Apart from regular migration, there are instances of people being trafficked or smuggled across the border for forced labor, sexual exploitation, or criminal activities. Human smuggling is defined by the United Nations as the facilitation, for financial or other material gains, of irregular entry into a country where the migrant is not a national or resident. The criminals behind this highly lucrative business seize the opportunity created by the need or desire of people to escape poverty, lack of employment opportunities, natural disasters, conflict, or persecution. While smugglers, or “coyotes,” prey on these vulnerabilities, many migrants die of thirst in deserts, perish at sea, or suffocate in containers in search of a better life.
The Department of Homeland Security defines human trafficking as using force, fraud, or coercion in exchange for labor, services, or a commercial sex act. The illegal trafficking of humans is a multi-million-dollar industry. Large or recurring payments to familiar sources in border regions could signify involvement in such activities, so be sure your financial institution tracks suspicious transactions.
Human trafficking gets a lot of exposure in the media and attention from law enforcement. However, its sister crime of human smuggling can be just as deadly. Human smuggling is not a victimless crime, as evidenced by the San Antonio, Texas discovery in June 2022 of 53 migrants, including children, who died in a tractor-trailer as they attempted to enter the United States illegally. The smuggler abandoned the locked trailer in sweltering South Texas temperatures with no water, allowing the people to perish. This example is only one of the many yearly tragedies along our southwest border.
In January 2023, FinCEN issued an alert on human smuggling along the United States’ southwest border. The southwest border is a hotbed for this crime, where over 2.3 million encounters occurred in 2022, up from 1.7 million in 2021 and growing. According to the Homeland Security Operational Analysis Center, human smuggling along the southwest border generates an estimated $2-$6 billion in annual revenue for these criminals.
Human trafficking and smuggling have been named as part of FinCEN’s National Priorities, and financial institutions should include these concerns in their risk assessment and AML program. In addition to the two FinCEN advisories released in 2014 and 2020, the 2023 alert gives several red flags specific to threats along the southwest border, such as frequent cross-border wire transfers, rapid movement of funds, and deposits followed by immediate withdrawals (funnel accounts).