Submitted by Jojojoost010 t3_zy5kce in explainlikeimfive
Ansuz07 t1_j248jd6 wrote
Reply to comment by Belzeturtle in Eli5: Why are matress and laundromat stores often used for laundering money by Jojojoost010
You could, sure, but laundromats are pretty low-margin businesses, so running with no load is going to eat away most of the profits and limit your laundering.
You also run into the issue with comparables. If your laundromat is doing much better than nearby laundromats, that is a red flag that could get you audited. If the foot traffic to your business doesn't match the number of loads you claim you ran (the average number of loads per person will be pretty static across laundromats) then you are going to have to explain why your business is so unique.
All in all, its going to get your business scrutinized, which is the last thing you want for a money laundering front.
That is why casinos and strip clubs are the best businesses for money laundering:
- Most people use cash (no paper trail)
- There is no "average" spend per customer (one guy could come in and drop 10k) and foot traffic doesn't correlate well with revenue
- The marginal cost is next to nothing
- Comparables are hard - your casino/club may just be higher end than the neighboring ones, explaining your higher revenue.
Belzeturtle t1_j248xbc wrote
I certainly agree that there are much better ways. I just didn't think water consumption would be the smoking gun.
Ansuz07 t1_j2498fz wrote
It doesn't have to be a smoking gun - it just has to be odd enough to get noticed, which will prompt a deeper dive into the finances, which is the last thing you want.
The average laundromat has margins in the 25% range - if your margins are higher, that is going to draw some curiosity. If you run your machines more and your water usage is much higher than comparables, that is going to draw curiosity too.
Belzeturtle t1_j24b466 wrote
Fair enough.
[deleted] t1_j24fg4z wrote
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