Money Laundering Scandals Bring Court Charges and Record Job Cuts to Euro Banks - 9 minutes read
Money Laundering Scandals Bring Court Charges and Record Job Cuts to Euro Banks
The international financial establishment is known to express concern about the risks of money laundering when the crypto space is mentioned. A string of scandals indicates, however, that traditional banks are not only susceptible to the phenomenon but sometimes complicit, whether knowingly or inadvertently. New chapters have been added to the saga over the last few months that are hurting banks, bankers and their clients.
Deutsche Bank, one of the biggest names associated with money laundering accusations, has been dogged by many problems during the past year. The leading German financial institution is now preparing for a major reorganization that may include the sacking of up to 20,000 employees, if the plan is approved at the end of this week.
The changes come after a failed merger with Germany’s Commerzbank a couple of months ago, which was eventually deemed too risky by the teams of both banks. It did not materialize, despite the support of the federal government in Berlin.
Many of the layoffs are expected to affect Deutsche Bank’s investment banking offices in London and New York. According to a BBC report, the German bank has 8,000 employees in the British capital. And the 20,000 jobs that are likely to be cut represent a fifth of the institution’s global staff.
Besides persistent problems with its investment business and unsatisfactory financial results, the banking giant has been suffering from its involvement in money laundering scandals. In November, 2018 its headquarters and other offices in Frankfurt were raided by law enforcement officers and representatives of the German tax authority.
During the operation, government agents, including prosecutors, were trying to establish whether Deutsche Bank employees assisted clients in setting up offshore accounts used to transfer illicit funds. The bank was connected to the big money laundering scandal at Danske Bank last year, which revealed that around €200 billion (around $230 billion) has flowed through its Estonian branch from suspicious accounts from the former Soviet space.
The German bank admitted it had processed some of these transactions which took place between 2007 and 2015. According to a confidential internal report quoted by The Guardian in April this year, Deutsche Bank acknowledges the scandal has hurt its global brand. The document warns about possible fines, disciplinary and legal action because of the bank’s role in a $20 billion Russian money laundering scheme.
Failure to comply with anti-money laundering (AML) regulations has reportedly lead to a federal investigation into Deutsche Bank in the U.S. The New York Times wrote last month that the FBI wants to know how the bank handles reports of suspicious financial activities. According to the publication, the U.S. Department of Justice has also opened a criminal investigation into potential money laundering. Some of the transactions in question were linked to Donald Trump’s son-in-law and White House adviser Jared Kushner.
Other European financial institutions were also caught up in the scandal with Denmark’s largest bank. Raiffeisen Bank International and other Austrian banks were accused of negligence regarding suspicious flows from Danske Bank. Finland-based Nordea and the Swedish Swedbank are also among those implicated in the money laundering scandal. The shares of all these banks lost value following the revelations.
Criminal investigations into Danske Bank’s conduct have been opened in Denmark, Estonia, Britain and the United States. Earlier this year, the bank announced it’s pulling out of the Russian Federation and the Baltic countries. In May, the Danish press reported that Thomas Borgen, a former chief executive responsible for Danske’s international operations between 2009 and 2012, has been charged for his role in the money laundering case.
In the aftermath of the affair, all Nordic banks took steps to improve their compliance with AML regulations. For example, Danske Bank increased its compliance staff from 1,200 to 1,700 employees. Furthermore, the region’s six leading banks – Danske, Swedbank, Handelsbanken, Nordea, SEB, and DNB – created a customer checking center as part of their efforts to recover from the scandal and combat money laundering more effectively.
Another money laundering scandal erupted in the administrative center of the European Union. In late June, Belgian media reported that KBC Bank, part of the Brussels-based KBC Group which has 11 million clients and thousands of branches across Europe, has been accused of facilitating money laundering and tax evasion by Belgian citizens who have transferred large amounts of foreign assets into the country since 2005. The charges were brought against the banking group by the prosecutor’s office for East Flanders in Ghent.
The clients involved in the case include four members of a family that owns and manages a door and window construction company called Engels in the Flemish city of Lokeren,The Brussels Times revealed. According to the report, over a period of 13 years the Engels family repatriated millions of euros from bank accounts in Switzerland. Prosecutors claim that a mother and her three sons did not pay due taxes and fines and the transactions should have been flagged as suspicious and reported to the Belgian financial authorities.
KBC Bank insists it acted according to the information it had at the time and there was no reason to suspect money laundering activities. Both the legal team of the financial institution and the accused members of the Engels family have indicated their intentions to fight the charges in Belgian courts. KBC Group, which operates in Belgium, Ireland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, and Bulgaria, said in a statement that in recent years it has continuously upgraded its systems for identifying and preventing tax evasion.
