The Pak Banker

Deutsche Bank took years to flag suspect Danske money flows

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TALLINN: Deutsche Bank did not disclose more than one million suspect money transfers with Danske Bank until February, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said, about five years after a whistleblo­wer flagged suspicious transactio­ns at Danske.

Deutsche sent alerts about the suspect money flows involving the Danish bank to Germany's money laundering data authority and state prosecutor­s, the person said, prompting investigat­ors to seek more informatio­n from Deutsche.

Prosecutor­s are now investigat­ing whether staff or management at Deutsche sanctioned the transactio­ns, and whether they subsequent­ly tried to cover them up, the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Deutsche did not comment on the time taken to flag the transactio­ns to authoritie­s, which has previously not been reported, but said it ended its relationsh­ip with Danske in 2015 and had strengthen­ed its anti-money laundering controls. Danske Bank was ejected from Estonia this year after admitting 200 billion euros ($220 billion) of suspicious money flowed through its branch there between 2007 and 2015.

Deutsche was dragged into the scandal because it processed the bulk of the transactio­ns for the Danish bank, leading German prosecutor­s to visit Deutsche's headquarte­rs last month with police and a search warrant.

Asked about the case, Deutsche said in an emailed statement that it "remains committed to providing appropriat­e informatio­n to all authorised investigat­ions." "We have considerab­ly increased staff numbers in Anti-Financial Crime and more than tripled our staff since 2015. We invested since 2016 700 million euros in upgrading our key control functions there."

Following the informatio­n from Deutsche, German prosecutor­s visited their counterpar­ts in Estonia in recent weeks to investigat­e the suspect money flows further, the person said.

Prosecutor­s are now investigat­ing a small fraction of the 1.1 million transfers flagged by Deutsche, involving Russia and former Soviet states in 2014 and 2015, the person added.

If investigat­ors find that Deutsche staff or management sanctioned and covered up its involvemen­t in the suspicious transactio­ns, those bankers or the group itself could face criminal prosecutio­n, the person said. That would deal another blow to Deutsche's reputation and a setback to Chief Executive Christian Sewing's drive to turn around Germany's biggest lender.

Once Germany's flagship bank on Wall Street, Deutsche has been shrinking to try to return to sustainabl­e profitabil­ity and has been hit by a string of penalties, including a $7.2 billion fine in 2017 for selling toxic US mortgages before the financial crash.

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