- In short: SkyCity Adelaide and AUSTRAC have agreed to a $67 million fine in a joint submission to the Federal Court of Australia.
- AUSTRAC found SkyCity engaged in systemic non-compliance with anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws, and “failed to carry out due diligence on 124 customers”.
- What’s next? Justice Michael Lee will determine in the Federal Court if the fine is appropriate next month.
The operator of the Adelaide Casino has agreed to pay a $67 million fine as an “appropriate penalty” after it accepted it had engaged in misconduct.
In a statement, SkyCity Adelaide and the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC) said they had filed a joint submission with the Federal Court of Australia to propose a $67 million penalty over the casino’s misconduct.
AUSTRAC launched a Federal Court action against SkyCity in December 2022, alleging systemic non-compliance with anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws.
It says that SkyCity “failed to carry out due diligence on 124 customers”.
While both parties agree it is an appropriate penalty, a court hearing has been set for next month.
Justice Michael Lee will determine if the parties’ proposed settlement is appropriate.
AUSTRAC’s chief executive officer, Brendan Thomas, said SkyCity failed to carry out diligence.
“AUSTRAC took this action out of concern that SkyCity’s conduct meant that a range of high-risk practices, behaviours and customer relationships were allowed to continue unchecked for many years,” Mr Thomas said.
Mr Thomas said the action serves as an important reminder to casinos and the gaming sector to take their obligations seriously and be vigilant to money laundering and terrorism financing risks.
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