The Journal. - Drug Cartels' New Weapon: Chinese Money Launderers
Episode Date: December 22, 2025Federal officials say Chinese money launderers moved more than $300 billion in illicit transactions through U.S. banks and other financial institutions in recent years. WSJ’s Dylan Tokar explores th...e rise of these highly lucrative schemes and former federal prosecutor Julie Shemitz takes us inside the federal investigation to bring them down. Ryan Knutson hosts. Further Listening: - The Money Laundering Behind TD Bank's $3 Billion Fine - Mexico's New Cocaine Kingpin is Cashing In Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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One morning in Los Angeles County, a white range rover was cruising around, about to make several stops at local banks.
The vehicle was being tracked by law enforcement agents.
They set out to find the white range rover, which they see from the GPS trackers parked at this bank branch in Artesia, in the city of Artesia.
That's our colleague Dylan Tokar.
Shortly after they get there,
they see a man named Jioyang Yu
get out of the vehicle.
He's carrying a black backpack.
And his first stop is at the ATM machine
outside the bank.
They can't really tell,
but it seems like he deposits maybe a check there.
He then walks into the bank
and one of the task force officers
is following behind,
trying to look discreet.
The agents were following the driver,
Jai Yong Yu,
because they said,
suspected he might be laundering money.
They see you approach a teller, and he just starts taking stacks of cash
bound with rubber bands out of his backpack and putting it on the counter.
Then you left, but the agent stayed behind.
They asked the bank teller if you deposited more than $10,000.
Anything above that amount is supposed to get flagged by the bank.
And she looks at them, and she says, more like $100,000.
dollars. By then, Yu was already on his way to another bank.
Investigators allege that Yu is part of a new wave of sophisticated money launders,
all with ties to China, who are laundering money for powerful Mexican drug cartels,
and operating at such a scale and efficiency that it blows traditional money launders out of the water.
Welcome to The Journal, our show about money,
business, and power. I'm Ryan Knudsen. It's Monday, December 22nd.
Coming up on the show, the story of Operation Fortune Runner, a years-long push to bring down a
Chinese money laundering ring.
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Do you ever watch the wire?
I have watched the wire.
It's a little hurt for me to watch
because it's kind of, it's too close to home, you know?
Julie Shemit spent more than 30 years working for the Department of Justice.
Over the decades, she developed an expertise on money laundering.
She's seen it all, from corrupt Mexican banks to dirty money in Afghanistan.
And Julie abides by an age-old mantra,
follow the money.
The money-wandering side is a window into the larger organization.
You know, if you want to pursue drug traffickers, you could be on the street,
following people around, watching them do deals, watching them pass drugs to people and
picking up money, but it doesn't have any meaning until you actually start to see how the money
that they are handling
is getting to
the people who actually own those drugs.
You can swat bees,
but you really want to find the hive.
Exactly.
For years, Mexican drug cartels
have relied on money launderers from Latin America.
But in recent years,
there's been an explosion of new money laundering groups
with ties to China.
So many of these Chinese laundering groups
have popped up
that authorities have started referring to them
by their acronym, CMLOs, Chinese money laundering organizations.
And they are cleaning up and taking tons of market share from their competitors.
There's a few reasons why.
The first has to do with a law in China.
There's a rule that limits how much money Chinese citizens can transfer out of the country.
The cap is equivalent to about $50,000.
The goal is to keep money in the Chinese financial system.
the Chinese government really began to enforce this rule in 2016.
Still, there's a lot of people who want to get money out of China.
There are many, many, many Chinese nationals in the United States
who need dollars. They need dollars to function.
They need dollars to go to school.
They need dollars to buy real estate.
They need dollars to live.
And they may have resources in China, financial resources.
But those resources aren't really available to them.
And so it suddenly became imperative
for people to find another way
to move their money into the United States.
A Wall Street Journal analysis last year
estimated that more than $250 billion
had left China in a 12-month period.
One way Chinese people get money out
is by turning to a shadowy network of money brokers.
