Money laundering risk rises in four Swedish sectors

The risk of money laundering has increased across Swedish business according to a new national risk assessment published on Wednesday.

The updated assessment from the coordination function at the Swedish Police shows that the risk level is higher than in the 2020/2021 measurement. All 16 sectors are now assessed at the highest risk level.

The report, produced by 17 organisations including the Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority and the Swedish Economic Crime Authority, highlights four sectors as extra high risk: banking and financing, payment institutions, accounting and bookkeeping services, and real estate brokers.

The number of reported money laundering crimes has doubled from just over 9,000 in 2020 to about 19,000 in 2024. The Financial Intelligence Unit received over 60,000 suspicion reports, more than double since 2020.

“Money laundering is a fundamental prerequisite for organised crime,” says senior prosecutor Petra Götell at the Swedish Prosecution Authority.

相关文章

Police and construction workers collaborating on a theft prevention initiative in Dalarna, Sweden.
AI 生成的图像

New collaboration to warn construction industry in Dalarna

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

Police in Dalarna and Maskinentreprenörerna have launched a collaboration called Varningdirekt to reduce thefts and crimes against construction companies.

Frauds have become one of the most common crimes in Dalarna, with thousands of reports each year. Civil investigator Matilda Eriksson Rehnberg tracks the money that often vanishes abroad and the perpetrators. Many victims do not even report the crimes.

由 AI 报道

Svea Court of Appeal has increased prison sentences for two men from Hedemora convicted of gross money laundering. The men must now pay 1.8 million kronor in damages.

Örebro municipality helped KIF Örebro adjust its 2023 accounts to secure the 2025 elite license. An expert assesses the measures as possibly constituting several crimes.

由 AI 报道

Six people have already died in drowning accidents in Sweden by May. The Swedish Lifesaving Society has been granted 31 million kronor by the government to increase swimming proficiency among risk groups.

Social Democrats propose a temporary bank tax of four billion kronor ahead of the autumn election. Major banks warn they will raise mortgage rates if the tax is introduced. Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson cautions that costs will be passed on to customers.

由 AI 报道

Police in region Mitt have received several reports of counterfeit 500-kronor bills in circulation. The notes have been used or attempted in payments at stores and between private individuals.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