That fount of all wisdom (the internet) attributes the saying that a picture is worth a 1,000 words to Napoleon (here). The self-crowned emperor was many things, but a harried anticorruption investigator or prosecutor trying to explain the links between a criminal’s wrongdoing and a corporation to a judge of less than genius caliber or a jury after the lunch break he was not. Had he ever been in such a situation, he would have realized he vastly understated a picture’s value.
The diagrams below show why. Created by Targeting Natural Resource Corruption, they explain to those responsible for enforcing laws against poaching, illegal logging, and other crimes against the earth’s resources how a corporation obscures the relationship between these crimes and those behind them. For those like me, with no visual imagination or skill whatsoever, they are a godsend. Because they are easily reproducible and not copyrighted. Thanks to Targeting Natural Resources for making them readily available.



For those needing a better copy of one of the three, they are, along with much additional helpful information on detecting natural resource crimes, on this Targeting Natural Resources blog post.
Simple but very powerful method.
Thanks for the shout-out to TNRC, Rick! I want to recognize our partners at TRAFFIC (www.traffic.org), who are doing this excellent work on unpacking the financial side of wildlife trafficking.