Swiss bank Wegelin & Co. to close after US tax evasion fine
Switzerland's oldest bank is to
close permanently after pleading guilty in a New York court to helping
Americans evade their taxes. Wegelin & Co., which was established in 1741,
has also agreed to pay $57.8 million in fines to US authorities.
It said that once
this was completed, it "will cease to operate as a bank".
The bank had
admitted to allowing more than 100 American citizens to hide $1.2bn from the
Internal Revenue Service for almost 10 years.
Wegelin, based in
the small Swiss town of St Gallen, started in business 35 years before the US
declaration of independence.
It becomes the
first foreign bank to plead guilty to tax evasion charges in the US.
Other Swiss banks
have in recent years moved to prevent US citizens from opening offshore
accounts.
US Attorney Preet
Bharara said: "The bank wilfully and aggressively jumped in to fill a void
that was left when other Swiss banks abandoned the practice due to pressure
from US law enforcement."
He added that it
was a "watershed moment in our efforts to hold to account both the
individuals and the banks - wherever they may be in the world - who are
engaging in unlawful conduct that deprives the US Treasury of billions of
dollars of tax revenue".
Otto Bruderer, a
managing partner at the bank, said it was aware that its previous conduct had
been "wrong".
'Aggressively pursuing'
After Wegelin was
first indicted by US authorities in February last year, it was declared a
fugitive from justice when its executives failed to appear in a US court.
The bank had vowed
to fight the charges, claiming that because it only had branches in
Switzerland, it was bound only by its home country's relaxed banking laws.
Jeffrey Neiman, a
former US federal prosecutor who was involved in a previous investigation into
Swiss banks, said: "It is unclear whether the bank was required to turn
over American client names who held secret Swiss bank accounts. What is clear
is that the Justice Department is aggressively pursuing foreign banks who have
helped Americans commit overseas tax evasion."
It remains to be
seen whether US authorities will continue with, or drop, parallel charges
against three Wegelin bankers, Michael Berlinka, Urs Frei and Roger Keller.
The Wegelin case
comes four years after a far larger Swiss bank, UBS, agreed to pay a $780
million fine to US authorities related to tax evasion charges. UBS also agreed
to reveal the details of US account holders.
However, UBS
neither pleaded nor was found guilty. Instead it and US prosecutors came to
what is called a deferred prosecution agreement, with the fine being paid in
exchange for the charges being dropped.
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