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AML Risks & Methods

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Q1. Which of the following BEST describes the term 'placement' in money laundering?

Explanation: Placement is the first stage of money laundering — introducing illegal cash into the financial system, e.g. cash deposits into bank accounts.

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Q2. What is 'layering' in the context of money laundering?

Explanation: Layering is the second stage — creating complex, multi-layered transactions to distance funds from their criminal origin and obscure the audit trail.

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Q3. Integration, the final stage of money laundering, refers to:

Explanation: Integration is the final stage where laundered funds re-enter the legitimate economy, appearing as lawful income or business proceeds.

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Q4. Which activity is MOST associated with 'smurfing'?

Explanation: Smurfing (structuring) involves breaking large cash amounts into smaller deposits/transactions to stay below mandatory reporting thresholds.

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Q5. Trade-based money laundering (TBML) primarily involves:

Explanation: TBML exploits international trade transactions — over/under-invoicing, multiple invoicing, falsely describing goods — to transfer criminal value across borders.

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Q6. Which of the following is a red flag for trade-based money laundering?

Explanation: Significant discrepancies between invoice value and actual market price of goods is a key TBML red flag, indicating possible over/under-invoicing.

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Q7. Which sector is considered HIGHEST risk for money laundering through real estate?

Explanation: High-value commercial real estate transactions, especially all-cash purchases, are high-risk for ML due to the ability to rapidly transfer large sums and obscure beneficial ownership.

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Q8. What is 'gatekeeping' in AML terminology?
Explanation: Gatekeepers are professionals such as lawyers, accountants, and notaries whose services can be abused to facilitate money laundering — or used to prevent it.

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Q9. Which predicate offence is MOST commonly associated with money laundering proceeds globally?

Explanation: Drug trafficking remains the largest source of laundered proceeds globally, though all listed offenses generate significant illicit funds.

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Q10. The concept of 'beneficial ownership' refers to:
Explanation: Beneficial ownership identifies the natural person(s) who ultimately own or control a legal entity, even if nominal ownership is held by others.

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Q11. Shell companies are primarily used in money laundering to:

Explanation: Shell companies have no real business activity and are used to obscure the true ownership of assets and the origin of funds.

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Q12. Which of the following BEST describes 'comingling' as a money laundering technique?

Explanation: Comingling involves mixing proceeds of crime with legitimate business revenues to disguise their illicit origin within normal business cash flows.

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Q13. Which of the following is an example of 'integration' in the money laundering cycle?

Explanation: Purchasing a legitimate business with laundered funds and running profits through it as business income is a classic integration technique — the money re-enters the legitimate economy.

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Q14. The concept of 'correspondent banking' poses AML risk because:

Explanation: In correspondent banking, the correspondent bank processes transactions on behalf of the respondent bank's customers — who the correspondent does not directly know. This creates significant AML risk from opaque, nested relationships.

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Q15. Which of the following BEST describes 'gatekeeping risk' in the legal profession?

Explanation: Lawyers can be misused as gatekeepers — facilitating ML/TF through company formation, trust creation, real estate conveyancing, and client account management. FATF Recommendation 23 addresses this risk.

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Q16. Which of the following is a characteristic of 'virtual asset' (cryptocurrency) money laundering risk?

Explanation: Cryptocurrencies present ML risks due to pseudonymous addresses, fast cross-border movement, and obfuscation tools (mixers/tumblers). FATF extended its standards to Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) in 2019.

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Law Enforcement

1 / 9

Q1. In the US, which agency is primarily responsible for receiving and analysing SARs from financial institutions?

Explanation: FinCEN, a bureau of the US Treasury, is the US Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) — it receives, maintains, and analyzes BSA filings including SARs and CTRs.

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Q2. Under the Bank Secrecy Act, what is a Currency Transaction Report (CTR)?

Explanation: CTRs must be filed with FinCEN for every cash transaction (single or aggregated) exceeding $10,000 in a single business day, regardless of whether the activity is suspicious.

