The Chief Financial Crimes Officer (CFCO) is responsible for leading the organizations enterprise-wide financial crime prevention framework including Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Counter-Terrorist Financing (CFT) fraud prevention sanctions compliance and anti-bribery & corruption programs.
This role ensures the organization is protected from financial crime risks while maintaining full compliance with regulatory requirements and international standards. The CFCO plays a critical role in safeguarding the organizations integrity reputation and operational resilience.
Key Responsibilities
1. Financial Crime Strategy & Governance
Develop and implement a comprehensive financial crime risk management strategy
Establish governance frameworks covering AML fraud sanctions and anti-corruption
Align financial crime programs with enterprise risk and compliance strategies
Promote a strong financial crime compliance culture
2. AML/CFT & Sanctions Compliance
Oversee AML/CFT programs including KYC CDD EDD and transaction monitoring
Ensure compliance with international standards (e.g. FATF) and local regulations
Manage sanctions screening and compliance frameworks
Ensure timely reporting of suspicious activities (STR/SAR)
3. Fraud Risk Management
Oversee fraud prevention detection and investigation frameworks
Implement controls to minimize internal and external fraud risks
Leverage advanced analytics and monitoring tools
Coordinate fraud response and recovery efforts
4. Financial Crime Detection & Investigations
Lead investigations into suspicious transactions and financial crime activities
Ensure proper escalation and reporting to regulators and authorities
Collaborate with law enforcement and financial intelligence units (FIUs)
Maintain robust case management and documentation processes
5. Regulatory Compliance & Reporting
Ensure compliance with all financial crime-related regulations
Manage regulatory inspections audits and reporting obligations
Maintain audit-ready documentation and controls
Monitor regulatory developments and adapt frameworks accordingly
The Chief Financial Crimes Officer (CFCO) is responsible for leading the organizations enterprise-wide financial crime prevention framework including Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Counter-Terrorist Financing (CFT) fraud prevention sanctions compliance and anti-bribery & corruption programs.
This role ensures the organization is protected from financial crime risks while maintaining full compliance with regulatory requirements and international standards. The CFCO plays a critical role in safeguarding the organizations integrity reputation and operational resilience.
Key Responsibilities
1. Financial Crime Strategy & Governance
Develop and implement a comprehensive financial crime risk management strategy
Establish governance frameworks covering AML fraud sanctions and anti-corruption
Align financial crime programs with enterprise risk and compliance strategies
Promote a strong financial crime compliance culture
2. AML/CFT & Sanctions Compliance
Oversee AML/CFT programs including KYC CDD EDD and transaction monitoring
Ensure compliance with international standards (e.g. FATF) and local regulations
Manage sanctions screening and compliance frameworks
Ensure timely reporting of suspicious activities (STR/SAR)
3. Fraud Risk Management
Oversee fraud prevention detection and investigation frameworks
Implement controls to minimize internal and external fraud risks
Leverage advanced analytics and monitoring tools
Coordinate fraud response and recovery efforts
4. Financial Crime Detection & Investigations
Lead investigations into suspicious transactions and financial crime activities
Ensure proper escalation and reporting to regulators and authorities
Collaborate with law enforcement and financial intelligence units (FIUs)
Maintain robust case management and documentation processes
5. Regulatory Compliance & Reporting
Ensure compliance with all financial crime-related regulations
Manage regulatory inspections audits and reporting obligations
Maintain audit-ready documentation and controls
Monitor regulatory developments and adapt frameworks accordingly