You're reading: OCCRP presents: The Russian laundromat

Editor's Note: Call it the Laundromat. It’s a complex system for laundering more than $20 billion in Russian money stolen from the government by corrupt politicians or earned through organized crime activity. It was designed to not only move money from Russian shell companies into European Union banks through Latvia, it had the added feature of getting corrupt or uncaring judges in Moldova to legitimize the funds. The state-of-the-art system provided exceptionally clean money backed by a court ruling at a fraction of the cost of regular laundering schemes. It made up for the low costs by laundering huge volumes. The system used just one bank in Latvia and one bank in Moldova but 19 banks in Russia, some of them controlled by rich and powerful figures including the cousin of Russian President Vladimir Putin.These stories were produced by the Washington-based Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, a Kyiv Post partner.

 The Russian laundromat

The Russian banks and Putin’s cousins

Kempinski negotiating hotel deal with Alexander Grigoriev

The laundry cycle, from start to finish

The $20 billion bank in the country of the poor

Latvian bank was laundering tool