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Q3. What is an 'information subpoena' or '314(a) request' in AML?
Explanation: Section 314(a) allows FinCEN (on behalf of law enforcement) to request FIs to search their records for accounts and transactions related to specified individuals/entities under investigation for ML/TF.

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Q4. Section 314(b) of the USA PATRIOT Act allows financial institutions to:

Explanation: Section 314(b) allows FIs that have registered with FinCEN to voluntarily share information with each other to identify and report ML/TF — providing safe harbour from privacy law liability for such sharing.

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Q5. Civil asset forfeiture in money laundering cases allows governments to:

Explanation: Civil asset forfeiture allows authorities to seize assets connected to criminal activity, often without a criminal conviction — the property itself is the defendant and must be forfeited if shown to be proceeds of crime.

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Q6. A 'John Doe summons' is a US law enforcement tool used to:

Explanation: A John Doe summons allows the IRS to summon records from a third party (e.g., a bank) for an unidentified group of people believed to owe taxes or be engaged in tax evasion.

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Q7. Which of the following BEST describes a financial intelligence unit (FIU)?

Explanation: An FIU is a national body that receives mandatory disclosures (SARs/STRs) from reporting entities, analyzes them, and disseminates financial intelligence to competent authorities for investigation.

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Q8. What is 'asset recovery' in the context of AML?

Explanation: Asset recovery involves tracing, identifying, freezing, seizing, and ultimately confiscating criminal proceeds — depriving criminals of the benefits of their crimes and returning assets to victims or governments.

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Q9. Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs) facilitate:

Explanation: MLATs are bilateral or multilateral treaties allowing countries to request and provide formal legal assistance — evidence, witness statements, asset freezing — for criminal investigations including ML.

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Compliance Programs

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Q1. Under FATF Recommendation 1, what approach must countries and financial institutions use for AML/CFT?

Explanation: FATF Recommendation 1 requires countries and financial institutions to apply a Risk-Based Approach (RBA), allocating resources proportionate to identified ML/TF risks.

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Q2. Which of the following is a core element of an effective AML compliance program?

Explanation: An effective AML program must include written policies/procedures, internal controls, independent testing/audit, designated compliance officer, and ongoing employee training.

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Q3. The 'five pillars' of a Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) AML compliance program include all EXCEPT:

Explanation: The five BSA pillars are: internal controls, independent testing, designated BSA officer, ongoing training, and customer identification program (CIP). Fraud reporting mandates are not a 'pillar.'

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Q4. What is the primary purpose of an independent audit function in AML compliance?

Explanation: Independent audit tests whether the AML program is working effectively, identifies weaknesses, and provides assurance to senior management and the board.

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Q5. Which of the following describes a 'Wolfsberg Group' best practice?
Explanation: The Wolfsberg Group is an association of global banks that produces industry guidance on AML/CFT standards for correspondent banking, private banking, and other areas.

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Q6. A 'culture of compliance' in AML is BEST demonstrated by:

Explanation: A genuine culture of compliance requires tone from the top, with senior leadership visibly supporting, championing, and modeling ethical and compliance behavior.

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Q7. What is the primary role of a Money Laundering Reporting Officer (MLRO)?

Explanation: The MLRO receives internal suspicious activity reports from staff, evaluates them, and decides whether to make an external disclosure (SAR/STR) to authorities.

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Q8. Which of the following is the MOST important factor when assessing a financial institution's AML risk?

Explanation: An institution's inherent AML risk is determined by its customer types, products/services offered, delivery channels, and geographic exposure — not size alone.

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Q9. Third-party reliance for CDD is permitted under FATF standards ONLY when:

Explanation: Institutions may rely on third parties for CDD but remain ultimately responsible. Documented reliance agreements, regulatory compliance of the third party, and immediate access to CDD data are required.

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Q10. AML training programs should be provided to:

Explanation: All employees must receive AML awareness training; those in higher-risk roles (relationship managers, compliance staff) require more detailed, role-specific training.

