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Cuban immigrant accused of conspiracy in Medicare fraud international money laundering scheme

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The laundered money was deposited in accounts at the Royal Bank of Canada in Montreal, with the proceeds later wired to numerous shell companies in Trinidad — then deposited into unknown accounts in Cuba’s national bank.

In one example, “Sanchez benefitted both sides by wiring $468,985 from a South Florida company engaging in fraud to a Canadian bank account,” Davidson, the prosecutor, alleged in the motion to detain Sanchez before trial.

According to court and public records, one of the alleged Canadian shell companies that received the laundered checks was Magnus Aviation Logistics. Corporate papers say Magnus was headed by Anthony Caristo and dissolved last year.

Canadian records also show that Caristo was a director of two other Montreal companies, Arxe Capital and Monetaria Card Solutions, which were also dissolved. Monetaria became inactive just days after Sanchez’s arrest last month, records show. Neither Caristo nor his listed businesses could be reached for comment.

Like the United States, Canada has a federal agency — Financial Transactions Reports Analysis Centre (FINTRAC) — that collects intelligence on suspected money laundering and terrorist financing activities.

Under Canadian law, financial institutions that receive or send foreign wire transfers of $10,000 or more are required to file a report with FINTRAC. That means checks or wires sent to and from the Magnus account should have generated reports.

The Canadian agency did not return calls from The Miami Herald.

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