe that one
listed Carpenter, carpenter. He was a
carpet well.
And, you know, I think that's a really
illustrative example of why this stuff is important. Because I
think, you know, even, even the people who really don't want to
be captured by fin tracks, regs, and we talk with a lot of those
people on a regular basis in our business, even those people
would agree that they also don't want human trafficking to exist
In Canada like that is, I that's a pretty vanilla statement. I'd
like to think, and I hope so anyway, and, and I think the
perspective I've tried to take on it, and what I've tried to
tell people is, you know, if you can just by doing your job the
way you're supposed to be doing it help prevent just a little
bit of that. Doesn't that make it worth it? I think, like,
that's,
yeah, I mean, and that's exactly it. I mean,
do we want this person who has sex trafficked over 250 victims
to use their funds that they obtained during that time to
then buy a house? Right? I just don't. I just don't. Yeah, you
don't really feel right about that. And it has, it doesn't
have anything to do with, like, necessarily. Well, actually, it
does have a lot to do with ethics. I guess
it does quite a bit, yes, yeah, but, and it's okay, I
think again, it's one of those things that as a country, I
think we can all agree that that's not. I think if we were
to take a poll, you know, whether whatever political party
you're gonna vote for, yeah, I think most people would still
vote that they do not want sex trafficking to occur in Canada.
That's, I hope we would get somewhere in the 90% ish on that
one, yeah, there's always gonna be a few people. Who are you?
Well, those people are likely, those people
committing the crimes.
Hey, maybe this is a new adverse media technique we
could inform
to be made in criminals. That's for sure.
There
you go. So that's a really great dramatic example
that I think really highlights the power of the tool. Are there
some other kind of less dramatic ones you could think of that
would be worth kind of sharing and talking about?
Yeah, I think that the less kind of exciting
ones are are just related generally to fraud. And I want
to, I wanted to bring this one up, because I think similarly, I
guess it might not be as shiny, but it is also really important,
because once again, it just goes back into the people that are,
you know, that have clean money and that are trying to use these
services and pay for things. Things are more expensive,
generally, are harder to come by, because, unfortunately,
things are kind of blown out of proportion from the people that
have dirty money and have access to dirty money. And so when it,
when I say fraud, the one, the one example that I brought, or
that I was thinking of, was just a person who had gone from
corporation to corporation to Corporation, to Corporation,
filed for bankruptcy, filed for bankruptcy, and just through
this chain of kind of corporate filings, would basically commit
whatever various type of fraud it was. Filed for bankruptcy,
not not be held liable in any sort of way where they wouldn't
be able to just start a new corporation, and then continued
that chain. And so what was happening is, and I am talking
about, technically, a Ponzi scheme. This person was an
investment person, but as a say, as a realtor, if somebody comes
to you and they say, Hey, I've got this corporation, I've got
this business, this is the cash flow. I can show you the
statements like without doing a adverse media search. You might
never, ever know that this person who looks extremely
legitimate looks like they've had years and years of business.
This corporation might appear big because they might have
multiple employees. It might be completely illegitimate and the
victims are actually the people that are, unfortunately, people
that you don't know and who are having good faith in that one
individual. And so in this way, it's like they're able to
continually move their money in ways where the government's not
able to actually seize the funds and give it back to the victims.
And that is the kind of one that I think I see a lot, which, and
not specifically the Ponzi scheme, general types, different
types of fraud that that can be found in adverse media. But
aren't, as you know, flashy and massive, and there's no Netflix
documentary, well, there might be, but that'll be flashy
anyhow, too. Yeah, they'll
find a way to make it flashy. But I think that's a
really good example, actually. And the reason I really like
that example is because one of the things businesses don't want
to do is be involved in fraudulent activity, because
they might just be the victim of that fraud. And I guess, like,
if I think about the real estate sector, and where that might
come up is, if you're dealing with somebody who's buying a
home and their deposit check bounces for $100,000 the
brokerage might be the one on the hook. That's that's a real,
actual possibility. And so ignoring the like societal
benefit angle of adverse media, that's something that the
business who's doing the adverse media probably wants to know,
just for their own protection, let alone anything else. So
yeah, 100% Yeah, yeah, no, it's, it's
tough. But I mean, and that, I think, you know, this might
segue into different conversation, but that that kind
of goes into, okay, well, what are the brokerages able to do to
get their adverse media sorted? Well,
I think that's the natural next part of this
conversation. And I, you know, wanted to give the audience a
couple of good examples of why. Let's talk about the how and
what are the best practices out there. How are people doing
this? Are people doing this, and what does it look like?
I think you would be, you'd be a really good
person to speak about with regards to the real estate
sector, but at least I can maybe speak on other sectors that are
all, yeah, there's, there's generally one way of doing it,
which is very manual, which is just somebody sitting there at a
computer and just doing these searches every time a new client
comes in. There are various systems that people can pay for
that goes ahead and uses llms largely large language models to
be able to do that as well. There's various automations.
