FBI touts crackdown on financial crime

BY AP Wire Service
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
2/28/12 at 6:40 AM


WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI said Monday that its probes of financial crime last year led to more than 3,000 convictions and more than $12 billion in court-ordered restitution as agents attacked insider trading, Ponzi schemes and Medicare fraud in high-dollar scams that victimized thousands of investors and the government.

In a press briefing that amounted to a warning to the business community generally and to Wall Street in particular, the bureau released video and wiretaps from a few of its undercover operations targeting complex financial crime.

The bureau also offered up a new public service announcement done by actor Michael Douglas, who in the movie "Wall Street" portrayed a greedy corporate raider operating on the wrong side of the law.

"Our economy is increasingly dependent on the success and integrity of the financial markets," Douglas said in the PSA announcement. "If a deal looks too good to be true, it probably is. For more information on how you can help identify securities fraud, or to report insider trading, contact your local FBI office."

FBI Assistant Director Kevin Perkins, head of the bureau's criminal investigative division, said the law enforcement agency has shifted its focus on financial crime away from low-dollar cases and has hired 250 forensic accountants who hunt for criminal activity in financial records.

FBI Financial Crimes Section Chief Timothy Gallagher said the bureau now operates a financial intelligence center to identify where it needs to send agents to investigate newly emerging threats in financial crime.


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