These brokers have bank accounts
in both China and the U.S.
and can secretly facilitate currency conversion.
And for that service, they get a cut.
As demand for that service picked up,
Chinese money brokers began searching for new sources of U.S. cash,
and that led them to one business that makes a lot of cash,
drug trafficking.
When a Chinese national in the United States
gets money from a money broker from China,
they pay a commission on it.
and they pay a hefty commission on it.
And this enables the Chinese underground banking organizations
to charge less to the narcotics trafficking organizations
for whom they are laundering those funds.
Hmm. I see.
So because they have this other side of the market
that is a revenue stream for them,
they can undercut their competitors
when they're offering their services in a cartel.
Exactly.
Typically, the percentage was anywhere from 5 to 10 to even more.
And the Chinese started charging 1 to 2% to move money.
Oh, wow, that's a big price cut.
Yeah.
The last case Julie worked on before she stepped down at the DOJ
involved one of these Chinese money laundering networks.
The investigation was known as Operation Fortune Runner,
And it was centered on the group's alleged ringleader, a man called Saizhong.
I think he would describe himself as a boss, and they give out the orders and tell people what to do.
Go here, pick up this, bring it here.
The whole system works because this one person is controlling, you know, pulling the strings.
There's unfortunately only so much we can know about Zhang.
Our colleague Dylan has been following the Fortune Runner case.
What I was told about Zhang is that he came to the U.S. in 2009 on a student visa.
He told law enforcement that he was enrolled for at least some time
at the California State University in Northridge.
We're not sure how long he was enrolled for.
At some point, he got his green card,
and he got into this money exchange business.
Zhang is awaiting trial as a result of the Fortune Runner operation.
He pleaded not guilty to money laundering and drug trafficking charges.
His lawyer didn't respond to requests for comment.
This account of Zhang's alleged scheme is based on Dylan's reporting, court documents,
and conversations with people familiar with the Fortune Runner investigation.
At a high level, Chinese money laundering operations like Zhang's work like this.
When Chinese money laundering groups take all this dirty drug,
money from the cartels, they sell it to Chinese nationals who are looking to convert their
Chinese yuan into U.S. cash.
This is that money broker business we mentioned a minute ago.
After that happens, laundering groups like Zhangs are left with a bunch of Chinese yuan,
which they use to buy stuff in China and sell in Mexico.
In other words, that narcotics money is used to buy those goods, and the goods are shipped
to Mexico where they're sold for pesos
and the pesos are turned back to the cartel.
What kinds of goods do you see them buy in this trade-based system?
Oh, you name it.
I mean, luxury items in some cases,
but also just jeans, garments of various kinds, electronics,
whatever goods they could sell on the market in Mexico.
That's where China's role in the global economy gives them such an edge because there are so many businesses worldwide, including in Mexico, that are actually looking for Chinese currency and Chinese goods.
So that Chinese broker can go to businesses in Mexico and say, I'll give you a good deal on some Chinese currency, which you can use to buy goods that you are importing into Mexico.
So this gives Chinese money launderers their advantage.
To really make this system work, though,
you can't be shipping around hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash.
You need to get that money into a bank.
Money in the bank in the legitimate financial system
is always more useful than especially when you get into high values of cash.
Like it just becomes, it's kind of hard.
You're always going to look a little specific walking into any sort of business transaction
with a bank of cash.
Money launderers have always tried to sneak money into the banking system,
but what makes groups like Zhang's different is how reckless they are.
Usually, a money launderer would be careful not to exceed the bank's reporting limit of $10,000.
But like you heard about at the start of this episode, not these guys.
The way they're approaching the banks is they don't care whether the banks are going to flag
the amount of money. They don't care. They're regularly depositing much,
more than $10,000, and basically they know that the bank is flagging this, and they know that the bank
could at some point shut down the account. But in their experience, the bank doesn't do that very
fast. Banks are required to report suspicious activity. These reports are one of many tools the
U.S. government has to combat money laundering. But Dylan says that banks can take a long time to file
those reports, and Chinese money launderers have learned to take advantage of that slowness.
