Book traversal links for 2.1.1. Obscuring Identity/Beneficial Ownership
2.1.1. Obscuring Identity/Beneficial Ownership
Effective from 7/6/2021Individuals can use legal persons and arrangements to obscure or conceal their involvement in a transaction. In many jurisdictions, the individuals who truly own, control, direct, or benefit from a transaction—known as the beneficial owners—are not required to reveal their identities to the authorities. Individuals who are wanted criminals, known terrorist financiers, or connected to heavily sanctioned jurisdictions can form opaque companies in lower-risk jurisdictions and seek financial services under the name of a legal person or arrangement they control.
Even in jurisdictions where legal persons and arrangements are required to report their beneficial ownership, illicit actors can seek to conceal their ownership interest through the use of complex corporate structures, intermediaries, and nominees, as discussed below.