Skip to main content Skip to navigation

State of Financial Crime 2023 Report

Adverse Media Screening, Predicate Offences and 6AMLD

Adverse Media Knowledge & Training

The EU has long tried to get a handle on which predicate offences drive money laundering. Now, with the latest anti money laundering directive set to be transposed into law in December 2020, many new predicate offences will need to be monitored by regulated businesses – screening for them without a sufficient solution will be a difficult task.

The Sixth Anti Money Laundering Directive (6AMLD) is the first EU AMLD to present a precise and consolidated list of all relevant predicate money laundering offences, including many new predicate offences which had previously featured as criminal offences in EU legislation and is certain to have an impact on Adverse Media Screening (AMS).

For those unfamiliar with the term, a predicate offence refers to a crime that generates money and occurs prior to money laundering or terrorism financing.

Although the directive is directed at the governments of member states of the EU and does not need to be transposed into national law until 3 December 2020, the increasing focus on the sources of the proceeds of crime is an important trend not only in the EU but in other jurisdictions. For example, the New York Department of Financial Services’ (NYDFS) Rule 504 of 2017 stipulated that screening and transaction monitoring platforms should be configured not only for the core offences of money laundering and terrorist financing but their predicates, where typological behaviors could be identified.

The increasing focus on predicate offences is sure to have an impact on the future of how AML controls are implemented and will make businesses consider the need to screen for links to predicate offences when onboarding and monitoring customers.

Predicate Offences on the Surface

Previously, the EU has taken a relatively piecemeal approach to the definition of predicate offences. The 1st AMLD focused primarily on the drug trade, and over time, other offences such as corruption, involvement in organized crime and tax evasion were added to subsequent directives. By 5AMLD, however, there was a clear sense that the variety of predicate offences across different EU jurisdictions was creating problems for inter-FIU and cross-border inter-agency cooperation on international crime; some member states were appearing less open to cooperation where the predicate was not an offence in their own country.

6AMLD does not specifically mandate that obligated entities look for these crimes in their client books or from new customers, but preexisting CDD requirements imply the necessity of a full understanding of who the customer is and the potential character of the business relationship. 4AMLD also states that businesses should report activity not only suggestive of money laundering but also “associated predicates,” suggesting that firms should be monitoring for them too. Part of the difficulty with this, of course, is that monitoring for predicate crimes in transactional behaviors is difficult to do, and therefore to the extent which businesses are looking for potential links to predicate criminality, this has to come via some form of screening process in addition to transaction monitoring.

The codification of the 22 predicate offences changes the tone of the debate, however, because it places predicate criminality back at the forefront of what AML is about – the detection, disruption and prevention of crimes that help criminals make money.

6AMLD infographic

In the future, businesses that need to meet this more comprehensive approach to predicate offences will have to consider the wide-ranging aspects of compliance. Onboarding checks and controls will need to be carefully calibrated to ensure that they are not bringing a wider range of criminals than before. This suggests the need for more work for compliance teams, first through the identification of businesses’ potential exposure to particular predicate crimes through an enterprise-wide risk assessment, the reconfiguration of controls, and then the execution of the controls and checks at the end of the process. Depending on the character and scale of a firm’s current AML framework, that might imply considerably lengthier checks than previously undertaken will be required.

This will prove a challenge for many businesses that are reliant on keyword-based checks, Google, and ad hoc solutions during onboarding, client risk assessments and event-driven reviews. Even with a limited range of offences to be thinking about, this is a lot of work for a team of human analysts. And with 22 specific offenses to consider, with all their permutations, it will be challenging for a truly diligent obligated entity to be able to hit their onboarding targets once 6AMLD is fully transposed into national laws without an Adverse Media Screening provider that can effectively assist in these goals. Especially once regulators start asking questions about what controls firms have in place to cover for these risks.

The ability to identify predicate offences related to your customers will be critical for compliance functions going forward.

Search Strings and Keywords in Adverse Media Screening

What to do about this challenge?

There’s not a great deal of guidance available on Adverse Media Screening (or Adverse Information and Media) from regulators. They want to make sure that you’re not missing out on relevant adverse media, but they do not necessarily have the expertise to tell you how to do that. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) are notable exceptions that provide robust and workable guidance for the use of adverse news with respect to transaction monitoring.