So banks, you know, if they file a bunch of reports for an account, usually they'll shut it down
after maybe like three suspicious activity reports or something like that.
That could take them months to do that.
It takes a while to file suspicious activity reports.
But even when a bank does flag suspicious activity, there are so many reports that authorities
usually don't look at it, and it rarely sparks an investigation.
Dylan says the reports usually get thrown into a database that cops might check after they get a tip.
These money launders are using fake passports, they're opening new accounts, they're recruiting people from the street, so they're just operating with complete disregard for the U.S. anti-money laundering system.
They just know that by the time it does anything, they'll have already moved millions of dollars through an account.
It seems like this case sort of shows, at least from the banking standpoint, that the safeguards that have been put into the system actually don't really work that well.
No, I don't think they do
And I think right now
We're having a big push by the Trump administration
We had this push previously
In other administrations
To try to reform this system to some degree
But it's hard
It's hard to design a system
That stops money laundering as it happens
For years, Zhang and his network
allegedly exploited these vulnerabilities
in the banking system
And over time, law enforcement
began to take notice
They were aware
of Zhang's activity going back years
from what I understand.
I mean, they saw him play a major role
in a prior investigation they had
into a smaller drug trafficking ring
in the L.A. County area.
And that's when they realized
just the sheer quantity of money
that he was handling. And so that's
when they decided when they wrapped up that case
that they would launch an investigation
to Zhang specifically.
How Julie and a team of investigators
slowly built that case against Zhang is next.
In cases it involve a vast criminal enterprise, such as money laundering,
investigators have traditionally relied on a tried and true technique, wiretapping.
But in the Fortune Runner case, wiretapping wasn't an option.
That's because many Chinese money launderers rely on encrypted messaging apps like WeChat to do business.
WeChat is based in China, and they do not cooperate with U.S. law enforcement.
So unlike some other platforms, there is no way to get information about subscribers or traffic on WeChat or certainly the cons.
content of any
we chat messages.
You can't get a wiretap
on we chat.
You cannot.
So if you can't do a wiretap,
you've got to do some legwork.
The main thing that they had to do
to make this case was just
primarily sitting in cars
outside of suspects'
residences.
And then, you know,
often for a long time
until someone would come out
of that residence with a bag of cash
and then they would follow them
all the way across L.A.
Mm-hmm.
And you're just,
just trying to commit as many hours to that as you possibly can,
hoping you're going to see something that helps you make the case.
If Julie and her team wanted to break up Zhang's alleged scheme for good,
she says they needed to draw a direct line between his business and the cartels.
The idea in following the couriers was to identify where they were getting this money.
And if we could prove that they were getting it from people who were trafficking in narcotics,
then we had our proof that the dollars that were involved in these transactions
were, in fact, drug trafficking proceeds.
Then, in 2021, the investigators got a breakthrough
when two money handlers were seen crossing the border.
Typically, in these kinds of cases, we put an alert at Homeland Security
so that if it appears that,
one of our targets might be leaving the country or coming back into the country that we'll know about it.
And when they hit the border coming from Mexico back into the United States, as the, as happens at the border with every car that crosses, a picture was taken.
That picture was forwarded to the agents who had listed their names.
for an alert, and we got the photograph.
The photograph is grainy.
It was in black and white,
the kind of photo you can expect from security footage.
It shows a car with one of Zhang's associates in a driver's seat.
And next to him, in the passenger seat, there's another man,
a money handler associated with one of the most powerful drug cartels in the world,
the Sinaloa cartel.
Everybody was completely blown away
because it was proof that at least the money laundering arm
of the drug trafficking organization
was in close contact with the Chinese underground banking network
that we were investigating.
Were you surprised to see these two people together?
A little bit, yeah.
We were.
I mean, typically they,
They stay separate.
They only are together when there's a delivery.
But in this situation, they had apparently gone to Mexico together
and were coming back together.
The grainy photo-energized investigators.
From there, the agents began collecting more evidence
of how the cartels drug trafficking fed into Zhang's banking network.
