Compliance
US Lawmakers Seek Deutsche Bank Probe

Senators have called for a probe into the German bank, which faces a number of investigations about its anti-money laundering controls.
US lawmakers are sharpening their focus on Deutsche Bank as the
German lender faces investigations over whether its anti-money
laundering controls are strong enough, according to the Wall
Street Journal.
Two Democratic senators have asked Republican colleagues who
control the Senate Banking Committee to launch a “thorough,
detailed bipartisan committee investigation” into the bank. The
calls came from Elizabeth Warren (D, Mass) and Chris Van Hollen
(D, Md). They cite probes into the German lender’s activities in
Russia and its role in recently surfaced money-laundering
investigations tied to a Denmark banking scandal and offshore tax
havens.
In Europe, a mass of dirty money stories and allegations have
prompted European Union lawmakers to call for tougher controls on
money laundering. But as the latest case shows, the issue is
global. In Asia, for example, banks have been kicked out and
fined by jurisdictions such as Singapore for AML system
failures.
However, as the WSJ report noted, Deutsche Bank has not
been accused of wrongdoing following the new probes and said
it is cooperating with the authorities.
Family Wealth Report contacted the bank, and a
spokesperson said: “Deutsche Bank takes its legal
obligations seriously and remains committed to cooperating with
authorized investigations."
At the end of November German authorities raided Deutsche Bank
offices in Frankfurt as part of an offshore tax-evasion and
money-laundering case. The matter was reported by FWR’s
sister publication
here.
“The compliance history of this institution raises serious
questions about the national security and criminal risks posed by
its US operations,” the Democratic Senators reportedly said
in a letter to Senator Mike Crapo (R, Idaho), chairman of
the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs.
Deutsche Bank has faced a number of problems in recent years, even leading to a flurry of speculation about its future. Shares in the firm have been under pressure in recent weeks.
Source: Deutsche Bank