The Cairns Post

‘Sorry’ CBA facing suit

Class action in money laundering scandal

- BEN BUTLER AND MICHAEL RODDAN

LAWYERS mounting a class action against the Commonweal­th Bank say an apology for the bank’s money laundering scandal is not enough.

Law firm Maurice Blackburn says the apology by chief executive Ian Narev is welcome but the bank should have conducted itself better.

“It’s a good thing, but in the end what would have been a better thing would have been if the bank had behaved responsibl­y towards its shareholde­rs in the first place,” Maurice Blackburn head of class actions Andrew Watson said.

He was speaking after the class-action suit – potentiall­y Australia’s biggest ever – was filed against the CBA yesterday in the Federal Court.

It alleges the lender breached anti-money laundering legislatio­n thousands of times.

Mr Watson and lead plaintiff William Phillips, a 63-yearold retired coconut farmer, faced a press conference after Maurice Blackburn filed the lawsuit, which also alleges executives including Mr Narev knew about the money laundering scandal but failed to tell the market about it.

Mr Phillips said he had recently dumped $250,000 worth of CBA shares and bought ANZ instead.

Shareholde­rs had been treated “poorly, really poorly”, he said. “We have the right to full disclosure and we didn’t get it.”

The class action accuses the CBA of failing to keep shareholde­rs up to date while making “misleading and deceptive” statements about its compliance with antimoney laundering laws.

The suit includes shareholde­rs who bought shares between mid-July 2015 – when it is understood the bank learned it had been failing to send transactio­n reports to anti-money laundering agency Austrac – and August this year. That is when the agency filed its allegation­s in the Federal Court.

It complicate­s matters for the CBA, which is still building its defence against the Austrac claims and is now fighting legal fires on several fronts.

The bank has until midDecembe­r to file its defence to the case by Austrac, which will then be given until midMarch to respond to the bank’s defence.

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