Search strings (a list of keywords numbers and operators meant for finding specific results) are already recognized as an inefficient way of identifying risks that don’t sit neatly on sanctions screening and PEP lists. It takes a long time, especially when an analyst can only search against 32 keywords in Google, including the variations of those keywords, at a time.

Using this kind of approach is a low likelihood way to try and isolate whether or not someone may pose a risk to a business. Moreover, search strings themselves are often not used consistently across multiple analysts, or stored in secure or appropriate ways; in fact, they are often saved in an analyst’s personal Word document as a long complex mass of variations, exclusions and Google-hacks.

The level of weight and prominence that 6AMLD gives to so many predicate offences indicates manual Adverse Media Screening is unlikely to be a viable path and is arguably already out of date unless firms wish to drastically lengthen the time taken to onboard or review customers — risking alienating them as a result. The more efficient, secure and auditable way to approach the problem is an automated AMS platform.

However, it is not as simple as just buying a platform. Unfortunately, most Adverse Media Screening platforms are using keywords too – it is automation but without context. Although there are fewer compliance officers, those that remain will probably not be aware that their solution is missing out on nuanced variations and clever replacement words that can enhance their searches.

The positive news is that there are more intelligent approaches to Adverse Media Screening which are able to understand the nuance of language through Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques, which use machine learning to develop and compile a database of adverse entities. NLP powered tools can search through millions of pages of news made available on the internet every day and refer back to many billions of pages that have already been indexed in order to create this comprehensive database of individuals and organizations.

Coverage and configurability are also vital. Platforms need to allow firms to search for a customer based on their personal information (full name, date of birth, etc.) and receive a profile that compiles all their relevant adverse media into one location. More importantly, they need to be able to take a risk-based approach (RBA) to collate adverse media relating to relevant predicate offences. Configurable solutions are the only way forwards in the face of new risks and predicate offences.

The Power of Profiles and Future Proofing

Customer profiles compiled by Adverse Media Screening platforms should relate to all the predicate offences plus any other crimes that have been included in your RBA, according to internal policy. Screening for adverse media that relates to these offenses will allow your compliance officers to more thoroughly justify, monitor and reject customers depending on your business’s policies.

Compliance officers encounter and must assess a constellation of risks, a series of weak signals that are often discussed as distinct issues but are, in reality, interconnected. Adverse media, when combined into a profile, combines many of these weak signals into a singularly powerful asset in determining whether or not a customer or potential customer poses a significant risk to the business.

We don’t know what the future holds. But we can take precautions based on what has happened before. The renewed focus on predicate offences in the EU, FATF and elsewhere appears to be part of a trend that businesses need to take seriously. To codify 22 offenses in one directive is significant and there is every possibility that more will come with further changes to the regulations.

For businesses, there is a need to get ahead of the game here, and integrating an Adverse Media Screening platform that can easily be configured for new predicate offences and is actively compiling profiles all the time is a robust way to be prepared.

There is significant risk in putting your business into a position where it is unable to accurately screen for adverse media or have Adverse Media Screening that will be out of date in a matter of years. Future-proofing your compliance functions means that you can focus on making sure customers fit the business’s risk profile — giving you an advantage when talking to regulators.

No regulators will criticize a firm for doing Adverse Media Screening well, but deficiencies in the event of an audit may negate possible leniencies.

Going Forward with Adverse Media Screening

What’s important in the face of 6AMLD is recognizing that non-software solutions to Adverse Media Screening are no longer really viable. You need to focus on what’s happening right now, the changes that are going to have an immediate impact. But compliance teams have to keep an eye focused on what’s happening in the industry and what will be occurring in the near future.

Any Adverse Media Screening platform provider you partner with now will need to be reconfigurable for further changes down the line. The focus on predicate offences is going to create a widening of scope regarding how we think about AML, and it is more than likely that new predicates will be added over time. Preparing for that possibility now will mean that businesses are able to better weather further compliance changes for the long term.Find out how Santander improved its Adverse Media Screening

Originally published 08 September 2020, updated 17 November 2021

Disclaimer: This is for general information only. The information presented does not constitute legal advice. ComplyAdvantage accepts no responsibility for any information contained herein and disclaims and excludes any liability in respect of the contents or for action taken based on this information.

Copyright © 2023 IVXS UK Limited (trading as ComplyAdvantage).