Those can get really expensive. Unfortunately, it's. It's and
literally just coming off of just certain quotes a few years
or, sorry, a few months ago, a lot of people will charge you $1
for every client that you want to run through some adverse
media. So it can be quite expensive. And those are, I
mean, those are really the two ways, unless, unless your
business is able to create a system at hand within the
business that's free, that manual is kind of the way to go.
Now, I just want to, because I think a bunch of our
real estate clients right now are probably going, Oh, it's
only $1 we can totally afford that. Oh, sorry, but, but I
think they're, they're missing a really important piece about
that puzzle. It's the ongoing nature of the whole thing. Yes,
so let's, let's delve into that for a second to because it's not
$1 per client, it's actually $1 per client per period,
yes, yes. Sorry, I should clarify. So when
I say $1 per client, what I mean, is so the expectations
that you're at least doing this, and, you know, people can do
this once a day, a check, once a day, people can do this once a
month. I would say probably once a month. And maybe I'd probably
say once a month is probably the longest you want to go. So say
you have, I don't know, 1000 clients, and you need to do that
every month for one year, right? The the dollars do it up, that's
$1,000 a month, and then that's $12,000 a year. And then
depends, of course, you're going to have more clients. So of
course, you're going to be wanting to add more to that. So
depending on how big you scale and how many clients you enter
into. And then on top of that, I should also note tintrec has
been their guidance has said that we do want to be doing this
for a five year period, from once you get a client to just
the end of the the relationship of the client. Even if you
haven't spoken to that client in five in four years, you still
need to be doing these adverse media searches for that time
period. So it's can become very hefty, very quickly. Good.
I just wanted to kind of come back because I think
otherwise, there's a bunch of real estate companies out there
who are like, Oh, dollar. I can afford that. Let's go. But what
you're actually saying is it's, it ends up being quick math, $60
a client, kind of minimum to do it properly, and that's if you
have a system that's built out so it's actually ends up being
far more, far, far, far more. Yeah, no. And I think to the
question you raised at the beginning, my experience in the
real estate sector would tell me that very, very, very few
brokerages have any sort of a adverse media concept at all at
this point. And certainly that's that's one of the reasons that
we felt it was important to start to build that, that that
segment of our capabilities, for our for our clients, on the fin
track, express, part of things as you as you well know. So,
yeah. Okay, so I guess I wanted to leave we've kind of presented
the the what it is, and the the why it's important, and the how
to do it, side of things. Is there any other Is there
anything about the future of adverse media, or anything that
we haven't talked about that you think we we want to leave the
audience with, yeah, yeah.
I think, I think one thing that I would
love to just quickly touch on is the idea that, I think a lot of
the times when people are starting to do adverse media
searches, they can feel overwhelmed, rightly so about
what crimes are actually ones that that are maybe applicable
to their brokerage or applicable to their practice. Yeah. And
this, you know, I, my very common kind of example is that
in every different job that I've been in, every different
industry that I've been in, everybody takes a different
stance on, say, for example, the crime of first degree murder,
where, which, which is, I think, a really good one, because, of
course, nobody likes murder. Nobody wants murder. It's
terrible. I think, I think, once again, no matter what side of
the political spectrum you're on, you can generally agree that
that's bad. But is this necessarily something that is
related to money laundering or terrorist financing associated
to your business's transactions and practices. Some people will
err on the side of caution and say, yes, absolutely, I have
this is a violent crime. You know that the some people will
say, No, actually, and, and finally, I'm actually on that,
on on that kind of side where I think that there's a lot of gray
and a lot of crimes, yeah? So yeah, I wanted to bring that up
because I know that people can feel overwhelmed with what
they're looking at and if it's something that they should file
on.
Yeah. No, that's a really good point, actually, and
I'm glad you raised it, because, yeah, you know the the murder
for hire? Well, yes, that's. Not might be money laundering, but,
but how do you differentiate that? And how do you kind of
figure that out? And that's where really getting the back.
And I'm going to tell you that the Hitman probably doesn't
identify themselves to you in their occupation as being a hit
man, unless you have access to the dark web and
you're able to look up their name.
Yeah. That's, that's a whole new level of adverse
searching, going, going to the dark web like it. Yeah,
that's fun too. That that, that's, that's really
interesting. It's a lawless land
that's awesome, lovely. Well, thank you so much
for for coming on today. Sorry. It's been really a lovely
conversation, and I hope that our audience will get something
out of it. And yeah, thank you. And I look forward to chatting
you at some point in the future. Yeah,
no, thanks for having me. And yeah, chat later.
Take care. Bye, great. You.