Steve Robinson
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But it was interesting to me because I had called him just before then, pretending to be someone in Massachusetts who needed a property transfer attorney in that area.
And he told me that he doesn't work in that area.
So it wouldn't work for me.
He wouldn't do a property transfer for me in that part of the state because his office is in a different county.
But for the Chinese national and the Chinese woman from Massachusetts who needed to move around, do a gift transfer for an illicit marijuana grow, he was more than happy to sign on the dotted line.
Probably just a coincidence, right?
I'm sure it's just a coincidence for sure.
But the more I learned about how the real estate world works and how lawyers factor in, the more I began to suspect that there was probably a different, more lucrative money-making opportunity in play here.
And it gets back to what we were talking about earlier and what we just grabbed some images of, of MT law.
the law firm in Massachusetts that was named in the Leah Foley's indictment.
MT Law appears to be just your run-of-the-mill law firm.
Their entire staff is Chinese, except for their one, you know, American-looking... One of these doesn't look like the others.
Yeah, just the white gorilla there, who I'm sure attends functions on their behalf.
But there's a technique called seasoning the money that I learned about, which may be old hat for people who are familiar with money laundering and how it works.
But seasoning the money involves a trusted lawyer
And it's a money laundering technique.
It's been used by white guys going back decades.
If you've got a cash heavy business like a coin op laundry or a car wash, and you've got all this cash, but you don't want to pay taxes on it, you want to make a real estate investment with it, what you do is instead of trying to bring it to the bank or to a real estate agent to buy property,
You bring it to your attorney and you tell your attorney to deposit it in his IOLTA account or his interest on lawyers.
There's different words for it in other states, but it's an account that lawyers hold money from multiple clients in a single pot and it earns interest, but it's kind of like protected under statute.