Aller au contenu

AML case management workflow — how do you structure yours?

par :name Fatima Al-Rashid · Lutte contre le blanchiment d'argent (LBA) · Apr 6, 2026 · 2 réponses Répondu
Participer à la discussion

Aucune garantie sur le contenu du forum. Les informations, opinions et discussions partagées sur ce forum sont fournies par les membres de la communauté et l'équipe LexFlag et ne constituent pas des conseils professionnels. LexFlag n'approuve, ne vérifie ni ne garantit l'exactitude, l'exhaustivité ou la fiabilité du contenu publié.

Identité des utilisateurs et contenu généré par l'IA. Rien ne garantit que les utilisateurs utilisent leur vrai nom, représentent une organisation ou expriment leurs propres opinions. Les réponses et contributions peuvent être partiellement ou entièrement générées par l'intelligence artificielle.

Vérification indépendante requise. Vous devez vérifier de manière indépendante toute information obtenue sur ce forum avant de prendre toute décision. LexFlag, ses affiliés et les contributeurs déclinent toute responsabilité pour toute perte ou tout dommage résultant de la confiance accordée au contenu du forum.

We're redesigning our AML case management workflow and I'd love to learn how others structure theirs. Currently our process is basically: alert fires → analyst opens a case in Excel → investigates → writes narrative → supervisor reviews → file or close.

The problems:

  • No centralized view of all open cases
  • No way to link related cases
  • Metrics are all manual
  • Knowledge doesn't transfer when analysts leave

We're looking at dedicated AML case management software but first I want to make sure our workflow is right before we automate a bad process. How do you handle case assignment, prioritization, QA, and closure?

Fatima Al-Rashid
Membre depuis Apr 2026
2
Réponse acceptée

Smart to fix the process before automating — that's a mistake a lot of organizations make when buying case management software. They purchase a tool and then wonder why it doesn't help.

A solid AML investigation workflow typically has these stages:

1. Triage — Alert comes in, gets an initial risk score (automated if possible). A senior analyst or team lead assigns it based on complexity and analyst workload.

2. Investigation — The analyst gathers relevant data: transaction history, customer profile, prior SARs, adverse media. A centralized system should pull this together in one view rather than requiring the analyst to log into 5 different systems.

3. Documentation — Ongoing notes as the investigation progresses. This is crucial — if the analyst leaves mid-case, someone else should be able to pick it up.

4. Decision — File SAR, close with no action, or escalate for further review. Clear decision criteria reduce subjectivity.

5. Quality assurance — A second pair of eyes reviews a sample of both filed and closed cases. This is where most AML programs find their biggest improvement opportunities.

6. Closure and feedback — Close the case and feed learnings back into the alert tuning process.

For case linking: this is one of the biggest advantages of moving from Excel to dedicated software. Being able to connect multiple alerts, customers, and SARs into a single investigation is transformative for catching networks.

LexFlag Team
Membre depuis Apr 2026
1

2 réponses

One thing I'll add: build SLA tracking into your workflow from day one. We track time-to-triage (alert → assignment), time-to-close, and aging of open cases. Without these metrics you can't manage capacity or demonstrate program effectiveness to examiners.

Our AML case management solution auto-escalates any case that's been open more than 30 days. Before that, cases would sometimes sit in someone's queue for weeks without anyone noticing.

Tomás Herrera
Apr 11, 2026 at 6:47 AM
1

Plus de discussions dans Lutte contre le blanchiment d'argent (LBA)

2 2 réponses
3 3 réponses
Répondu

Money laundering typologies — what emerging patterns are you seeing?

par Fatima Al-Rashid · il y a 3 semaines
2 2 réponses
3 3 réponses
Répondu

How are you handling the new EU AML Authority (AMLA) requirements?

par James O'Brien · il y a 3 semaines
3 3 réponses

Structuring detection — are your thresholds too obvious?

par Daniel Ifeanyi · il y a 4 semaines

Rejoignez la discussion

Créez un compte gratuit pour poser des questions, partager votre expertise et voter pour les meilleures réponses.

Besoin d'aide ?

Notre équipe de soutien est là pour répondre à vos questions

Messagerie intégrée

Les utilisateurs inscrits peuvent contacter le soutien directement via la messagerie.

Se connecter S'inscrire