Legal
Ex-UBS Wealth Head Goes On Trial In Tax Evasion Case

Raoul Weil, former head of wealth management at UBS, goes to trial in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, today, for allegedly helping wealthy US citizens evade millions in taxes through the use of Swiss bank accounts, Bloomberg has reported.
Raoul Weil, former head of wealth management at UBS, goes on trial today in Fort
Lauderdale, FL, for allegedly helping wealthy US citizens evade
millions in taxes through the use of Swiss bank accounts,
Bloomberg has reported.
Weil was charged by US authorities in 2008 but continued to live
and work in Switzerland which does not extradite its citizens in
tax cases. An international arrest warrant for Weil was made in
early 2009, months after he was charged for allegedly conspiring
to help 17,000 American clients of Swiss bank UBS avoid
taxes.
After going on a business trip to Italy last year, he was
extradited to the US after being on the run for five years. If
convicted, he faces up to five years in prison for conspiracy to
commit tax fraud as well as a hefty fine.
Following his extradition, he pleaded not guilty and was freed on
$10.5 million bail in December.
"We are preparing diligently for trial," Weil's New York-based
attorney Aaron Marcu was reported as saying.
In recent years, the US government has stepped up its pursuit of
Swiss banks that have helped clients evade taxes
Last year, the US and Swiss governments signed an accord under
which Swiss banks can state whether they have, or have not,
violated US laws on tax.
US authorities are also currently investigating 14 Swiss banks to
determine whether they were involved in helping thousands of US
citizens evade paying their taxes.
In 2009, UBS agreed pay $780 million and turn over some client
names to settle allegations that it aided tax evasion in the US,
while earlier this year, Credit Suisse pleaded guilty to
conspiracy to help US citizens evade taxes and agreed to pay a
$2.815 billion settlement with US authorities.