AML Conversations
AML RightSource
AML Conversations is dedicated to inform professionals and those interested in anti-money laundering about conversations happening in the government, private sector, and internationally. Throughout the series John Byrne, AML RightSource Vice Chairman, will interview industry experts or participate in live programming or panel discussions related to the industry.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Apr 3, 2026 • 16min
Sanctions, Scams, and Scrutiny: Global Enforcement Signals Financial Institutions Can’t Ignore
In this episode, Elliot Berman and John Byrne break down a wide‑ranging set of regulatory and enforcement developments shaping the global financial crime landscape. The conversation covers major U.S. bank settlements tied to the Epstein litigation, a closely watched Capital One debanking case involving Trump‑affiliated entities, and key overseas actions—from Australia’s expanded AML regime to the UK’s sanctions enforcement against Apple and a massive scam operation in Cambodia.
The discussion also dives into the OECD’s latest anti‑bribery report, FinCEN’s proposed whistleblower award program, emerging healthcare fraud typologies, and renewed concerns over the weakening of the U.S. Corporate Transparency Act. Wrapping up, Elliot and John assess developments tied to FATF’s mutual evaluation of the United States, nonprofit de‑risking, and new OFAC guidance on sham transactions—offering critical context for compliance professionals navigating a rapidly shifting risk environment.

Apr 1, 2026 • 25min
Monthly chat with Sarah Beth Felix
In this episode of AML Conversations, John Byrne sits down with Sarah Beth Felix—AML expert and author of Dirty Money Weekly—for a wide‑ranging discussion on the biggest AML, sanctions, and financial crime developments shaping the landscape in March 2026.
Drawing on insights from multiple industry conferences and recent regulatory activity, Sarah shares why banks of all sizes are becoming more creative in financial crime detection, why sanctions compliance is no longer just a name-matching exercise, and how AI can be leveraged thoughtfully to manage growing complexity. The conversation explores Treasury’s newly released national risk assessments, critical gaps in the U.S. regulatory framework, and what institutions should take away as the FATF mutual evaluation continues.
John and Sarah also dig into the implications of recent court decisions affecting FinCEN’s residential real estate rule, ongoing lobbying challenges, FINRA’s growing leadership in AML enforcement, and why now is not the time for institutions to let their guard down—despite shifting regulatory priorities.
This episode is a must‑listen for AML, compliance, and risk professionals looking for practical, unfiltered insights on where the industry stands—and where it’s headed next. The views expressed in this podcast represent those of the speakers and not AML RightSource.

Mar 31, 2026 • 31min
The FATF Shadow Report: Nonprofits, Financial Access, and the U.S. Mutual Evaluation
In this special episode of AML Conversations, John Byrne is joined by Ashleigh Subramanian Montgomery of the Charity & Security Network to discuss C&SN’s newly released Shadow Report on the U.S. FATF Mutual Evaluation and what it means for nonprofits, financial institutions, and regulators.
The conversation explores how U.S. government actions since the last FATF evaluation in 2016 have affected nonprofit financial access, particularly for humanitarian organizations operating in high‑risk and conflict environments. Ashleigh walks through the findings of the Shadow Report, including both positive developments—such as humanitarian carve-outs and improved risk-based language—and ongoing concerns around de-risking, executive actions, and the expanding use of counterterrorism authorities.
John and Ashleigh also discuss recent Treasury risk assessments, the gap between policy and on‑the‑ground implementation, and emerging concerns about nonprofit investigations tied to domestic terrorism. The episode concludes with practical guidance for financial institutions on communication, due diligence, and balancing AML/CFT obligations with humanitarian imperatives as FATF assessors finalize the U.S. review.

Mar 27, 2026 • 22min
War, Sanctions, Fraud, and the State of Public‑Private Partnerships
In this milestone 300th episode of This Week in AML, Elliot Berman and John Byrne reflect briefly on the evolution of the podcast before diving into a wide‑ranging discussion of the most pressing developments in the AML, sanctions, and financial crime landscape.
The episode features key takeaways from the Fifth Annual AML Partnership Forum in Washington, DC, including insights on public‑private collaboration, cryptocurrency investigations, fraud trends, sextortion, and human trafficking. Elliot and John also unpack major global and domestic developments—from wartime corruption risks and sanctions involving Iran and Russia, to FATF’s new anti‑fraud toolkit and a federal court ruling striking down FinCEN’s residential real estate AML rule.
Additional topics include emerging concerns about insider trading and prediction markets, nonprofit investigations tied to domestic extremism, shifting counterterrorism resources, and new reporting on classified information and financial motives. The episode closes with reflections on public service and the legacy of former FBI Director Robert Mueller.
As always, listeners are encouraged to review the source material referenced and draw their own conclusions.

