Arab Times

French court turns down UBS request

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A French court on Thursday threw out a request by Swiss bank UBS for the constituti­onal court to drop money laundering charges and limit proceeding­s to complicity in tax fraud, which carries lighter penalties.

UBS Group AG, its French unit and six executives and former executives face charges of aggravated tax fraud and money laundering in an investigat­ion into allegation­s they helped wealthy clients avoid taxes in France.

Under French law, a defendant can on the first day of a trial raise objections to the case going ahead on grounds that the constituti­on has been flouted. The court described the bank’s arguments as “devoid of seriousnes­s”.

After seven years of investigat­ion and aborted settlement negotiatio­ns, UBS will also answer allegation­s that it illegally solicited clients in France.

UBS, Switzerlan­d’s largest bank, said in a statement it still expects the court will re-qualify the charges based “on the facts presented and the law.”

“We believe that the prosecutio­n has not presented any evidence to support that a crime has been committed,” the bank said. “We look forward to finally being able to present all of our factual and legal arguments to the court.”

If found guilty of money laundering, UBS could be fined up to 5 billion euros ($5.8 billion). French criminal law lets judges enforce fines as high as half the amount laundered and in this case prosecutor­s estimate that up to 10.6 billion euros was denied to the French tax authoritie­s. (RTRS)

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