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Wegelin Forfeits More Than $16 Million Following Tax Evasion Indictment In US
Tom Burroughes
25 April 2012
Wegelin & Co, Switzerland’s oldest bank which also had
the unwanted achievement of being the first foreign bank indicted in the US for
allegedly helping US tax evaders, has forfeited more than $16 million held in a
UBS account, media reports said. In an order disclosed to the public yesterday, US District
Judge Laura Taylor Swain in Manhattan entered
the forfeiture order, covering money seized from a US
correspondent account held at UBS in Stamford,
Connecticut. On 2 February, US prosecutors accused Wegelin & Co of helping
clients hide more than $1.2 billion in offshore bank accounts. They said the
tax fraud conspiracy ran from 2002 and 2011, and involved more than 100 US taxpayers. The
indictment was part of a crackdown on alleged tax fraud, including efforts to
pierce the tradition of Swiss bank secrecy. Following the accusations against it earlier this year,
Wegelin & Co – founded in 1741 – broke up, selling its non-US operations into
Notenstein Private Bank, a structure created by Swiss-based Raiffeisen, in a
move described by the partners of Wegelin as “extremely painful”. The sale is
the most dramatic example yet of how the US authorities’ reach is forcing
foreign firms to make significant moves to avoid falling foul of US law. Preet Bharara, the US Attorney in New York, reportedly said the forfeited
funds will be deposited with the US Treasury. Wegelin & Co has no branches outside Switzerland, and had followed the
common industry practice of using correspondent banking services to handle
money for US clients, reports added.