8 snips
Mar 24, 2026 • 13min
The AI Promise vs The Reality - What's Your Backup Plan?
Mark Sully, Managing Director of Commercial Affairs (EMEA & APAC) with deep fintech and regtech experience, cuts through AI hype in AML. He contrasts flashy claims with real use cases. He warns about data shortfalls, delayed rollouts and rising alert volumes. He pushes contingency plans, realistic timelines, and using managed services to keep compliance on track.

Mar 20, 2026 • 15min
War, Fraud, and Enforcement - What Compliance Teams Need to Watch
This week on This Week in AML, John Byrne and Elliot Berman unpack a rapidly evolving risk landscape—from the ongoing war with Iran and its implications for terrorism threats, to new DOJ enforcement policies and global fraud trends reshaping financial crime compliance.
They discuss OFAC’s latest Russia-related license, concerns about the lack of updated DHS threat advisories, and the implications of conflict-driven risks for financial institutions. The conversation also covers major developments in fraud and AML, including new SAR guidance, DOJ updates on voluntary disclosure, AI-enabled fraud, human trafficking trends, and critical reports from Interpol, Nasdaq, and MONEYVAL.
The episode closes with updates from Europe on fraud enforcement and AMLA’s supervision plans, as well as breaking news from the U.S. national security community—offering essential insights for compliance, risk, and financial crime professionals.
A must‑listen for compliance professionals looking to stay current in a rapidly shifting environment.

Mar 13, 2026 • 22min
Treasury’s Newest Risk Assessments, Cyber Strategy Updates, and Global AML Developments
In this week’s episode of This Week in AML, Elliot Berman and John Byrne break down a wide-ranging set of developments shaping the financial crime landscape. They begin with the U.S. Treasury’s three newly released national risk assessments—money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing—highlighting key findings on fraud trends, shell companies, NPO vulnerabilities, and geopolitical threats.
Elliot and John also discuss emerging insights from the IRS on the value of CTRs, the White House’s new cybersecurity strategy, upcoming AMLA public hearings in the EU, and AUSTRAC’s expanded compulsory examination powers. Additional topics include recent enforcement actions targeting illicit Iranian oil networks, covert Russian vessel-protection teams, and FATF’s updated consolidated assessment ratings.
A must‑listen for compliance professionals looking to stay current in a rapidly shifting environment.

Mar 10, 2026 • 36min
When Compliance Collides with Civil Society- How AML-CFT Pressures Are Impacting Nonprofits
In this timely and eye-opening conversation, John Byrne sits down with leaders from the Charity & Security Network, EarthRights International, and the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee to explore how the current U.S. AML/CFT environment is reshaping the operating reality for nonprofits.
With the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) beginning its mutual evaluation of the United States, the stakes for civil society have never been higher. The guests unpack Recommendation 8, the rise of de-risking, expanding state and federal investigations, and how banks’ compliance decisions—sometimes based on misinformation—can delay humanitarian assistance, hinder environmental advocacy, and even jeopardize lives.
From faith-based organizations facing surprise information demands to environmental groups navigating criminalization and “eco‑terrorism” labels, this episode exposes the real-world consequences when financial regulations drift from a risk-based approach. The discussion closes with concrete takeaways for AML/CFT practitioners, emphasizing communication, due diligence, and the need for a deeper understanding of nonprofit missions.

Mar 6, 2026 • 17min
Geopolitics, Crypto Risks, and AML Shake‑Ups: What’s Driving Compliance This Week
A rapid tour of global crypto misuse and sanctions evasion tied to state actors and exchange movements. Discussion of new stablecoin and fraud risk reports from international standard-setters. Coverage of recent U.S. regulatory moves on real estate reporting, stablecoin frameworks, and corporate transparency debates. Looks at cross-border enforcement actions, supervision gaps in professional bodies, and counterintelligence staffing concerns.

Feb 27, 2026 • 19min
Reputation Risk, Russia, and Regulatory Shifts: The AML Landscape This Week
In this week’s episode, Elliot Berman and John Byrne cover a wide-ranging set of developments reshaping the global AML landscape. They open by marking the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine before diving into new regulatory, enforcement, and geopolitical stories affecting financial crime professionals.
John highlights the Federal Reserve’s request for comment on removing “reputation risk” from bank supervision and discusses ongoing litigation involving JPMorgan and the Trump Organization. The conversation then turns international: OCCRP’s newly announced Anti-Corruption Hero Awards, revelations of European-made parts ending up in Russian military drones, and the European Center for Not-for-Profit Law’s work on financial access for human rights defenders.
Elliot and John also examine Australia’s transition to a new AML/CFT regime and Canada’s new financial intelligence initiative focused on extortion. Additional topics include the Treasury Inspector General’s audit of FinCEN, IRS-CI’s latest BSA data usage report, and U.S. cases involving cyber intrusions and tax fraud.


