Greeks & Italians take their savings by the billion out of the country, willingly accepted by foreign banks: is this not money laundering?

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Doesn't laundering involve illegal money.

Personally I would ask what right a country has to restrict people taking their money wherever they want.

But if I HAD to launder money,  I'd use Woolite and Axion bleach.

I'm baffled.  What does this have to do with writing or reading crime fiction?

Uh...yeah. Any reason we're being bombarded with this topic, P.C.?

I can see where it could be.  I'd love to see PC tune it in a little.

Nah.  If I had money in the Greek banking system, I'd have pulled it out months ago.  There's a plot for at least one legal thriller (or heist story, or both) in the Greek meltdown and eventual default, though--lots of people are getting very rich betting against the Greek economy and banking system right now, and somebody (or several somebodies) has done a very clever job of making billions of Euros go poof.

Totally agree, Jon.   I would think anybody who knows about banking and such could create a "SIlver Bears" type thriller, or maybe a smaller scale mystery kind of thing out of this.  DEFINITELY a con-game caper.

Sure, I would have done so as well, joining the flight capital. The movement of capital is a combination of (dis)trust, loss avoidance and profit expectation. But now you must put on your criminological glasses (we are on crimespace, aren't we?) and read the UNODC report on laundering: 3,2% of the GDP is proceeds. The you will see how hypocritical and unfouded the UN reports on this issue of laundering is.

 

OK, now I'm baffled, too.

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