Elsewhere in Europe, Cypriot police raided the offices of FBME Bank in Nicosia and in Limassol this past May, as part of another money laundering investigation. According to sources quoted by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), the law enforcement officers gathered evidence from the bank’s servers and documents and questioned the employees who were at the branches at the time of the operation.
The non-profit media organization further detailed that the investigation in Cyprus concerns various cases of legalization of proceeds from criminal activities such as drug smuggling and terrorism financing. No arrests have been made so far and the bank’s owners are yet to be questioned. In 2014, FBME, which is headquartered in Tanzania, was described by the U.S. Treasury’s Financial Crime Enforcement Network (Fincen) as a “financial institution of primary money laundering concern.” Fincen banned U.S. banks from dealing with it.
The Central Bank of Cyprus, which is the principal regulator of the island’s banking sector, has so far put in place multiple measures trying to reduce the risk of illicit activities at FBME. Immediately after the U.S. ban, the supervisory authority appointed new management for the bank and limited its operations. In 2015, the CBC imposed a fine of €1.2 million ($1.3 million) for gaps in the implementation of Cyprus’s AML legislation and revoked the license of its main branch. And in May 2017, the FBME Bank’s license was also revoked by the Bank of Tanzania.
With so many money laundering scandals within the traditional banking system, one might question whether the numerous measures designed to combat the phenomenon work adequately at all. The same measures are now prescribed in the crypto sector with the recently released FATF global standards for digital assets. Whatever the case, the word’s financial establishment is rapidly losing the moral high ground to criticize the nascent crypto industry, which despite all suspicions should at least be treated innocent until proven otherwise.
Source: Activistpost.com
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Keywords:
Money laundering • Court • Euro • International law • Finance • Business • Risk • Money laundering • Cryptography • Deutsche Bank • Bank One Corporation • Money laundering • Nazi Germany • Financial institution • Employment • Nazi Germany • Commerzbank • Cabinet of Germany • Berlin • Deutsche Bank • Investment banking • London • New York City • BBC • Employment • Capital (economics) • Employment • Institution • Globalization • Employment • Investment • Business • Finance • Bank • Money laundering • Frankfurt • Germans • Deutsche Bank • Employment • Offshore bank • Money laundering • Danske Bank • Estonia • Soviet Union • Legal guardian • Deutsche Bank • Globalization • Fine (penalty) • Lawsuit • Money laundering • Money laundering • Regulation • Federal judiciary of the United States • Federal Bureau of Investigation • Deutsche Bank • United States dollar • The New York Times • Federal Bureau of Investigation • United States Department of Justice • Criminal procedure • Money laundering • Donald Trump • White House • Jared Kushner • Denmark • Raiffeisen Zentralbank • Austria • Danske Bank • Finland • Nordea • Sweden • Swedbank • Money laundering • Share (finance) • Danske Bank • Denmark • Estonia • United States • Russia • Baltic states • Money laundering • Money laundering • Financial regulation • Danske Bank • Employment • Swedbank • Handelsbanken • Nordea • SEB Group • DNB ASA • Money laundering • Money laundering • Capital city • European Union • Belgium • KBC Bank • Brussels • KBC Bank • Europe • Money laundering • Tax evasion • Belgium • Prosecutor • East Flanders • Ghent • Flanders • Lokeren • The Brussels Times • Friedrich Engels • Switzerland • Tax • Fine (penalty) • Belgium • Financial market • KBC Bank • Money laundering • Law • Financial institution • Friedrich Engels • Belgium • KBC Bank • Belgium • Republic of Ireland • Czech Republic • Slovakia • Hungary • Bulgaria • Tax evasion • Europe • Cyprus • FBME Bank • Nicosia • Limassol • Money laundering • Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project • Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project • Evidence • Document • Employment • Separation of powers • Time • Nonprofit organization • Mass media • Organization • Criminal procedure • Cyprus • Case law • Crime • Illegal drug trade • Terrorism financing • Arrest • Bank • Tanzania • United States Department of the Treasury • Financial Crimes Enforcement Network • Financial Crimes Enforcement Network • Financial institution • Money laundering • Financial Crimes Enforcement Network • Central Bank of Cyprus • Bank regulation • Bank • Risk • Canadian Broadcasting Corporation • Fine (penalty) • Statistics relating to enlargement of the European Union • Cyprus • Money laundering • FBME Bank • Bank of Tanzania • Money laundering • Bank • Employment • Cryptography • Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering • Globalization • International Organization for Standardization • Finance •
The international financial establishment is known to express concern about the risks of money laundering when the crypto space is mentioned. A string of scandals indicates, however, that traditional banks are not only susceptible to the phenomenon but sometimes complicit, whether knowingly or inadvertently. New chapters have been added to the saga over the last few months that are hurting banks, bankers and their clients.
