This morning's warning from the UK's anti-slavery watchdog about women being "sold like products" on adult services sites exposes the darkest intersection of technology, exploitation, and financial crime.
Behind every trafficking operation is a financial infrastructure. Criminals don't just move people—they move money. They open accounts. They process payments. They launder proceeds. And at every step, they rely on verification systems failing to identify who they really are.
At SmartSearch, we often talk about compliance as a defence. But it's worth being explicit about what we're defending against: not abstract regulatory breaches, but real human suffering. Every single illicit dollar laundered through the financial system leaves a real-world scar. It exploits human lives through modern slavery and organised crime.
The financial enablers of human trafficking
Trafficking syndicates operate like any criminal enterprise—they need banking infrastructure, payment processing, and ways to legitimise illicit funds. They:
When a bank, fintech platform, or payment processor fails to properly verify identity at onboarding, they're not just missing a compliance requirement. They're potentially providing the infrastructure that enables exploitation.
Where financial institutions can intervene
The most effective intervention point is before criminals establish legitimacy in the financial system. That means:
1. Rigorous identity verification at onboarding
Biometric liveness detection to catch deepfakes and synthetic identities. Multi-source triangulation to detect inconsistencies. Document forensics to identify forged credentials. Traditional "tick the box" KYC doesn't catch sophisticated criminal networks.
2. Ultimate Beneficial Owner identification
Trafficking operations hide behind layers of corporate structures—offshore companies, nominee directors, opaque trusts. If you can't identify the real people controlling an entity, you can't assess the risk it poses.
3. Real-time sanctions and PEP screening
Many trafficking networks have connections to organised crime groups, sanctioned entities, or politically exposed persons. Screening against 1,100+ global watchlists—updated daily, not annually—is essential.
4. Transaction monitoring and behavioural analysis
Trafficking operations have patterns: high cash volumes, cross-border transfers to high-risk jurisdictions, payments to shell companies, rapid movement of funds. Monitoring shouldn't stop after onboarding.
5. Suspicious Activity Reporting
When financial institutions spot red flags, reporting to the National Crime Agency isn't just regulatory compliance—it's intelligence that helps law enforcement disrupt trafficking networks.
Why this matters beyond regulation
The call for an overhaul of adult services sites is important. But platforms alone can't solve this problem. Trafficking syndicates will move to new platforms, new geographies, new methods. What they can't escape is the need to move money through the regulated financial system.
Every account opened by a trafficker is a chokepoint. Every payment processed for a trafficking operation is an opportunity for intervention. Every suspicious transaction flagged is potential intelligence for law enforcement.
The question is whether financial institutions have systems sophisticated enough to actually catch these threats—or whether they're relying on manual checks, visual document inspection, and static databases that criminals learned to bypass years ago.
SmartSearch's role in the solution
We provide the technology that helps businesses verify who they're really dealing with:
But technology is only part of the answer. The real defence is a collective commitment from financial institutions, payment processors, fintechs, and platforms to recognise that compliance isn't paperwork—it's a direct act of protection.
The moral mandate
When the UK's anti-slavery watchdog warns that women are being "sold like products," they're describing a £150 billion global industry. That money doesn't stay in cash. It enters the financial system. It flows through accounts that someone, somewhere, approved.
Every verification you skip. Every beneficial owner you don't identify. Every suspicious transaction you ignore. It's not just non-compliance. It's complicity in an industry built on human suffering.
The statistics are overwhelming: an estimated 50 million people in modern slavery globally, generating £150 billion in illegal profits annually. But behind every statistic is an individual who deserved protection and didn't get it.
Financial institutions can't solve human trafficking alone. But they can refuse to be the infrastructure that enables it.
That's not checkbox compliance. That's defence.