ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:95102308.LAR DATE:10/23/95 TITLE:23-10-95 US INITIATIVES AGAINST INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME TEXT: TR95102308 (White House fact sheet on crime initiatives) (800) WASHINGTON -- Following is the text of a fact sheet released Oct. 22 by the White House: US INITIATIVES AGAINST INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME WHITE HOUSE FACT SHEET Oct. 22, 1995 In his speech to the 50th UN General Assembly, the President outlined 5 new steps that the United States is taking to address international organized crime. 1. No Trade With International Narcotics Traffickers Centered in Colombia and Their Front Companies: The President announced that he had signed an Executive Order utilizing the authority of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The order finds that the activities of significant foreign narcotics traffickers centered in Colombia, including the so-called Cali cartel, constitute an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States. These traffickers are responsible for more than 80 percent of the cocaine entering the United States. Moreover, they destabilize regional economies and produce violence and corruption everywhere they operate. The President has ordered that the leaders, cohorts, and front companies of these traffickers be identified and their assets in the U.S. blocked. U.S. individuals and companies will then be barred from trading with those identified individuals and front companies. The President has also ordered that evidence be developed against other international criminal groups and their front companies so that further action may be taken as appropriate. 2. Money Laundering Centers: The President announced that he has instructed the Secretaries of the Treasury and State and the Attorney General to identify and notify the nations which are most egregious in facilitating criminal money laundering that they should enter into bilateral or multilateral arrangements to conform to international standards. Such standards have been established by the 28-member Financial Action Task Force. If these nations do not enter into such agreements and implement laws against money laundering, the Secretary of the Treasury, after consulting with the Secretary of State and the Attorney General, will recommend to the President whether economic sanctions should be applied. Among the sanctions available is the prohibition of electronic fund transfers and dollar clearing to financial institutions in the subject country. Secretary Rubin will be co-chairing a meeting of hemispheric Treasury/Finance Ministers in Buenos Aires in December on the issue of money laundering. 3. International Declaration: The President called for the negotiation of an international Declaration on Citizens' Security and Combating International Organized Crime. In such a Declaration nations would join in a series of international commitments to deny sanctuary to terrorists, narcotics traffickers, and other international organized criminals and provide mutual assistance in investigations of such crimes. International agreements already exist in many of these areas and now arrangements should be forged where they do not. 4. Legislative Tools: The President has directed the Attorney General and the Secretaries of State and of the Treasury to develop a legislative package of new authorities which U.S. government agencies believe they need to better investigate and prosecute all aspects of international organized crime. The U.S. legislative proposal would also provide additional sanctions authority against those governments which cooperate with or provide sanctuary for international organized crime. This effort is the result of a comprehensive review ordered by the President last year. 5. International Assistance: The President directed that the new U.S. legislative package include authorization for providing increased U.S. training and assistance to friendly governments to help them in their efforts to combat international organized crime affecting their own and other countries around the globe. 6. Counterterrorism: The Administration has made counterterrorism one of its highest priorities. Since taking officer the Administration has: -- Arrested and brought back to the U.S. to stand trial terrorists hiding in Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, Jordan, and Egypt. -- Made swift arrests following both of the major terrorist incidents that have taken place in the U.S. (World Trade Center and Oklahoma City). -- Broken up two major attacks on the U.S. that were about to take place, before they could happen (New York: UN and Holland tunnel; Manila: US flag 747s) -- Exercised unilateral military action against a country whose intelligence service we found to have attempted to organize a terrorist act against a former President (Iraqi plot against President Bush). -- Extended economic sanctions to Iran and Sudan for their sponsorship of terrorism. -- Prevented the loosening of sanctions against Libya and Iraq, both states on the list of stats sponsors of terrorism. -- Assisted other nations in their apprehension of major terrorist figures. -- Banned fund-raising for Middle East terrorists in the United States. -- Increased personnel and other resources for counter-terrorism. -- Proposed an expansion of legal authorities for counter-terrorism. 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