The Egmont Europe II horizontal analysis of IO.2, IO.6, R.29 and R.40 arrives at a clear conclusion: the extent to which law-enforcement agencies (LEAs) actually use FIU disseminations is the decisive horizontal element in IO.6 evaluations. Across 23 jurisdictions, the study shows that higher IO.6 ratings correlate with systematic integration of financial intelligence into investigations, prosecutions and asset tracing, while lower ratings are associated with under-use of FIU products—even when the FIU itself is technically compliant and produces reasonable outputs. For FIU and LEA leadership, the message is straightforward: improving IO.6 is no longer mainly about building the FIU; it is about changing how law enforcement works with financial intelligence, every day.
Egmont defines the horizontal element “LEA Use of Financial Intelligence” as:
the systematic integration of FIU-disseminated intelligence into law-enforcement operations to investigate ML, predicate offences and TF, including using financial intelligence to develop evidence, trace proceeds, and support both preliminary and ongoing investigations.
The operational impact depends on two sides:
IO.6 effectiveness is therefore assessed on how consistently FIU products are absorbed into the law-enforcement process, not just on the existence of channels or the volume of reports.
Egmont’s quantitative analysis is unambiguous:
Egmont explicitly labels this a “decisive horizontal element”: jurisdictions that do not fix the LEA-side use of FIU intelligence are very unlikely to move beyond Moderate IO.6 ratings.
In weaker systems, Mutual Evaluation Reports repeatedly describe a familiar pattern:
Egmont summarizes it succinctly:
“In weaker systems, FIU products are underutilised, proceeds tracing is limited, and opportunities to initiate ML/TF cases are missed, even when disseminations are of reasonable quality.”
Typical symptoms include:
From an IO.6 perspective, these behaviours translate into minimal demonstrable impact, regardless of how advanced the FIU platform might be.
In High and Substantial-effectiveness jurisdictions, the picture is very different:
Egmont notes that in higher-rated systems:
This systematic LEA use is one of the most frequently cited strengths in Substantial/High IO.6 jurisdictions.
For FIUs and LEAs, focusing on LEA use of FIU intelligence is not just about scoring better in evaluations. It has direct operational and strategic consequences:
Egmont also links strong LEA use with better national cooperation & coordination, another key horizontal factor for IO.6. Where FIUs and LEAs work together systematically, the whole AML/CFT system becomes more intelligence-led.
The horizontal analysis, taken together, points to a set of structural enablers.
LEAs must be able to:
Recommended actions in weaker systems include amending laws to expand FIU information-sharing powers with LEAs and clarifying procedures for cross-border cases.
High-performing jurisdictions exhibit strong, institutionalised cooperation between FIUs, LEAs, prosecutors and supervisors, supported by MOUs and structured mechanisms.
This typically includes:
Egmont identifies national cooperation & coordination as a key horizontal factor: its absence as a strength in many Moderate-effectiveness jurisdictions signals lost opportunities to exploit financial intelligence fully.
LEAs need specialised financial investigators, clear guidance and continuous training to work effectively with FIU outputs. Recommended actions include:
Higher-rated jurisdictions are characterised by strong IT systems and wide-ranging access to financial, administrative and law-enforcement data, which underpin effective use of FIU intelligence.
In practice this means:
From an implementation perspective, FIUs and LEAs can treat LEA use of FIU intelligence as a joint reform project, not a one-sided FIU issue.
A pragmatic roadmap could include:
Platforms like FIU360-type systems can support this by embedding FIU–LEA workflows, feedback capture and KPI dashboards directly into the technology stack.
Egmont’s Europe II horizontal analysis identifies law-enforcement use of FIU intelligence as the decisive horizontal factor for IO.6. In 80% of Moderate-effectiveness jurisdictions it is a weakness; in Substantial and High systems it is consistently a strength. Strong performance requires not just good FIU products, but legal gateways, national cooperation, LEA capacity and IT systems that make FIU intelligence central to investigations, prosecutions and asset recovery.