The London Laundromat: When "Swanky" Meets Shady
If history teaches us that emperors used books to cage ideas, modern kleptocrats use London real estate to cage cash. The case of Su Jiangbo—and the freezing of his £81 million property empire—is a masterclass in how "The System" works until it doesn't, and how professional ethics often take a backseat to a juicy commission.
When a single individual buys 85 properties in one of the world's most expensive cities, the "Anti-Money Laundering" (AML) alarms shouldn't just ring; they should be deafening. Yet, the Triptych Bankside and Oxford Street deals went through. This highlights a cynical reality: in the high-stakes world of London real estate, "Due Diligence" is often treated as a box-ticking exercise rather than a moral gatekeeper.
The Breakdown of the Gatekeepers
The Anti-Money Laundering Acts: The UK has some of the strictest AML laws on paper (like the Economic Crime Act 2022), but enforcement is a different beast. The "Unexplained Wealth Order" (UWO) used by the CPS is a powerful tool, but it's often a reactive "mop-up" operation rather than a proactive shield.
Developers & Estate Agents: They are the front line. However, their business model is built on volume and speed. For a developer with a £10-million penthouse to sell, a buyer with "ready cash" is a dream, not a suspect. The industry has a "Don't Look, Won't Find" problem—if you ask too many questions, the buyer goes to the next developer who won't.
Lawyers & Accountants: These are the "enablers." Under the law, they must report "Suspicious Activity" (SARs).
But complex offshore structures (like Su’s Jersey-linked entities) provide "legal shade." A lawyer can argue they performed "standard checks," while the client’s true source of wealth remains a mystery hidden behind layers of shell companies.