Financial criminals exploit gaps between institutions and jurisdictions, yet traditional anti-money laundering efforts remain siloed worldwide. Modern public-private partnerships are breaking this paradigm through confidential, structured information sharing that transforms how governments and financial institutions combat money laundering and terrorist financing. The U.S. FinCEN Exchange exemplifies this evolution—moving beyond voluntary information sharing that suffers from limited participation due to privacy concerns and regulatory risk. This session examines emerging global models for public-private collaboration that create structured feedback loops, enable real-time threat identification, and support coordinated case development. Attendees will explore how these partnerships transform reactive compliance into proactive, intelligence-driven financial crime prevention.