The airport security check meets Source of Wealth Due Diligence
- lukaszlukaszewski7
- Jun 16
- 3 min read
Security measures—whether at airport checkpoints or in banking—exist to protect us from bad actors. Just as stringent liquid screenings protect passengers from explosive threats, due diligence reviews of large transactions safeguard financial systems from illicit funds. Below, we unpack this analogy, explain why these checks are critical, and explore the technology powering modern Source of Wealth (SoW) inspections.

Why Security Checks Exist: From Hijackings to Hidden Funds
Airport Context: Nobody enjoys having their suitcase searched, yet these security checks are vital. Before 1972, airports had minimal screening until hijackers threatened a nuclear reactor. The FAA then mandated baggage and carry-on inspections, and in 2006 liquid restrictions were formalized globally to counter explosive risks. These checks became more automated as scanning technology improved.
SoW Context: We’re losing the fight against a staggering USD 1.4 trillion money laundering problem. SoW checks—introduced under FATF Recommendation 10 in the early 2000s—help banks verify the origins of wealth. As financial crimes grew more sophisticated, particularly with digital assets, institutions transitioned from basic KYC checks and expert systems to pattern detection using AI.
The next frontier lies in automating the evidence-led SoW reviews.
The Airport Liquids Gateway Analogy
1. Conveyor Sensor: Transaction Monitoring
At security checkpoints:
Tray scanners let bottles under 100 ml pass. Larger containers are diverted for X‑ray and manual inspection.
At financial firms:
Volume Thresholds: Financial rules set transaction‑value or risk criteria (e.g., €10 000). Anything above triggers deeper scrutiny.
Exceptions & Random Checks: Just as savvy travelers test the 100 ml limit—forcing random checks—criminals split illicit funds into sub‑threshold transfers (68 % under €10 000). Institutions counter this with random or risk‑based sampling at lower thresholds (e.g., the equivalent of 50 ml or 10 ml for cryptocurrency originated wealth).
Oversized Sneak‑In: Attempting a €200 000 crypto-related deposit without scrutiny is like slipping a 2 L water shampoo bottle into your tray: it flagrantly triggers the rules and underscores the need for dynamic filtering.
2. Deep Dive: X‑Ray, Manual Inspection & Explosive‑Residue Swabs
Further inspection: Flagged bottles undergo complete security checks: X‑ray scanning, residue swabs, and manual bag searches.
SoW Deep Dive: Once a transfer is flagged, compliance analysts conduct a meticulous review of all evidence, confirming plausibility without measuring "every millilitre" of funds.
3. Tech Roles similarities:
Digital Scanners & Tagging Transaction monitoring systems automatically route high‑value or high‑risk transfers into your compliance queue based on configurable criteria, mirroring airport scanners that divert oversized bottles.
Rule Engine & Alert Manager A centralized rule engine applies both hard thresholds and random sampling, ensuring that known triggers and unpredictable patterns alike are captured for review. A similar process decides if your suitcase gets redirected.
Deep‑Dive Inspection Toolkit. In financial firms, further checks are now mostly manual. Modern SoW platforms offer banks a dedicated, detailed investigation workspace built for crypto and fiat sources of wealth:
Integrated Data Feeds: Pull on‑chain transaction histories, exchange records, sanctioned lists, and other databases in real time (for crypto-related wealth, see chaincomply.io/for-banks).
Unified Investigation Dashboard: Consolidate all artefacts—wallet analytics, capital gains calculations, and illicit activity appraisal reports—side by side, with fields for analyst notes and decision rationales (for crypto-related wealth, see details at chaincomply.io/product).
Audit‑Ready Reporting: Generate regulator‑compliant SoW reports automatically
Conclusion
Airport liquid restrictions and SoW due diligence both evolved to counter adaptive threats—terrorism and financial crime—through clear thresholds, targeted sampling, and rigorous inspections.
Modern SoW tools ensure routine transfers sail through while only the truly high‑risk “containers” undergo a thorough, evidence-led verification process. Discover how ChainComply can elevate your SoW program: chaincomply.io
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