Deutsche Bank, one of the biggest names associated with money laundering accusations, has been dogged by many problems during the past year. The leading German financial institution is now preparing for a major reorganization that may include the sacking of up to 20,000 employees, if the plan is approved at the end of this week.
The changes come after a failed merger with Germany’s Commerzbank a couple of months ago, which was eventually deemed too risky by the teams of both banks. It did not materialize, despite the support of the federal government in Berlin.
Many of the layoffs are expected to affect Deutsche Bank’s investment banking offices in London and New York. According to a BBC report, the German bank has 8,000 employees in the British capital. And the 20,000 jobs that are likely to be cut represent a fifth of the institution’s global staff.
Besides persistent problems with its investment business and unsatisfactory financial results, the banking giant has been suffering from its involvement in money laundering scandals. In November, 2018 its headquarters and other offices in Frankfurt were raided by law enforcement officers and representatives of the German tax authority.
During the operation, government agents, including prosecutors, were trying to establish whether Deutsche Bank employees assisted clients in setting up offshore accounts used to transfer illicit funds. The bank was connected to the big money laundering scandal at Danske Bank last year, which revealed that around €200 billion (around $230 billion) has flowed through its Estonian branch from suspicious accounts from the former Soviet space.
The German bank admitted it had processed some of these transactions which took place between 2007 and 2015. According to a confidential internal report quoted by The Guardian in April this year, Deutsche Bank acknowledges the scandal has hurt its global brand. The document warns about possible fines, disciplinary and legal action because of the bank’s role in a $20 billion Russian money laundering scheme.
Failure to comply with anti-money laundering (AML) regulations has reportedly lead to a federal investigation into Deutsche Bank in the U.S. The New York Times wrote last month that the FBI wants to know how the bank handles reports of suspicious financial activities. According to the publication, the U.S. Department of Justice has also opened a criminal investigation into potential money laundering. Some of the transactions in question were linked to Donald Trump’s son-in-law and White House adviser Jared Kushner.
Other European financial institutions were also caught up in the scandal with Denmark’s largest bank. Raiffeisen Bank International and other Austrian banks were accused of negligence regarding suspicious flows from Danske Bank. Finland-based Nordea and the Swedish Swedbank are also among those implicated in the money laundering scandal. The shares of all these banks lost value following the revelations.
Criminal investigations into Danske Bank’s conduct have been opened in Denmark, Estonia, Britain and the United States. Earlier this year, the bank announced it’s pulling out of the Russian Federation and the Baltic countries. In May, the Danish press reported that Thomas Borgen, a former chief executive responsible for Danske’s international operations between 2009 and 2012, has been charged for his role in the money laundering case.
In the aftermath of the affair, all Nordic banks took steps to improve their compliance with AML regulations. For example, Danske Bank increased its compliance staff from 1,200 to 1,700 employees. Furthermore, the region’s six leading banks – Danske, Swedbank, Handelsbanken, Nordea, SEB, and DNB – created a customer checking center as part of their efforts to recover from the scandal and combat money laundering more effectively.
Another money laundering scandal erupted in the administrative center of the European Union. In late June, Belgian media reported that KBC Bank, part of the Brussels-based KBC Group which has 11 million clients and thousands of branches across Europe, has been accused of facilitating money laundering and tax evasion by Belgian citizens who have transferred large amounts of foreign assets into the country since 2005. The charges were brought against the banking group by the prosecutor’s office for East Flanders in Ghent.
The clients involved in the case include four members of a family that owns and manages a door and window construction company called Engels in the Flemish city of Lokeren,The Brussels Times revealed. According to the report, over a period of 13 years the Engels family repatriated millions of euros from bank accounts in Switzerland. Prosecutors claim that a mother and her three sons did not pay due taxes and fines and the transactions should have been flagged as suspicious and reported to the Belgian financial authorities.
KBC Bank insists it acted according to the information it had at the time and there was no reason to suspect money laundering activities. Both the legal team of the financial institution and the accused members of the Engels family have indicated their intentions to fight the charges in Belgian courts. KBC Group, which operates in Belgium, Ireland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, and Bulgaria, said in a statement that in recent years it has continuously upgraded its systems for identifying and preventing tax evasion.