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Q11. Under the risk-based approach, which action should a financial institution take when it identifies a high-risk customer?

Explanation: High-risk customers require EDD — more detailed information gathering and verification — plus more frequent and intensive ongoing monitoring, not automatic rejection or SAR filing.

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Q12. Which of the following BEST describes a 'correspondent banking relationship'?
Explanation: Correspondent banking involves a respondent bank accessing services (dollar clearing, trade finance, wire transfers) from a correspondent bank, typically in another country. High AML risk due to indirect customer relationships.

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Q13. Which of the following BEST describes a 'correspondent banking relationship'?
Explanation: Independent testing must be conducted by a party independent of the AML compliance function — typically internal audit, external consultants, or specialized reviewers — to objectively assess program effectiveness.

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Q14. What is the function of a 'Customer Risk Rating' (CRR) in AML compliance?

Explanation: CRR assigns each customer a risk score (low/medium/high) based on customer type, geography, product use, and other risk factors — determining the appropriate level of CDD, EDD, and transaction monitoring intensity.

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KYC & CDD

1 / 14

Q1. Which of the following is NOT a standard element of Customer Due Diligence (CDD)?
Explanation: Standard CDD elements are: identifying the customer, verifying identity, understanding the business relationship, and identifying beneficial owners. Credit scoring is not a CDD requirement.

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Q2. Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) is required for which category of customers?

Explanation: EDD is required for higher-risk customers including PEPs, customers from high-risk jurisdictions, non-face-to-face customers, and others identified as high-risk.

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Q3. A Politically Exposed Person (PEP) is defined as:

Explanation: PEPs are individuals entrusted with prominent public functions (heads of state, senior politicians, military officials, etc.) plus their family members and known close associates — at heightened risk for corruption/bribery.

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Q4. How long should a FORMER PEP continue to be treated with enhanced due diligence?

Explanation: Former PEPs should remain subject to EDD until the institution determines, through a risk-based assessment, that they no longer pose heightened risk — FATF suggests a risk-based approach with no fixed period.

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Q5. Under FATF Recommendation 10, when must CDD be performed?

 

Explanation: FATF R.10 requires CDD: on establishing a business relationship; for occasional transactions at or above EUR/USD 15,000; when ML/TF is suspected; or when there is doubt about existing identification.

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Q5. Under FATF Recommendation 10, when must CDD be performed?

 

Explanation: FATF R.10 requires CDD: on establishing a business relationship; for occasional transactions at or above EUR/USD 15,000; when ML/TF is suspected; or when there is doubt about existing identification.

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Q6. What does 'ongoing due diligence' in a business relationship require?
Explanation: Ongoing CDD requires continuously monitoring transactions for consistency with the customer profile and risk level, and updating CDD information when it changes.

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Q7. The concept of 'de-risking' refers to:

Explanation: De-risking is the practice of FIs exiting whole customer segments or regions perceived as high-risk (e.g., money service businesses, correspondent banks in certain countries) rather than applying enhanced due diligence.

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Q8. Which of the following is required when a customer opens an account under the Customer Identification Program (CIP) rules in the US?

Explanation: US CIP requires collecting the customer's name, date of birth, address, and an identifying number (SSN for US persons; passport/alien ID/other for non-US persons).

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Q9. Simplified Due Diligence (SDD) may be applied to:

Explanation: SDD may be applied to customers/products assessed as lower risk — e.g., listed public companies, regulated financial institutions, low-value products — subject to country-specific rules.

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Q10. What is a 'nominee shareholder' and why is it AML-relevant?

Explanation: Nominee shareholders hold shares in their own name on behalf of the actual beneficial owner, obscuring true ownership. This is a key mechanism for concealing beneficial ownership and is a major AML risk.

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Q11. Which document is generally the MOST reliable form of customer identification for natural persons?

Explanation: Government-issued photo IDs (passport, national ID, driver's license) are considered the most reliable primary identification documents for natural persons.

