Compliance
Swiss Bank Conducts Internal Investigation Over Venezuelan AML Case

The bank is not being charged over the matter, its CEO has said.
Julius Baer is
carrying out an internal probe after a former employee who, since
his arrest, has admitted to taking part in a billion-dollar
scheme to launder money extracted from Venezuela’s state oil
company.
The matter, which first hit headlines at the end of July, was
reported again by Bloomberg yesterday when chief
executive Bernhard Hodler spoke about various issues in
Zurich.
The former employee is Matthias Krull, 44, a German resident of
Panama, who pleaded guilty to a count of conspiracy to commit
money laundering. He was arrested in July and charged with using
real estate and fake investment schemes to hide $1.2 billion
embezzled from the Venezuelan crude oil producer Petroleos de
Venezuela.
The bank has stated: “Julius Baer has taken note of the
allegations of the July 2018 criminal complaint against several
individuals, including a former relationship manager, as well as
of the statements in the plea agreement of its former employee.
The former employee pleaded guilty to charges brought against him
in his personal capacity.”
“Julius Baer is conducting an internal investigation based on the
information available in the criminal complaint and plea
agreement of the former employee. Julius Baer is cooperating with
competent authorities – as we typically would in cases involving
allegations linked to it. Julius Baer cannot comment on this
further until it has completed the internal investigation,” it
said.