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Leak of $100b Credit Suisse account details faces criminal investigat­ion

The case could dent efforts to boost transparen­cy in Switzerlan­d

- ZURICH Sueddeutsc­he —Bloomberg

Informatio­n on 18,000 accounts was leaked to an internatio­nal consortium of media, who went on to publish a series of exposes last February under the tagline ‘Suisse Secrets’.

The leak of account details of thousands of former Credit Suisse Group AG clients — including drug barons and kleptocrat­s — who’d held more than $100 billion faces a criminal probe in a case that could dent efforts to boost transparen­cy in secretive Switzerlan­d.

Switzerlan­d’s Attorney General’s Office confirmed it’s investigat­ing suspected acts of corporate spying and violations of banking secrecy laws after the informatio­n on 18,000 accounts was leaked to an internatio­nal consortium of media, who went on to publish a series of exposes last February under the tagline “Suisse Secrets.”

The probe needed sign off from the federal government because the espionage allegation­s are considered a “political infraction,” the AG’s office said. The bank declined to comment.

Banking secrecy

Bern’s blessing for the investigat­ion highlights the lengths Switzerlan­d goes to in order to protect banking secrecy, a principle enshrined in Swiss criminal law. The probe is also likely to intensify internatio­nal criticism of Switzerlan­d’s tendency to prosecute the whistleblo­wer rather than the criminal activity exposed in the leak.

An anonymous whistleblo­wer gave the informatio­n to German newspaper

Zeitung, which shared data with a nonprofit journalism group and dozens of other news organizati­ons worldwide. But Tamedia, publishers of the respected Swiss-German daily Tages-Anzeiger which has worked on such collaborat­ive projects in the past, said it couldn’t work on Suisse Secrets because of a risk of falling afoul of the bank secrecy law.

When the leaks were published a year ago, CS issued a statement saying that approximat­ely 90 per cent of the reviewed accounts were closed or were in the process of being closed.

 ?? Reuters ?? ■
Account details of thousands of former Credit Suisse clients, including drug barons and kleptocrat­s, have been leaked.
Reuters ■ Account details of thousands of former Credit Suisse clients, including drug barons and kleptocrat­s, have been leaked.

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