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Q13. What is the AML significance of 'nominee directors'?

Explanation: FATF guidance typically uses 25% as an indicative threshold for beneficial ownership, though countries and institutions may apply lower thresholds based on risk (e.g., 10% for higher-risk situations).

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Q14. Non-face-to-face (remote) customer onboarding carries heightened AML risk because:

Explanation: Non-face-to-face onboarding increases the risk of identity fraud and the use of false documents, as the institution cannot physically verify the customer's identity — requiring additional verification measures.

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Transaction Monitoring

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Q1. What is the primary purpose of transaction monitoring in AML compliance?

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Q2. Which of the following is a key red flag in transaction monitoring for money laundering?

Explanation: Frequent large cash deposits inconsistent with the stated business or customer profile is a classic ML red flag, indicating possible placement of illicit funds.

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Q3. 'Structuring' (also called smurfing) is the practice of:

Explanation: Structuring involves deliberately breaking transactions into amounts below reporting thresholds to evade detection. It is illegal in most jurisdictions even if the funds are legitimate.

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Q4. Which of the following BEST describes a 'rules-based' transaction monitoring system?

Explanation: Rules-based TM systems use pre-defined thresholds and scenarios (e.g., cash deposits exceeding $9,000, wire transfers to high-risk jurisdictions) to flag transactions for review.

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Q5. In transaction monitoring, what does 'alert dispositioning' mean?

Explanation: Alert dispositioning is the process by which analysts review flagged alerts, gather additional information, and decide to close (no suspicious activity) or escalate to a full investigation.

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Q6. Which of the following is an indicator of potential money laundering in wire transfer activity?

Explanation: Pass-through activity — funds moving in and out of an account rapidly with no clear business purpose — is a key red flag, suggesting the account is being used to layer funds.

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Q7. What is meant by 'transaction monitoring tuning'?

Explanation: Tuning involves calibrating TM system parameters — thresholds, rules, lookback periods — to improve the signal-to-noise ratio, enhancing suspicious activity detection while reducing unproductive false positives.

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Q8. Which of the following product types carries the HIGHEST inherent money laundering risk?

Explanation: Numbered accounts and private banking for high-net-worth individuals carry high ML risk due to the confidentiality involved, large transaction values, and potential for obscuring beneficial ownership.

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Q9. What does a 'false positive' alert in a transaction monitoring system indicate?

Explanation: False positives are alerts generated by the TM system for transactions that turn out to be legitimate. High false positive rates are a major operational challenge, diverting analyst resources from genuine suspicious activity.

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Q10. What is the MOST important element when preparing a SAR narrative?

Explanation: The SAR narrative must clearly and factually describe the suspicious activity in sufficient detail for investigators — covering the subjects, the nature of the suspicious activity, amounts, dates, and why it is suspicious.

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Q11. In the context of AML, what is a 'layered' transaction structure?

Explanation: Layered transactions involve moving funds through multiple steps — accounts, institutions, jurisdictions, currencies — to create distance from the criminal origin and make the audit trail difficult to follow.

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STR/SAR Filing

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Q1. In the US, what is the minimum dollar threshold for mandatory SAR filing by banks for transactions involving possible money laundering?

Explanation: US banks must file a SAR for transactions of $5,000 or more where the bank can identify a suspect, or $25,000 or more regardless of whether a suspect is identified.

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Q2. What is the 'tipping off' offense in AML compliance?

Explanation: Tipping off is the offense of disclosing to the subject (or others likely to inform the subject) that a SAR has been filed or is under consideration. It can obstruct investigations and carries criminal penalties.

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Q3. Under what circumstances should a SAR be filed?

Explanation: A SAR must be filed when an institution knows, suspects, or has reason to suspect that a transaction: involves illegal activity, is designed to evade BSA requirements, lacks a lawful purpose, or involves ML/TF.

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Q4. In the US, what is the deadline for filing a SAR after a suspicious transaction is detected?

