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How A Balkan Casino Empire Became A Quiet Bank For The Sinaloa Cartel
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) From the outside, it looked like a success story: a family of immigrants from Albania building a mini-empire of casinos, restaurants, fuel companies and logistics firms across northern Mexico, with branches reaching into Canada and Poland.
Behind the bright slot-machine lights, U.S. and Mexican investigators now say, those same businesses acted as a discreet bank for the Sinaloa Cartel.
According to U.S. sanctions documents, the Hysa family used at least ten casinos and more than a dozen related companies to move cartel cash between 2017 and 2024.
The mechanism was basic but powerful. Cartel couriers brought in bulk cash. Casino managers turned it into“wins,” bar and restaurant income, or inter-company payments, then broke it into small bank deposits that stayed under automatic alert thresholds.
From there, the money could be wired on to accounts in Europe and North America with a clean label. At the centre is Luftar Hysa, an engineer who left a poor, unstable Albania, passed through South Africa and Peru and arrived in Mexico in 2004, just as private casinos took off.
He talks about generating more than 1,500 jobs and insists he is the victim of envy and smear campaigns. U.S. authorities, by contrast, describe him and several relatives as part of a wider Albanian network that also launders drug profits through real-estate projects and tourist developments around major European ports.
Criminal alliances reshape cities and launder money
The“story behind the story” is how these alliances change whole regions. Albanian groups bring access to Rotterdam, Antwerp, Valencia or Hamburg, plus experience in turning dirty cash into apartments, hotels and office blocks.
Mexican cartels bring the cocaine and meth. Together, they can reshape coastal cities with flashy casinos, nightclubs and resorts whose real purpose is to recycle criminal money.
Politics enters when local officials bend rules or look away. In Baja California, a casino linked to the Hysa network secured favourable permits under a mayor who later became a federal deputy and is now under U.S. sanctions in a separate Sinaloa-related case, which she denies.
For expats and foreign investors, the lesson is blunt: not every boomtown is built on clean money. A trendy casino, beach bar or condo complex can be part of an international laundering pipeline that distorts prices, corrodes institutions and eventually brings the kind of instability that serious, law-abiding businesses try to avoid.
Behind the bright slot-machine lights, U.S. and Mexican investigators now say, those same businesses acted as a discreet bank for the Sinaloa Cartel.
According to U.S. sanctions documents, the Hysa family used at least ten casinos and more than a dozen related companies to move cartel cash between 2017 and 2024.
The mechanism was basic but powerful. Cartel couriers brought in bulk cash. Casino managers turned it into“wins,” bar and restaurant income, or inter-company payments, then broke it into small bank deposits that stayed under automatic alert thresholds.
From there, the money could be wired on to accounts in Europe and North America with a clean label. At the centre is Luftar Hysa, an engineer who left a poor, unstable Albania, passed through South Africa and Peru and arrived in Mexico in 2004, just as private casinos took off.
He talks about generating more than 1,500 jobs and insists he is the victim of envy and smear campaigns. U.S. authorities, by contrast, describe him and several relatives as part of a wider Albanian network that also launders drug profits through real-estate projects and tourist developments around major European ports.
Criminal alliances reshape cities and launder money
The“story behind the story” is how these alliances change whole regions. Albanian groups bring access to Rotterdam, Antwerp, Valencia or Hamburg, plus experience in turning dirty cash into apartments, hotels and office blocks.
Mexican cartels bring the cocaine and meth. Together, they can reshape coastal cities with flashy casinos, nightclubs and resorts whose real purpose is to recycle criminal money.
Politics enters when local officials bend rules or look away. In Baja California, a casino linked to the Hysa network secured favourable permits under a mayor who later became a federal deputy and is now under U.S. sanctions in a separate Sinaloa-related case, which she denies.
For expats and foreign investors, the lesson is blunt: not every boomtown is built on clean money. A trendy casino, beach bar or condo complex can be part of an international laundering pipeline that distorts prices, corrodes institutions and eventually brings the kind of instability that serious, law-abiding businesses try to avoid.
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