They did not.
stint on their efforts, they spent thousands of hours in their cars watching these people
and building up evidence for the indictment. It really was an incredible effort.
Field agents saw Zhang's associates make trips to houses across the L.A. area and to banks, too.
This brings us back to where we started the story. In the spring of 2023, when agents followed
Jay Yang Yu and that white rangeover
to a Chase Bank and Artesia.
A week later, they were following
Yu again and decided to detain him.
This time,
they have police officers
waiting for him, police officers from Southgate
Police Department.
So they get you to consent
to a search. They find bundles of cash
in his backpack.
You says it's about $100,000.
They get a canine unit to come do a
sniff test. So the dog
alerts to the scent of narcotics
so they're able to seize it legally.
You eventually pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy
to operate an unlicensed money-remitting business.
A lawyer for you declined a comment.
A spokesman for J.P. Morgan Chase said,
quote, our anti-money laundering monitoring program
performed as intended in this case.
As for Zhang, after years of piecing together
his alleged money laundering operation,
investigators decided in May of 2023
that they were ready to make their move.
One of his lieutenants had gone to New York and was getting ready to board a plane to China.
And so we asked the New York authorities to arrest that guy.
And because of that, we were concerned that Sai Zhang might also be planning to leave the country.
And so we determined that we better arrive.
arrest him as well.
By this point, the agents had a warrant for Zhang's arrest,
and they had attached GPS trackers to cars he used.
When they tracked him down, they saw him come out of a house carrying a white grocery bag.
Later, they pulled him over for texting while driving and arrested him.
One of the lead task force officers arrives on the scene shortly after the arrest.
He reads Zhang, his Miranda writes,
and Zhang sort of starts to, on his own accord, basically talk.
Zhang tells the task force officer that's not drug money.
He says, I know a lot of rich people, and I move a lot of money for rich people.
Zhang has pleaded not guilty to money laundering and drug trafficking charges.
His case is expected to go to trial next year.
in total 24 people have been indicted following the fortune runner investigation
half of them pleaded guilty
the other 12 were either at large or headed to trial
so you have taken down a part of this operation
how big of a deal is that for the overall cartel and their drug trade
does it make an actual dent or is it just sort of like whack-a-mole
um you know i get asked that question
a lot and it does make a dent and it's not exactly whack-mull because now they have to develop another
network to distribute the funds that they're getting from the narcotics traffickers and on top of that
they owe the money that they lost to the cartel and they have to make good on that how much bigger do you
think this goes I mean do you do you think that you took out a massive chunk of it?
or just the tip of the iceberg?
I think it's the tip of the iceberg.
I think there's a ton more going on.
This is the challenge, I think, of being someone in law enforcement,
who is up against the cartels.
I mean, they're operating at such a huge scale,
taking out this one money laundering group.
But it was very clear talking to people close to the investigation.
This was not the only way that Sinolao was
laundering its money in L.A. County area.
I mean, they have multiple, multiple ways.
I mean, they know that they need to spread this money out
so that if one group gets taken down like this,
they still have other ways, and they're going to be fine.
What do you think this will do to the rise of Chinese money laundering groups, though,
in this whole two-sided market that Saizhong was able to allegedly take advantage of?
Yeah, I mean, I would think that,
This might drive awareness among Chinese money brokers that they're under direct scrutiny by the U.S. government.
And I think if you start to put pressure on them, they have to sort of accept that what I'm doing is clearly illegal and it's clearly a priority of the U.S. government to stamp it out, right?
It's harder for them to avoid knowing that.
That's all for today, Monday, December 22nd.
The journal is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal.
Additional reporting in this episode by Justin Bear, Jason Douglas, Rebecca Fung, Patricia Kousman, Vipal Manga, and Brian Spiegel.
This, by the way, is one of our last episodes of the year.
Tomorrow we'll be back with a new episode of Camp Swamp Road, get excited, and we've got a little treat for you next Monday.
But until then, Merry Christmas. Happy holidays, and thanks for listening.
