Jan 18, 2023
A secretive financial surveillance database established by the Arizona attorney general's office in 2014 has ballooned into a behemoth tool used by more than 600 law-enforcement entities, which can search for more than 150 million money transfers between people in the US and more than 20 countries, according to internal program documents obtained by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR). The database is called TRAC, or Transational Record Analysis Center, and was established as part of a settlement reached with Western Union to combat human trafficking and drug runners from Mexico. The data includes the full names of both the sender and the recipient, along with the amount of the transaction, the Wall Street Journal reports. "It's a law-enforcement investigative tool," said Rich Lebel, TRAC's director, who claims that the program has resulted in hundreds of leads and busts involving drug cartels and other criminals engaged in money laundering. "We don't broadcast it to