FROM A
DIFFERENT ANGLE by Kenneth Rijock
Financial Crime Consultant, for World-Check
Venezuelan Government ID scandal becomes public
20 July 2006

Venezuela's dirty little secret, well known to many North American compliance officers, has surfaced: you cannot trust its government-issued forms of identification.

The Social Christian Party, which opposes the Chavez government, has complained that Venezuela's voter registry contains millions of bogus identities, created in order to insure election victories for the current regime. Three million new voter registrations have occurred since 2003. This corrupt arrangement is but a part of a tainted system of government identification that renders Venezuelan-issued IDs unsuitable for compliance purposes.

Those of you who are long-time readers of my articles on Latin America know that I have cautioned compliance officers against accepting Venezuelan  government identification documents for the past three years. Corrupt government policies have resulted in the issuance of multiple identities to its political supporters, also distributing identity documents to arriving members of radical Islamic terrorists who do not even speak Spanish, and rendering the national ID system meaningless.

A few of the inconsistencies found by the Social Christian Party :

  •  2,272,706 voters listed as living in the same two-story townhouse in Caracas. A woman answersing the door at that address stated that seven people lived there.
  • 39,000 voters with birthdays that would put them over the age of 100; this is a statistical impossibility, in a country whose population is only 26m. If true, it would mean that ten times as many Venezuelans as American citizens are living past the age of 100.
  • 1921 voters, all with the same last name, Gonzalez,  all allegedly born on the same day, 15 March, 1974, with most of them purportedly residing in Zulia State, which borders Colombia. Most of these voters are registered to vote in the same place.
  • A woman, drawing a monthly government payment, who is over the age of 150 years. The oldest living person in the world today is believed to be a 116 year-old woman in Ecuador, and the oldest documented age is 122.
  • 1.7m Venezuelans were originally registered without an address, which is a major violation of the law. 

Remember, these illegal voters all must have Cedulas, national identity cards containing a unique number, to register, which means that without active governmental collusion, these voter registrations could not occur. It also tells compliance officers that many Cedulas, the generally accepted means of identification for opening bank accounts, are bogus. Caveat compliance.

Since known members of Hezbollah, Hamas, the FARC, the ELN, ETA, and other designated terrorist organisations who are operating opening in Venezuela are also holding Cedulas, potential terrorist financing exposure is also present when North American and European banks open accounts for Venezuelan nationals. 

Compliance officers are strongly urged to independently verify identity for new clients who hold Venezuelan government-issued identification, lest they approve customers whose true identities make them unacceptable risks. It is suggested that verified bank references from major international institutions, located outside Venezuela, may provide the needed verification.     

 

 

 

The facts and opinions stated in this article are those of the author and not those of World-Check. World-Check does not warrant the accuracy of any facts and opinions stated in this article, does not endorse them, and accepts no responsibility for them.

Email Article

Banner
PRODUCT INFORMATION
NEWSWIRE
Chechen leader profiled by World-Check 5 year...
Read the full press release here.
World-Check protects clients from illicit ves...
World-Check‟s vessel screening research unit profiled 17 of the 27 vessels allegedly connected to Iran‟s nuclear and missile programs many months ahead of their inclusion on published government lists...more
Read World-Check experts commentary on corpor...
Read World-Check's Robert Mitchell and David Leppan commentary on corporate fraud in Business Ethics in the Times supplement 18 May 2010. ...more
How will the UK Bribery Act affect your busin...
How will the UK Bribery Act affect your business? FCPA and anti-corruption compliance specialist Michael Osajda explains in detail. Watch the video...more
World-Check announces 4500 clients
World-Check has reported another year of exceptional growth, bringing its client base to over 4,500 organisations. A combination of outstanding client service, new products and global execution has at...more

ARTICLE ARCHIVE
Banner
© 2010 World-Check, All Rights Reserved.