Legal

DoJ Investigates Credit Suisse On Cross-Border Services

Tom Burroughes Group Editor 17 July 2011

DoJ Investigates Credit Suisse On Cross-Border Services

Credit Suisse is being investigated by the US Department of Justice as part of a broader industry inquiry, the Swiss bank said today.

The investigation concerns historical private banking services provided on a cross-border basis to US persons, and the bank received a letter notifying it that it was also being investigated.

“As previously disclosed, Credit Suisse has been responding to requests for information, including subpoenas, in an investigation by the US Department of Justice (DoJ) and other US authorities,” the bank said in a statement.

“The investigation concerns historical private banking services provided on a cross-border basis to US persons. As part of this process, on 14 July 2011, Credit Suisse received a letter notifying it that it is a target of the DoJ investigation. It has been reported that the US authorities are conducting a broader industry inquiry. Subject to our Swiss legal obligations, we will continue to cooperate with the US authorities in an effort to resolve these matters,” the statement added.

The story highlights how US authorities have targeted a range of banks in their hunt for alleged tax evaders. In February 2009, Credit Suisse’s Zurich-listed rival, UBS, had to pay a $780 million fine to settle criminal charges that it helped wealthy US citizens evade tax and later that year, as part of a civil case, it handed over client account details to the US. The move was seen as a historic breach of Switzerland’s centuries-old bank secrecy laws. Tax evasion, in contrast to practice in many nations, is not regarded as a crime under Swiss law.

A number of banks, including UBS, Wegelin and Julius Baer, no longer provide offshore banking services to the US.

It is not just Swiss banks that have come under the microscope; HSBC has come under investigation, as reported earlier this year, and the probe widened to include Israeli and Asian banks. In February, reports came out claiming the DoJ and Internal Revenue Service had received information about accounts at Bank Leumi in Israel and China Merchants Bank. However the US has not alleged either bank was engaged in wrongdoing, according to the reports at the time.

Furthermore, in February the US authorities charged four Credit Suisse bankers with conspiracy to help tax evaders. At the time, a spokesperson for the bank said it was cooperating with the authorities in their investigation of these individuals and that it was not a target of those investigations

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