Current Affairs Police raid headquarters of alleged money-laundering operation
Police in Prague say they’ve uncovered a huge money-laundering operation located in the city centre. According to the police anti-corruption unit, a firm based on Prague’s Narodni street had laundered hundreds of millions of dollars, apparently via a bureau de change and a complex of holiday apartments.
Photo: CTK
Passers-by on the busy intersection of Prague’s Národní and Spálená
streets witnessed an unusual start to the working week on Monday when
police surrounded the large office building on the corner and sealed off
the area. Eyewitnesses reported seeing a number of people being led away to
waiting police vans, although the police are being tight-lipped about what
or who they were looking for and indeed what they found.
A spokesman did confirm to the media, however, that the operation was part of an investigation into a huge money-laundering business. A spokesman for the police anti-corruption unit quoted in Lidové Noviny newspaper said at least 5.3 billion Czech crowns, which is just three hundred million U.S. dollars, had been laundered and taken out of the country.
The building is home to a number of companies, including a popular bureau
de change called Aktiv Change as well as a complex of holiday flats called
Town Residence Apartments. According to Lidové Noviny, Aktiv Change is
majority owned by an American citizen, with a British man and an Egyptian
citizen also involved in the company.
A security expert contacted by the paper said bureaux de change were an ideal way of laundering large sums of money, because they keep far fewer details of transactions. But he also said he was sceptical that so much money could have been laundered in such a short time. So far police are not saying where they believe the money has come from, but the usual candidates are profits from prostitution, the sale of weapons and drugs.







