Deutsche Bank fined $150 million for ties to sex offender Epstein

Agence France-Presse

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This marks the first time a financial institution has been penalized for its dealings with Jeffrey Epstein, says the New York Department of Financial Services

DEUTSCHE BANK. The bank's logo is pictured at its headquarters in Germany. File photo by Daniel Roland/AFP

NEW YORK, USA – Financial regulators in New York said on Tuesday, July 7, they have fined Deutsche Bank $150 million for failing to raise red flags on accounts held by tycoon sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The fine marked the first time a financial institution has been penalized for its dealings with the late financier, said the New York Department of Financial Services (DFS), an agency of the state government.

It said in a statement Deutsche Bank had failed to monitor Epstein’s account sufficiently closely, “despite ample information that was publicly available concerning the circumstances surrounding Mr. Epstein’s earlier criminal misconduct.”

Epstein, who was 66, hanged himself in Manhattan’s Metropolitan Correctional Center in August 2019 while awaiting trial on charges of trafficking minors for sex. He had pleaded not guilty.

“Banks are the first line of defense with respect to preventing the facilitation of crime through the financial system, and it is fundamental that banks tailor the monitoring of their customers’ activity based upon the types of risk that are posed by a particular customer,” said DFS Superintendent Linda Lacewell. 

“Despite knowing Mr. Epstein’s terrible criminal history, the bank inexcusably failed to detect or prevent millions of dollars of suspicious transactions,” she added. 

The financial regulator said the bank should have raised red flags over transactions that included “settlement payments totaling over $7 million, as well as dozens of payments to law firms totaling over $6 million for what appear to have been the legal expenses of Mr. Epstein and his co-conspirators.”

It also listed suspicious payments “to Russian models, payments for women’s school tuition, hotel and rent expenses, and…payments directly to numerous women with Eastern European surnames.”

The DFS added that the regulators also found “periodic suspicious cash withdrawals — in total, more than $800,000 over approximately 4 years.” 

“Throughout the relationship, very few problematic transactions were ever questioned, and even when they were, they were usually cleared without satisfactory explanation,” it said.

The fine also covers Deutsche Bank’s relationship with Danske Bank Estonia, which is at the center of a money-laundering scandal. 

The regulator said Deutsche Bank had similarly failed to act on red flags in its relationship with FBME bank in Cyprus. – Rappler.com

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