The Jerusalem Post

HSBC draws line under Mexican cartel case after 5-year probation

- • By LAWRENCE WHITE

LONDON (Reuters) – HSBC drew a line under its punishment for lapses in anti-money laundering controls on Monday, saying the US Department of Justice (DoJ) would end its deferred prosecutio­n agreement, lifting the threat of further penalties.

Europe’s biggest bank paid a $1.9 billion fine and entered into the five-year deal in 2012 for failing to prevent Mexican drug cartels from laundering hundreds of millions of dollars.

Under the deal, HSBC pledged to strengthen its sanctions and anti-money laundering controls. It had successful­ly done this and the DoJ will therefore file a motion to dismiss the charges that had been deferred by the agreement, HSBC said.

“While we still have improvemen­ts to make and work to do, this shows the DPA has worked in the way intended which was to lead to a transforma­tion in the way HSBC manages financial crime risk,” Stuart Levey, Chief Legal Officer at HSBC, said.

In a deferred prosecutio­n agreement a prosecutor grants an amnesty in exchange for the defendant agreeing to fulfill certain requiremen­ts, often including the payment of a fine and a pledge to avoid further bad behavior.

US prosecutor­s in 2012 said that in February 2008, Mexican authoritie­s told the CEO of HSBC’s Mexico unit that a local drug lord referred to the bank as the “place to launder money.”

Lax money laundering controls at HSBC allowed two cartels – one each in Mexico and Colombia – to move $881 million in drug proceeds through the bank over the second half of the last decade, according to documents in the case.

Following its signing of the DPA in 2012, HSBC embarked on a worldwide program of upgrading its compliance systems to US standards, raising its spending to more than $1 billion a year.

As part of the agreements with the U.S. prosecutor­s and Britain’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), HSBC also installed an independen­t monitor charged with producing annual reports on the progress of its reforms on fighting financial crime.

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