Explanation: US SAR filings must be submitted within 30 calendar days of the initial detection of suspicious activity. If no suspect is identified, the deadline extends to 60 days.

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Q5. Safe harbour provisions for SAR filers protect institutions from:

Explanation: Safe harbor protects financial institutions and their employees from civil liability arising from SAR disclosures made in good faith — they cannot be sued by the subject of the report.

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Q6. Which of the following should NOT be included in a SAR narrative?

Explanation: SAR narratives should be factual and objective — describing the suspicious activity and indicators without including personal opinions, conclusions about guilt, or speculation about the subject.

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Q7. Continuing suspicious activity' SARs are filed when:

Explanation: If suspicious activity continues after the initial SAR filing, continuing activity SARs must be filed at regular intervals (typically every 90-120 days) to keep authorities updated.

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Q8. Can a financial institution share SAR information with its foreign affiliate?

Explanation: SARs may be shared within the same financial group (including foreign affiliates) for AML purposes, subject to strict confidentiality obligations — the information must not be disclosed to the subject.

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Q9. Which of the following is the correct definition of a 'suspicious transaction'?

Explanation: A suspicious transaction is one where the reporting entity suspects or has reasonable grounds to suspect that it represents proceeds of crime or is connected to ML/TF — the standard varies by jurisdiction.

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Q10. A financial institution discovers that a customer's transactions match ML patterns but the customer has been with the institution for 10 years with no prior issues. The institution should:

Explanation: Relationship length does not override the obligation to report suspicious activity. If investigation does not resolve the suspicion, a SAR must be filed. The institution must never tip off the customer.

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International Standards

1 / 15

Q1. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) is:

Explanation: FATF is the global standard-setter for AML/CFT/CPF. It produces the FATF Recommendations and conducts mutual evaluations of countries' compliance. It has no enforcement or arrest powers.

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Q2. How many FATF Recommendations are currently in force?

Explanation: FATF has 40 Recommendations covering criminal justice, law enforcement, financial system measures, and international cooperation for AML/CFT/CPF.

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Q3. What is the purpose of FATF's 'grey list' (Jurisdictions Under Increased Monitoring)?

Explanation: The FATF grey list identifies jurisdictions with strategic AML/CFT deficiencies that are working with FATF to address them under agreed action plans. FIs must apply EDD to customers from grey-listed countries.

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Q4. What is the consequence for financial institutions of dealing with customers from FATF 'black list' (High-Risk Jurisdictions) countries?

Explanation: FATF Recommendation 19 requires institutions to apply EDD proportionate to the risk for customers and transactions connected to high-risk jurisdictions. Countermeasures may apply in the most serious cases.

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Q5. The Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Units (FIUs) serves to:

Explanation: The Egmont Group facilitates international cooperation and intelligence sharing among over 170 national FIUs, enabling the sharing of financial intelligence to combat ML/TF.

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Q6. The Basel AML Index is published by:

Explanation: The Basel AML Index is published by the Basel Institute on Governance and ranks countries by ML/TF risk based on data from multiple sources including FATF evaluations.

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Q7. FATF Recommendation 16 (the 'Travel Rule') requires:

Explanation: R.16 (Travel Rule) requires FIs to obtain, hold, and transmit accurate originator and beneficiary information with wire transfers, making it available to authorities upon request to trace illicit fund flows.

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Q8. Which UN Convention was the first international treaty to criminalize money laundering?

Explanation: The 1988 Vienna Convention was the first international treaty to require criminalizing drug-related money laundering and laid the foundation for subsequent global AML frameworks.

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Q8. Which UN Convention was the first international treaty to criminalize money laundering?

Explanation: The 1988 Vienna Convention was the first international treaty to require criminalizing drug-related money laundering and laid the foundation for subsequent global AML frameworks.

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Q8. Which UN Convention was the first international treaty to criminalize money laundering?

