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Six Auckland law firms warned in AML audit crackdown

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 17 Jun 2026, 4:15pm

Six Auckland law firms are among those who have been issued formal warnings by the Department of Internal Affairs for non-compliance over anti-money laundering audits.

In total 10 reporting entities, including a payment provider and a real estate agency, were issued warnings under the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) Act 2009.

Each of the reporting entities failed to undertake an independent audit of its AML/CFT programme and risk assessment on at least two occasions.

Laura Olsen, acting director, AML/CFT, at the Department of Internal Affairs (DIA), said it was the first time multiple co-ordinated formal warnings had been issued for failing to complete a required independent audit.

“Today’s action signals a clear expectation that reporting entities must comply with their legal obligations,” Olsen said.

“These exist to protect us from financial crime, by helping us spot gaps in the system that could allow dirty money to slip through.”

Olsen said independent audits help the DIA check whether a reporting entity’s AML/CFT programme actually works and identifies gaps.

“Many crimes tied to money laundering harm ordinary people. Strong AML/CFT controls reduce these risks,” she said.

The formal warnings were issued to:

  • Singhs Lawyers (law firm)
  • Robertsons Associates Limited (law firm)
  • Castleview Law Limited (law firm)
  • FC Law Partners (law firm)
  • Woodroffe Lawyers (law firm)
  • Māngere Law Limited (law firm)
  • Flexi Online New Zealand Limited (payment provider)
  • Countryman Realty Limited (real estate agency)
  • Cook North & Wong Limited (accounting services provider)
  • Wilton Finance Limited (non-bank, non-deposit-taking lender)

Govt beefing up anti-money laundering regime

Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee plans to introduce a bill to Parliament this year that would “substantially increase maximum penalties for serious non-compliance” under the AML/CFT regime, she says.

She said penalties were much larger in the likes of Australia, Canada and Britain.

The paper noted that in 2024, SkyCity New Zealand was fined $4.1 million for breaches comparable to those committed by SkyCity Adelaide, but the Australian casino was fined a whopping A$67m ($80.99m).

Last week, the High Court ordered ASB to pay a $6.731m penalty – the equivalent to 0.5% of ASB’s net profit after tax in the last financial year – for seven breaches of the AML/CFT Act.

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