Legal
Standard Chartered Says Terrorist Funding Claims Without Merit
The UK-listed lender, which earns the bulk of its revenues outside the UK, in regions such as Asia, the Indian sub-continent and Africa, dismissed the claims.
UK-listed Standard
Chartered says it is confident that a US court will reject
allegations that it handled billions of dollars for funders of
terrorist groups.
The allegations, made in documents reportedly (various media
reports – Bloomberg, BBC, others) state that thousands
of transactions worth more than $100 billion were conducted by
Standard Chartered from 2008 to 2013 in breach of sanctions
against Iran.
In one report (BBC, 4 June), it stated that an
independent expert has identified $9.6 billion of foreign
exchange transactions with individuals and companies designated
by the US government as funding “terror groups,” including
Hezbollah, Hamas, al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
Standard Chartered, which earns the bulk of its revenues outside
the UK, in regions such as Asia, the Indian sub-continent and
Africa, dismissed the claims as without merit.
“This filing is another attempt to use fabricated claims against
the bank, following previous unsuccessful attempts,” the bank
said in an emailed statement to this news service yesterday. “The
false allegations underpinning it have been thoroughly
discredited by the US authorities who undertook a comprehensive
investigation into the claims and said they were ‘meritless’ and
did not show any violations of US sanctions. We are confident the
courts will reject these claims, as they have already done
repeatedly.”
The BBC report said Standard Chartered avoided
prosecution by the US Department of Justice after the government
at that time, led by Lord [David] Cameron, intervened on its
behalf in 2012.
This publication understands that there are historical cases
linked to this dating back over several years which have been
repeatedly rejected. One example is that of the long-running
Brutus Trading qui tam case, for which there were numerous
rulings in Standard Chartered’s favour, culminating in February
2024, when the US Supreme Court denied the plaintiff’s request to
hear the case which marked the end to the appeals
process.
It appears that the latest filing is an attempt to reopen the
case, alleging that the US government perpetrated a “colossal
fraud” on the court regarding the thoroughness of its
investigation into alleged sanctions violations in 2013 and 2014.
It alleges the “de-cloaking” of new data in a spreadsheet that’s
been in their possession for a decade and previously investigated
by US authorities.