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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL STRATEGY REPORT MARCH 1996:
FINANCIAL CRIMES AND MONEY LAUNDERING

United States Department of State

Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs


ASSET SHARING

Pursuant to the provisions of the 1988 US law, the Departments of Justice, State and Treasury have aggressively sought to encourage foreign governments to cooperate in joint investigations of drug trafficking and money laundering, offering the inducement of sharing in forfeited assets. A parallel goal has been to encourage spending of these assets to improve narcotics law enforcement. The long term goal has been to encourage governments to improve asset forfeiture laws and procedures, and undertake independent investigations.

From 1989 through December 1995, the international asset sharing program administered by Justice resulted in the forfeiture in the US of $124,679,340.22 of which $42,209,368.29 was shared with foreign governments which cooperated in the investigations. In 1995, the Department of Justice transferred forfeited proceeds to: Canada ($41,418.00), Israel ($34,770.00), Ecuador ($3,834,000.00) United Kingdom ($523,393.00), and Switzerland ($2,098,000.00) Prior recipients of shared assets (1989-1994) include: Argentina, the Bahamas, British Virgin Islands, Canada, Cayman Islands, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Egypt, Guatemala, Guernsey, Hungary, Liechtenstein, Paraguay, Romania, St. Maarten, Switzerland, United Kingdom, Venezuela.

To date, Switzerland, the Isle of Jersey (Channel Islands) and the United Kingdom are the only three jurisdictions that have shared forfeited assets with the United States as the result of the assistance of the United States to forfeitures effected under their own laws. In 1995, the United States also reached an asset sharing agreement with Mexico that will serve as the basis to transfer forfeited assets from the United States to Mexico in the future, as well as a reciprocal sharing agreement with Canada.

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