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Intriago rides again

You can't keep a good entrepreneur down, as Charles Intriago has proven with his latest multiple-choice examination and accreditation service, the Association of Certified Financial Crime Specialists.
You can't keep a good entrepreneur down, as Charles Intriago has
proven by 'changing the name and doing the same' with his latest
multiple-choice examination and accreditation service, the
Association of Certified Financial Crime Specialists. By all
accounts, the ACFCS is doing well against its old rival, the
Association of Certified Anti-Money-Laundering Specialists or
ACAMS, which Intriago started more than a decade ago and then
sold to Fortent for a good price.
The ACFCS exam consists of 145 scenario-based, four-option
multiple-choice items, or questions. For ACFCS members, the CFCS
examination fee is $995. Persons in a government or military
agency or academic institution in any country pay $695. The
examination fee for non-ACFCS members is $1095. ACAMS was - and
presumably still is - run along similar lines. It earned good
money in the days when Intriago ruled it by stipulating that
accredited people had to keep annual payments up if they wanted
to retain the letters 'CAMS' after their names. It is unknown
whether this is the case at the ACFCS.
The Ministry of Financial Services of the Bahamas - which at
independence in 1973 changed from being dominated by British
culture and cricket to being dominated by American culture and
baseball - recently granted 15 scholarships in alliance with
Intriago's new body. A scholarship bestows on the holder an ACFCS
study manual, access to an online ACFCS course, two days of
lectures and access (if that is the right word) to the
examination. On the mainland US, the University of New Haven has
begun to collaborate with Intriago on a new financial crime
course. A senior lecturer there has described the partnership as
'unique', suggesting that ACAMS has not taken the initiative with
this kind of collaboration.
The subjects are wider than in the early days of ACAMS and cover
FATCA, bribery and corruption, data security, 'ethics'
and international standards as well as the inevitable
money-laundering.
ACAMS is thought to have made Intriago more money even than
Money Laundering Alert, the magazine he founded in 1989
and which he also sold to Fortent many years ago.