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Swiss Banking Giant to Pay $780 Million to Settle U.S. Fraud Allegations


ubs.jpgFOX NEWS REPORTS: Banking giant UBS has agreed to pay $780 million and turn over once-secret Swiss banking records to settle allegations it conspired to defraud the U.S. government of taxes owed by thousands of American clients.

As part of the deal struck in a federal court in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, UBS has made the unprecedented step of agreeing to turn over to the U.S. government immediately account information for U.S. customers of the bank’s cross-border business.

In doing so, federal authorities have struck a big crack in Switzerland’s vaunted bank secrecy laws.

UBS will pay $780 million in fines, penalties, interest and restitution for conspiring to create sham accounts to hide from the U.S. government the assets of American clients.

“We accept full responsibility for these improper activities,” Peter Kurer, chairman of Swiss-based UBS AG, said in a statement. He added that the bank was determined to abide by the terms of the deal with U.S. criminal and securities officials.

“Client confidentiality, to which UBS remains committed, was never designed to protect fraudulent acts or the identity of those clients, who, with the active assistance of bank personnel, misused the confidentiality protections,” he said Wednesday.

Approximately 17,000 American clients concealed their UBS accounts from the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. tax-collection agency, hiding assets of roughly $20 billion in total, U.S. officials said.

According to U.S. officials, when an acquisition in 2000 of a U.S. company brought UBS a host of new American clients, the bank set about to evade new reporting requirements for those clients. To do so, UBS executives helped U.S. taxpayers open new accounts in the names of sham entities.

Prosecutors contend that UBS executives used encrypted software and other counter-surveillance techniques to prevent anyone from detecting that they were actively marketing Swiss bank secrecy, and tax evasion, to American taxpayers.

The clients, in turn, filed false tax returns that omitted the income they earned in their Swiss accounts, according to the court papers.

Federal officials said they had pulled aside a veil of secrecy that hid a corrupt international banking practice.

“This was not a mere compliance oversight, but rather a knowing crime motivated by greed and disrespect for the law,” said Alexander Acosta, U.S. attorney for southern Florida.

IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman warned U.S. taxpayers hiding money overseas that it was time to come clean with the agency.

“People who have hidden unreported income offshore need to get right with their government.

They should come forward and take advantage of our voluntary disclosure process,” Shulman said.

Democratic Sen. Carl Levin has estimated that abusive tax shelters and hidden offshore accounts cost the U.S. government nearly $100 billion a year in lost tax revenue.

Prosecutors still are hunting for UBS executive Raoul Weil, who was indicted in November 2008 on charges he conspired to defraud the government with his management of the bank’s cross-border business.

In June 2008 former UBS banker Bradley Birkenfeld pleaded guilty to a similar charge.

If UBS fails to turn over the clients’ information, or stops cooperating with authorities, federal prosecutors could re-file charges against the bank.

Under the deal, UBS also will stop engaging in the type of cross-border banking business that got them into trouble.

(LINK to Fox News)



One Response

  1. All the off shore hidden accounts cost the gov’t an estimated $100 billion a year according to this article. In the grand scheme of things of recent past, that’s a drop in the bucket. Hardly worth following up on if you ask me.

    People used to say of gov’t spending ” a hundred billion here and a hundred billion there, pretty soon were talking some real money!” That figure is quickly becoming a trillion here and there instead of a billion.

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