NEW
YORK: US authorities said on Thursday they had sued a former chief
compliance officer of money-transfer firm MoneyGram International,
seeking to collect a $1 million civil penalty from him for failing to
stop fraudulent telemarketers from using the firm's services.
The US departments of justice and the treasury said in a statement that under Thomas Haider, who left MoneyGram in 2008, the firm failed to put in place an effective anti-money laundering program and failed to file timely suspicious activity reports with law enforcement.
The government's lawsuit also seeks to bar Haider from participating directly or indirectly in the affairs of any financial institution in the United States, according to the statement.
The US departments of justice and the treasury said in a statement that under Thomas Haider, who left MoneyGram in 2008, the firm failed to put in place an effective anti-money laundering program and failed to file timely suspicious activity reports with law enforcement.
The government's lawsuit also seeks to bar Haider from participating directly or indirectly in the affairs of any financial institution in the United States, according to the statement.
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