Compliance
NY Regulator Hits PwC For Improperly Changing AML Report On Japanese Bank

Fresh regulatory action showed no let-up by US authorities in punishing organisations over breaches of sanctions and anti-money laundering rules.
US regulators have fined PricewaterhouseCoopers,
the global professional services firm, $25 million for improperly
altering a report on anti-money laundering and sanctions
compliance by Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi.
The New York State Department of Financial Services has also
banned PwC from accepting consulting work at financial
institutions regulated by the organisation for two years.
The announcement of the action comes in the wake of actions taken
by US authorities against banks and other institutions over AML
breaches and sanctions violations over countries such as Iran and
Sudan. The most severe so far has been a $8.97 billion fine
imposed on France’s BNP Paribas.
"This matter relates to a single engagement completed more than
six years ago in which PwC searched for and identified relevant
transactions that were self-reported to regulators by PwC’s
client. PwC's detailed report also disclosed the relevant facts
that PwC learned subsequent to its search process,” Miles
Everson, US advisory leader, said in a statement from PwC.
"PwC is proud of its long history of contributing to the safety
and soundness of the financial system by serving as subject
matter experts in banking regulatory and compliance matters and
the firm is committed to improving continuously and meeting
changes in regulatory expectations. This resolution reinforces
that commitment,” he added.
Historical transaction review
According to the New York regulator, two PwC partners were
responsible for supervising the “historical transaction review
report”, or HTR, concerning the Japanese bank. The regulator said
both persons – who were not named – have retired from PwC.
“During the HTR, a PwC director led the firm’s technology and
data collection team. This director is presently a PwC
partner,” the regulator said.
“Under pressure from BTMU executives, PwC removed a warning in an
ostensibly 'objective' report to regulators surrounding the
Bank's scheme to falsify wire transfer information for Iran,
Sudan, and other sanctioned entities,” the regulator said.
"We are continuing to find examples of improper influence and
misconduct in the bank consulting industry. As a regulatory
community, it may well be advisable for us to take a hard look in
the mirror and ask whether we are doing enough to root out and
investigate this troubling web of conflicts. When bank executives
pressure a consultant to whitewash a supposedly 'objective'
report to regulators – and the consultant goes along with it –
that can strike at the very heart of our system of prudential
oversight," Benjamin Lawsky, superintendent of financial services
at NYDFS, said in a statement.
A more than year-long DFS investigation uncovered that PwC –
under pressure from BTMU executives – improperly altered an
“historical transaction review" report submitted to regulators on
wire transfers that the bank performed on behalf of sanctioned
countries and entities, the statement said. PwC was asked in June
2007 to review the bank’s dollar-clearing activity from 1 April,
2006.
In May 2008, PwC found that BTMU had issued special instructions
to bank employees to strip wire messages of information that
would have triggered sanctions compliance alerts – after the bank
denied having such a policy only weeks before in a meeting with
regulators, the statement continued.
“PwC understood that this improper data manipulation could
significantly compromise the HTR’s integrity and PwC inserted
into an earlier draft of the report an express acknowledgement
informing regulators that 'had PwC know[n] about these special
instructions at the initial phase of the HTR then we would have
used a different approach in completing this project’.
Specifically, PwC would have conducted a more in-depth, forensic
investigation into the bank's scheme – rather than simply a more
rote, mechanical review of the transactions provided to it by the
bank. In other words, the discovery of the Bank's scheme to
falsify wire transfer information cast doubts on whether PwC had
a complete set of data to review (among other issues),” the
statement said.
“However, at the bank’s request, PwC ultimately removed the
original warning language from the final HTR Report the bank
submitted to regulators and, in fact, inserted a passage stating
the exact opposite conclusion,” it said. The passage read: "[W]e
have concluded that the written instructions would not have
impacted the completeness of the data available for the HTR and
our methodology to process and search the HTR data was
appropriate".
The PwC report also deleted information such as the English
translation of BTMU’s wire-stripping instructions, which
referenced the bank doing business with "enemy countries" of the
US; it deleting a regulatory term of art that PwC used throughout
the report in describing BTMU’s wire-stripping instructions and
replaced it with a nondescript reference that lacked regulatory
significance.
Director
Referring to a director that, it said, was involved in the
report, the regulator said that on “numerous occasions, this
director made statements in emails to PwC partners and employees
that elevated his apparent concern for client satisfaction over
the need for objective inquiry”.
“No-one at PwC reprimanded or even told the director that his
comments were inappropriate because they drew the firm’s
objectivity seriously into question,” the regulator said.
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, part of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial
Group, reached a settlement with Lawsky’s department in 2013 and
agreed to pay $250 million for violations of US sanctions laws,
according to Bloomberg.