Originally Posted by
MDawg
Money laundering is basically converting cash to some form of non-cash. The intent of money laundering is to get cash somehow into the stream of commerce without alerting the government to the cash to other than cash conversion.
Within a casino, merely depositing cash doesn't get you anywhere, so for purposes of a casino, money laundering is converting cash directly (without winning) to a casino check or casino outgoing wire.
Depositing cash and withdrawing cash doesn't really help a money launderer because he ends up with the same problem - how to get the cash into the stream of commerce.
I'm not talking about internal win-loss statements or handpays.
If the player can either dodge CTRs buying in (or get shady casino employees to go along with him dodging these CTRs), he can cash out and make it appear to just be a lucky win, and the money is clean.
Casinos and poker rooms have long been used for money laundering in this fashion.
In poker, it's even easier, as there's no close monitoring of the movement of chips, so it can simply appear that one player cleaned up in a poker session, starting from orders of magnitude less money. This does require cooperation from casino employees to look the other way regarding the buyins, and not filling out the CTR forms.
Various phony high-stakes "heads up" matches took place at the Bicycle Casino for exactly this purpose. After a few busts, and an ownership change, I don't think this is happening anymore.