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Crime

Billions laundered in German property

December 7, 2018

About €30 billion of dubiously-sourced money was funneled into German real estate in 2017. Transparency International is calling for a series of reforms to combat the problem.

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Aerial view of Leipzig
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/J. Woitas

Billions of euros of illicit funds are being funneled into German real estate, anti-corruption group Transparency International said in a report on Friday.

Germany recently introduced measures to combat money laundering in the real estate sector but the group argues these reforms have been wholly ineffective.

Read more: Italian Mafia, bikers, Berlin clans: Europe's crime gangs

What the report found:

  • About €30 billion ($34 billion) of international money with unclear background was funneled into German real estate in 2017.
  • Criminal networks, particularly the Italian Mafia, exploit legal loopholes to launder money through German real estate.
  • 15 to 30 percent of criminal proceeds are invested in real estate, through building and renovating, buying, selling and renting.
  • Such transactions are frequently run through frontmen, whose names do not appear in legal databases.
  • Of the 60,000 suspicious transactions raised to authorities in 2017, just 20 came from real estate agents.

Read more: Police target 'ndrangheta mafia in raids across Europe

'Safe haven for dirty money'

Transparency Germany boss Edda Müller said: "The existing laws and the resources of the investigating authorities are disproportionate, particularly in view of the unlimited nature of international financial flows".

The Green Party's Lisa Paus called on the federal government to give top priority to this issue, as it was also causes rising rents and purchase prices. "Germany must no longer serve as a safe haven for dirty money from all over the world."

Read more: German real estate: Renters' woes are speculators' profits

Berlin seizes crime clan assets

Transparency register failing: Germany's money laundering laws obligate real estate agents, notaries and lawyers to "know your customer" and report suspicions. In 2017 Germany introduced a transparency register that required nested corporate structures to reveal their true beneficiaries. All parties involved in companies, cooperatives and foundations holding more than 25 percent of the capital or voting shares must be listed. Failure to do so should result in fines of up to €1 million. Information is accessible to authorities and people with a legitimate interest, including real estate agents and notaries. However the database has enjoyed little use by anyone so far, and has been plagued with issues, with loopholes still allowing parties to obscure the true beneficiaries of transactions.

Notaries bound by confidentiality: Notaries, who update land title records for real estate transactions, could serve as a final buffer in the laundering of money, but are hamstrung by a commitment to client confidentiality. Transparency argues such obligations must be dropped in cases of criminal suspicion.

Make land registers public: Land title records are not publicly accessible in notoriously privacy-sensitive Germany. The registers are currently being digitized and centralized, however, Transparency called for this process to be expedited and the registers to be opened up to the public to help combat the issue.

Read more: Germany for sale: Why the cost of living in Germany is on the rise

Money laundering in focus

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