Elsewhere in Europe, Cypriot police raided the offices of FBME Bank in Nicosia and in Limassol this past May, as part of another money laundering investigation. According to sources quoted by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), the law enforcement officers gathered evidence from the bank’s servers and documents and questioned the employees who were at the branches at the time of the operation.
The non-profit media organization further detailed that the investigation in Cyprus concerns various cases of legalization of proceeds from criminal activities such as drug smuggling and terrorism financing. No arrests have been made so far and the bank’s owners are yet to be questioned. In 2014, FBME, which is headquartered in Tanzania, was described by the U.S. Treasury’s Financial Crime Enforcement Network (Fincen) as a “financial institution of primary money laundering concern.” Fincen banned U.S. banks from dealing with it.
The Central Bank of Cyprus, which is the principal regulator of the island’s banking sector, has so far put in place multiple measures trying to reduce the risk of illicit activities at FBME. Immediately after the U.S. ban, the supervisory authority appointed new management for the bank and limited its operations. In 2015, the CBC imposed a fine of €1.2 million ($1.3 million) for gaps in the implementation of Cyprus’s AML legislation and revoked the license of its main branch. And in May 2017, the FBME Bank’s license was also revoked by the Bank of Tanzania.
With so many money laundering scandals within the traditional banking system, one might question whether the numerous measures designed to combat the phenomenon work adequately at all. The same measures are now prescribed in the crypto sector with the recently released FATF global standards for digital assets. Whatever the case, the word’s financial establishment is rapidly losing the moral high ground to criticize the nascent crypto industry, which despite all suspicions should at least be treated innocent until proven otherwise.
Source: Activistpost.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Money laundering • Court • Euro • International law • Finance • Business • Risk • Money laundering • Cryptography • Deutsche Bank • Bank One Corporation • Money laundering • Nazi Germany • Financial institution • Employment • Nazi Germany • Commerzbank • Cabinet of Germany • Berlin • Deutsche Bank • Investment banking • London • New York City • BBC • Employment • Capital (economics) • Employment • Institution • Globalization • Employment • Investment • Business • Finance • Bank • Money laundering • Frankfurt • Germans • Deutsche Bank • Employment • Offshore bank • Money laundering • Danske Bank • Estonia • Soviet Union • Legal guardian • Deutsche Bank • Globalization • Fine (penalty) • Lawsuit • Money laundering • Money laundering • Regulation • Federal judiciary of the United States • Federal Bureau of Investigation • Deutsche Bank • United States dollar • The New York Times • Federal Bureau of Investigation • United States Department of Justice • Criminal procedure • Money laundering • Donald Trump • White House • Jared Kushner • Denmark • Raiffeisen Zentralbank • Austria • Danske Bank • Finland • Nordea • Sweden • Swedbank • Money laundering • Share (finance) • Danske Bank • Denmark • Estonia • United States • Russia • Baltic states • Money laundering • Money laundering • Financial regulation • Danske Bank • Employment • Swedbank • Handelsbanken • Nordea • SEB Group • DNB ASA • Money laundering • Money laundering • Capital city • European Union • Belgium • KBC Bank • Brussels • KBC Bank • Europe • Money laundering • Tax evasion • Belgium • Prosecutor • East Flanders • Ghent • Flanders • Lokeren • The Brussels Times • Friedrich Engels • Switzerland • Tax • Fine (penalty) • Belgium • Financial market • KBC Bank • Money laundering • Law • Financial institution • Friedrich Engels • Belgium • KBC Bank • Belgium • Republic of Ireland • Czech Republic • Slovakia • Hungary • Bulgaria • Tax evasion • Europe • Cyprus • FBME Bank • Nicosia • Limassol • Money laundering • Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project • Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project • Evidence • Document • Employment • Separation of powers • Time • Nonprofit organization • Mass media • Organization • Criminal procedure • Cyprus • Case law • Crime • Illegal drug trade • Terrorism financing • Arrest • Bank • Tanzania • United States Department of the Treasury • Financial Crimes Enforcement Network • Financial Crimes Enforcement Network • Financial institution • Money laundering • Financial Crimes Enforcement Network • Central Bank of Cyprus • Bank regulation • Bank • Risk • Canadian Broadcasting Corporation • Fine (penalty) • Statistics relating to enlargement of the European Union • Cyprus • Money laundering • FBME Bank • Bank of Tanzania • Money laundering • Bank • Employment • Cryptography • Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering • Globalization • International Organization for Standardization • Finance •