Two payment processors – Allied Wallet, Inc. and Allied Systems, Inc. – and their owner, Ahmad Khawaja, have entered into a settlement agreement requiring them to forfeit $13,335,248.91 to resolve civil forfeiture claims alleging that the funds were property involved in money laundering. The civil forfeiture complaint filed in Manhattan federal court also alleges that the funds were traceable to proceeds of the operation of an illegal gambling business and traceable to property used to operate an illegal gambling business.

According to the complaint and the Stipulation and Order of Settlement:

Between January 2009 and May 2009, more than $13,335,248.91 in funds traceable to Pokerstars, an online gambling company based in the Isle of Man, and other offshore online gambling companies were deposited in a bank account at Goldwater Bank held by Allied Wallet. These funds were traceable to several sources. Some of the funds were traceable to wire transfers from outside the United States by individuals and entities who knew that (a) the funds involved represented the proceeds of the illegal transmission of gambling information and the operation of an illegal gambling business, (b) the transfers were made in order to promote the carrying on of an illegal gambling business, and (c) the transfers were designed in part to conceal or disguise the nature, location, source, ownership and control of the proceeds of the illegal transmission of gambling information and operation of an illegal gambling business. Other funds were debited from the bank accounts of online gamblers who were using the Pokerstars.com website, and other websites, to engage in online gambling.

Some of the funds deposited in the Goldwater Bank account were transferred, directly or indirectly, into seven different bank accounts held, or otherwise controlled, by Allied Wallet, Allied Systems, and Khawaja. Other funds were credited to the bank accounts of online gamblers, often as winnings from their online gambling.