Explanation: The 1988 Vienna Convention was the first international treaty to require criminalizing drug-related money laundering and laid the foundation for subsequent global AML frameworks.

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Q9. What is the purpose of a Mutual Evaluation Report (MER) conducted by FATF?

Explanation: MERs assess both a country's technical compliance with FATF Recommendations and the effectiveness of its AML/CFT system in achieving intended outcomes.

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Q10. The Wolfsberg Correspondent Banking Due Diligence Questionnaire (CBDDQ) is used to:

Explanation: The Wolfsberg CBDDQ provides a standardized format for gathering AML/CFT information from correspondent banks, facilitating due diligence on correspondent banking relationships.

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Q11. The FATF Mutual Evaluation process assesses countries on:

Explanation: FATF MERs use a dual methodology: assessing both technical compliance (laws and regulations in place) and effectiveness (whether the system is actually achieving its intended outcomes).

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Q12. FATF Recommendation 24 (Transparency of Legal Persons) requires countries to:

Explanation: R.24 requires countries to ensure that competent authorities can access beneficial ownership information on legal persons in a timely manner — through registries, company records, or other mechanisms.

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Q13. The purpose of FATF's follow-up process after a mutual evaluation is to:

Explanation: After a MER, FATF's follow-up process monitors whether countries have addressed deficiencies — through regular reporting, enhanced follow-up for poorly performing countries, or grey/black listing for serious deficiencies.

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Financing of Terrorism

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Q1. How does terrorist financing DIFFER from typical money laundering?

Explanation: A key difference is that TF can involve funds from entirely legitimate sources (donations, charities, businesses) that are used for criminal/terrorist purposes — unlike ML where the underlying funds are always criminally derived.

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Q2. Which FATF Recommendation specifically addresses terrorist financing?

Explanation: FATF Recommendation 5 requires countries to criminalize terrorist financing, including the financing of individual terrorists and terrorist organizations, regardless of whether the underlying funds are from legitimate or illegal sources.

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Q3. The primary international legal instrument against terrorist financing is:

Explanation: The 1999 UN Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism requires states to criminalize TF and cooperate internationally. UNSCR 1267 and subsequent resolutions established targeted financial sanctions regimes.

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Q4. What is 'hawala' and why is it relevant to terrorist financing?

Explanation: Hawala is an informal value transfer system based on trust and a network of brokers (hawaladars). Because it operates outside the formal banking system, it can be difficult to detect and has been used to move TF funds.

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Q5. Targeted Financial Sanctions (TFS) require financial institutions to:

Explanation: TFS require institutions to freeze assets of, and prohibit transactions with, designated persons/entities without delay — typically 'immediately' or within 24 hours upon designation.

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Q6. Non-profit organizations (NPOs) are considered potentially high-risk for terrorist financing because:

Explanation: FATF Recommendation 8 recognizes NPOs as potentially vulnerable to TF abuse — particularly those operating in or near conflict zones or high-risk regions — due to public trust, cross-border operations, and variable oversight.

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Q7. 'Self-financing' of terrorism refers to:

Explanation: Self-financed terrorism — lone actors or small cells using personal income, savings, or consumer credit — is a growing threat as it leaves minimal financial footprint and is harder to detect through standard TM systems.

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Q8. Which of the following is a recognized risk indicator for TF in the NPO sector?

Explanation: Key TF red flags for NPOs include vague charitable mandates, cash-intensive operations, significant activity in conflict zones, opaque governance, and unexplained funds movements.

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Q9. The term 'de-listing' in the context of targeted financial sanctions refers to:

Explanation: De-listing refers to the removal of an individual or entity from a targeted sanctions list, following a review, petition process, or determination that designation criteria are no longer met.

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Q10. What is the key difference between AML controls and CFT controls?

Explanation: AML is primarily retrospective (detecting and reporting proceeds of past crimes); CFT is prospective — preventing funds from reaching terrorist actors through real-time sanctions screening and targeted financial sanctions before transactions complete.

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