Ferraris, Ghost Cars, and Dirty Money: Inside Australia’s 2025 Barangaroo Laundering Scandal
In July 2025, Sydney’s Barangaroo precinct became the unlikely stage for one of Australia’s most audacious money laundering cases. Beyond the headlines about Ferraris and luxury goods lies a sobering truth: criminals are still exploiting the blind spots in Australia’s financial crime defences.
A Case That Reads Like a Movie Script
On 30 July 2025, Australian police raided properties across Sydney and arrested two men—Bing “Michael” Li, 38, and Yizhe “Tony” He, 34.
Both men were charged with an astonishing 194 fraud-related offences. Li faces 87 charges tied to AUD 12.9 million, while He faces 107 charges tied to about AUD 4 million. Authorities also froze AUD 38 million worth of assets, including Bentleys, Ferraris, designer goods, and property leases.
At the heart of the case was a fraud and laundering scheme that funnelled stolen money into the high-end economy of cars, luxury fashion, and short-term property leases. Investigators dubbed them “ghost cars”—vehicles purchased as a way to obscure illicit funds.
It’s a tale that grabs attention for its glitz, but what really matters is the deeper lesson: Australia still has critical AML blind spots that criminals know how to exploit.

How the Syndicate Operated
The mechanics of the scheme reveal just how calculated it was:
- Rapid loan cycling: The accused are alleged to have obtained loans, often short-term, which were cycled quickly to create complex repayment patterns. This made tracing the origins of funds difficult.
- Luxury asset laundering: The money was used to purchase high-value cars (Ferraris, Bentleys, Mercedes) and designer items from brands like Louis Vuitton. Assets of prestige become a laundering tool, integrating dirty money into seemingly legitimate wealth.
- Property as camouflage: Short-term leases of expensive properties in Barangaroo and other high-end districts provided both a lifestyle cover and another channel to absorb illicit funds.
- Gatekeeper loopholes: Real estate agents, accountants, and luxury dealers in Australia are not yet fully bound by AML/CTF obligations. This gap created the perfect playground for laundering.
What’s striking is not the creativity of the scheme—it’s the simplicity. By targeting sectors without AML scrutiny, the syndicate turned everyday transactions into a pipeline for cleaning millions.
The Regulatory Gap
This case lands at a critical time. For years, Australia has been under pressure from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to extend AML/CTF laws to the so-called “gatekeeper professions”—real estate agents, accountants, lawyers, and dealers in high-value goods.
As of 2025, these obligations are still not fully in place. The expansion is only scheduled to take effect from July 2026. Until then, large swathes of the economy remain outside AUSTRAC’s oversight.
The Barangaroo arrests underscore what critics have long warned: criminals don’t wait for legislation. They are already steps ahead, embedding illicit funds into sectors that regulators have yet to fence off.
For businesses in real estate, luxury retail, and professional services, this case is more than a headline—it’s a wake-up call to prepare now, not later.

Why This Case Matters for Australia
The Barangaroo case isn’t just about two individuals—it highlights systemic vulnerabilities in the Australian financial ecosystem.
- Criminal Adaptation: Syndicates will always pivot to the weakest link. If banks tighten their checks, criminals move to less regulated industries.
- Erosion of Trust: When high-value markets become conduits for laundering, it damages Australia’s reputation as a clean, well-regulated financial hub.
- Compliance Risk: Businesses in these sectors risk being blindsided by new regulations if they don’t start implementing AML controls now.
- Global Implications: With assets like luxury cars and crypto being easy to move or sell internationally, local failures in AML quickly ripple across borders.
This isn’t an isolated story. It’s part of a broader trend where fraud, luxury assets, and regulatory lag intersect to create fertile ground for financial crime.
Lessons for Businesses
For financial institutions, fintechs, and gatekeeper industries, the Barangaroo case offers several practical takeaways:
- Monitor for rapid loan cycling: Short-term loans repaid unusually fast, or loans tied to sudden high-value purchases, should trigger alerts.
- Scrutinise asset purchases: Repeated luxury acquisitions, especially where the source of funds is vague, are classic laundering red flags.
- Don’t rely solely on regulation: Just because AML obligations aren’t mandatory yet doesn’t mean businesses can ignore risk. Voluntary adoption of AML best practices can prevent reputational damage.
- Collaborate cross-sector: Banks, real estate firms, and luxury dealers must share intelligence. Laundering rarely stays within one sector.
- Prepare for 2026: When the law expands, regulators will expect not just compliance but also readiness. Being proactive now can avoid penalties later.
How Tookitaki’s FinCense Can Help
The Barangaroo case demonstrates a truth that regulators and compliance teams already know: criminals are fast, and rules often move too slowly.
This is where FinCense, Tookitaki’s AI-powered compliance platform, makes the difference.
- Scenario-based Monitoring
FinCense doesn’t just look for generic suspicious behaviour—it monitors for specific typologies like “rapid loan cycling leading to high-value asset purchases.” These scenarios mirror real-world cases, allowing institutions to spot laundering patterns early. - Federated Intelligence
FinCense leverages insights from a global compliance community. A laundering method detected in one country can be quickly shared and simulated in others. If the Barangaroo pattern emerged elsewhere, FinCense could help Australian institutions adapt almost immediately. - Agentic AI for Real-Time Detection
Criminal tactics evolve constantly. FinCense’s Agentic AI ensures models don’t go stale—it adapts to new data, learns continuously, and responds to threats as they arise. That means institutions don’t wait months for rule updates; they act in real time. - End-to-End Compliance Coverage
From customer onboarding to transaction monitoring and investigation, FinCense provides a unified platform. For banks, this means capturing anomalies at multiple points, not just after funds have already flowed into cars and luxury handbags.
The result is a system that doesn’t just tick compliance boxes but actively prevents fraud and laundering—protecting both businesses and Australia’s reputation.
The Bigger Picture: Trust and Reputation
Australia has ambitions to strengthen its role as a regional financial hub. But trust is the currency that underpins global finance.
Cases like Barangaroo remind us that even one high-profile lapse can shake investor and customer confidence. With scams and laundering scandals making headlines globally—from Crown Resorts to major online frauds—Australia cannot afford to be reactive.
For businesses, the message is clear: compliance isn’t just about avoiding fines, it’s about protecting your licence to operate. Customers and partners expect vigilance, transparency, and accountability.
Conclusion: A Warning Shot
The Barangaroo “ghost cars and luxury laundering” saga is more than a crime story—it’s a preview of what happens when regulation lags and businesses underestimate financial crime risk.
With AUSTRAC set to extend AML coverage in 2026, industries like real estate and luxury retail must act now. Waiting until the law forces compliance could mean walking straight into reputational disaster.
For financial institutions and businesses alike, the smarter path is to embrace advanced solutions like Tookitaki’s FinCense, which combine scenario-driven intelligence with adaptive AI.
Because at the end of the day, Ferraris and Bentleys may be glamorous—but when they’re bought with dirty money, they carry a far higher cost.
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