Social Media

ON DEMAND: ComplyAdvantage Webinar - The Rise of Money Muling

*** Now available on demand ***

ComplyAdvantage Webinar banner: The Rise of Money Muling, with Charles Delingpole Founder and CEO of ComplyAdvantage, Gemma Rogers, Co-FOunder at FINTRAIL, Tom Keatinge, Director, Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies (CFCS) at The Royal U…

Due to rapidly changing global circumstances, high unemployment and uncertainty surrounded the future, money muling is tragically on the rise.

It is a crime that often disproportionately affects the most vulnerable and financially illiterate. Criminals involved in money muling often survive by tricking ‘clean’ individuals with no criminal history but who is ultimately responsible for educating and helping to prevent this insidious form of money laundering: individuals, banks, governments, regulators, social media platforms?

Join our expert panel including:

  • Charles Delingpole, Founder & CEO, ComplyAdvantage

  • Gemma Rogers, Co-Founder, FINTRAIL

  • Tom Keatinge, Director, Centre for Financial Crime & Security Studies, RUSI

  • Adam Hadley, Director, Tech Against Terrorism

In this thought-provoking webinar, the panel will be exploring:

  • The role that social media platforms play in recruitment, advertisement, and propagation

  • Why this issue deserves urgent and serious attention now

  • What the financial services sector and the regulator is and should be doing to stop money muling

FINTRAIL on the Captivated Audience - Season 1, Episode 26

In this episode, FINTRAIL’s James Nurse, joins hosts Sam Sheen and Marie Lundberg on the Captivated Audience podcast.

In this episode James offers insights from recent FINTRAIL papers on Social Media and Financial Crime, and the iterative risk approach to pre and post pandemic working for FinTech.

How Social Media is used to Further Financial Crime - Part 2

Similarly to most 18-year-olds, “Carlos” is glued to his phone, constantly refreshing his social media feeds and scrolling through friends’ pictures. In contrast with many other teenagers though, Carlos’ uploaded photographs illustrate a level of opulence and a life of excess. Carlos and his friends are pictured holding wads of cash, draped in designer clothes, Rolex watches on their wrists, and driving around London in a Mercedes. This seems quite implausible for an individual who left school after GCSEs and is now a junior employee at a central London restaurant (1).

 

Is the use of social media helping to fuel this problem? The HM Inspectorate of Probation’s report, ‘The Work of Youth Offending Teams to Protect the Public’, have described social media platforms as the “catalyst for some of the most serious and violent crime offences” (2). This is of no surprise as there has been a generational shift, with youngsters now living in a progressive online world which some adults just cannot get to grips with.

 

In Part 1 of this series, FINTRAIL used four basic money-mule associated search terms to pre-identify social media accounts of interest and those assessed to be associated with potential mule activity. These search terms were “Legit money UK”, “Easy Money UK”, “Flip Money” and “Instant Cash UK”. This investigation now seeks to focus on the initial phase of money mule recruitment and how by disrupting this critical stage it can disrupt the rest of the money mule value chain. However, it is important to first understand the money mule life cycle  which looks like this:

A simple diagram breaking down money muling into four steps; step 1 how to entice on social media, step 2 where they get a DM and get money deposited, step 3 the mule transfers money across their accounts, step 4 the mule gets caught and faces the c…

Honing in on Step 1 i.e. contact over Social Media, FINTRAIL have identified a number of key indicators of which combined together likely indicate an attempt to lure someone into Money Muling; these fall into two categories, visuals and language.

The likelihood of money muling being carried out on the internet depicted as visuals, e.g the images of cash etc to lure and the language used e.g. quick cash etc.

Visuals: There are a combination of images used that show instant gratification; key features include cash, cars, watches and evidence that large sums have been transferred into bank accounts. Further to this, many of the pages had adverts in their “stories” asking people to DM them if they want to make money quickly and requested people with very specific bank accounts to get in touch.

Language: By doing a simple drag and drop of Facebook, Instagram and Twitter pages into a tag cloud generator, FINTRAIL identified the types of language used across all platforms; the more popular the word, the larger it appears. The language used on the accounts really highlighted three key areas; fraudsters would request a specific bank account whether Barclays, Lloyds etc, then offer free fast easy money and explain that this was only a DM or whatsapp message away.

High chance of money muling: The combination of these images linked with these words are likely to indicate and point to something unsavoury and potentially illicit. This combination of factors can be used by social platforms to limit the likelihood of false positives when monitoring behaviour on their platforms and if kept up to date with evolving typological information, would create a far more effective disruption to wholesale financial crime scams than the over reliance on the regulated financial sector, by which point the damage is already done and the act of money laundering has already occurred.

So What Next? 

For FINTRAIL our money-mule journey on the social media platforms ended with the phrases “DM me for more info” or “whatsapp me”. However, in reality we know that this is only the beginning. We know that from here, behind the scenes, bank details are exchanged and money transfers are being made. This is where law enforcement has a critical role to play, coordinated with social media platforms, so that more can be done upstream to reduce the impact and have far more effect, reducing harm across the value chain of money mule activity.

 

Instagram as well as Facebook, use a new AI system Deep Text to essentially deal with and counteract major issues such as cyber bullying as well as malicious posts and comments. If the Instagram algorithm detects or finds provoking content, it’s discarded immediately. This demonstrates that technology already exists that can have an enormous impact on how social media platforms are abused (3).

A robust disruption of Step 1 of the money-mule cycle that is facilitated by social platforms will have a significant downstream impact where the end result would likely amount to a positive reduction in;

  • harm and exploitation of vulnerable people

  • costs to law enforcement effort (investigating money-mule cases)

  • the burden on the UK and global Suspicious Reporting Regimes

  • the burden placed on those operating in the regulated financial service sector


Very clearly, this needs to be an industry wide coordinated effort with law enforcement at the forefront and social media platforms on board. During the fifth Europol Money Mule Action (EMMA 5) week, 3883 money mules were identified alongside 386 money mule recruiters; 228 of these were arrested. As a major catalyst of money muling recruitment, social media platforms should share the burden and play their part in the deterrence of money muling by utilising technology they already have.

Get in Touch
If you are interested in speaking to the FINTRAIL team about the topics discussed here or any other anti-financial crime topics, please feel free to get in touch with one of our team or at contact@fintrail.co.uk

(1) How teenage money mules funnel millions from online fraud

(2) Monitor social media of young offenders to prevent crime says watchdog

(3)  Instagram leverages AI and big data