Saturday, February 11, 2017

Whistleblower Claims Swiss Bank IHAG did not Come Clean with DOJ as Category 2 Bank Receiving an NPA (2/11/17)

Finews.com reports (based on a Tax Notes report) that 
A whistleblower reported a Swiss private bank to U.S. prosecutors for violating an offshore settlement, it has emerged. Among his accusations: a Zurich-based bank shielded a gigantic precious emerald from the prying eyes of tax officials. Has IHAG [Private Bank] got a new problem on its hands?
Katherina Bart, Whistleblower Alleges Swiss Bank Cheated in U.S Tax Pact (Finews.com 2/8/17), here.

Other excerpts:
He [Rolf Schnellmann]  is the most recent in a series of Swiss private banking whistleblowers including former UBS banker Bradley Birkenfeld, ex-Julius Baer banker Rudolf Elmer, and Herve Falciani, who stole data from HSBC private bank when he worked at the Geneva-based institute as an information technology specialist.  
* * * * 
Schnellmann came forward as an informant to U.S. justice officials several months before IHAG reached a settlement in the U.S. for helping wealthy Americans cheat on their taxes. The bank, founded in 1949 by a wealthy weapons manufacturer and art collector, agreed in 2015 to pay a nearly a $7.5 million penalty to to avoid prosecution for its wrong-doings with U.S. clients. 
The bank voiced confidence that it is out of the woods. 
* * * * 
$870 Million Emerald 
A cursory read of Schnellmann's accusations, summarized in letters to U.S. officials through a lawyer, appear to at least partly jibe with the bank's own admissions to U.S. prosecutors.  
IHAG admitted to using several steps, including with the help of third parties, to strip assets of any sign they belonged to U.S. taxpayers. 
The gist of Schnellmann's accusations is that IHAG's deception went further: for example, he maintains that IHAG also set up a fund structure to hide beneficial ownership – the true account holder. 
Schnellmann also accuses a Zurich private bank of safekeeping an emerald valued at $870 million for a client who has since died. This claim appears far-fetched: the world's most expensive emerald gemstone, the Bahia Emerald, is valued at $400 million – a 341-kilogram schist. 
U.S. Revisits IHAG? 
The Department of Justice, or DoJ, must determine if Schnellmann's accusations are compelling enough to warrant revisiting IHAG's non-prosecution agreement. The DoJ didn't comment to finews.com. 
«IHAG Private Bank has, within the limits of Swiss law, always been fully transparent, honest and truthful with the Department of Justice, and IHAG will continue to fully co-operate with the DoJ,» the bank's attorney, Marnin Michaels of Baker & McKenzie, said in a statement. 
The authority in 2015 credited the bank with fully cooperating, provided information and documents requested on 182 accounts the bank held with U.S. taxpayers.  
«Furthermore, IHAG has always complied and will continue to fully comply with the provisions of and obligations under the non-prosecution agreement,» Michaels said.
* * * *  
[IHAG] could face serious repercussions if officials discover it hasn't, according to Douglas Hornung, a Swiss-based lawyer.  
«The non-prosecution agreement could be terminated, and criminal procedures against the bank could be launched,» Hornung told «Tax Notes».

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