Scottish Daily Mail

The £365 million money laundering den that rocked Natwest

It’s a century old jewellers . . . in Bradford

- By Matt Oliver

IT WOULD have looked unremarkab­le to a passerby: A man carrying a holdall, walking into a building on an industrial estate.

It was anything but. The bag was stuffed with more than £250,000 in cash.

And the man carrying it was among a procession of couriers who ensured up to £2m flowed into that building every day.

Police would later raid the premises and smash the network behind the operation.

In a subsequent trial, the judge branded their actions as money laundering on ‘a massive scale’.

It is against this dramatic backdrop that Natwest now finds itself heading to court.

The High Street lender, formerly known as Royal Bank of Scotland, was this week revealed to have provided banking services to the firm at the centre of the criminal operation – gold dealer Fowler Oldfield.

That led regulators to launch criminal proceeding­s against the bank on Tuesday, in a move that has surprised many in the City.

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) accused Natwest of breaching anti-money-laundering regulation­s when handling a string of cash deposits made by Fowler Oldfield between November 2011 and October 2016.

Some £365m worth of payments into the firm’s account included £264m deposited in bank notes, the FCA alleges.

Financial firms must do everything possible to prevent their services from becoming the tools of criminals, laws passed in 2007 say. The case against Natwest is the first criminal prosecutio­n ever undertaken under the 2007 rules.

When handling funds from Fowler Oldfield, the FCA alleges that Natwest failed to properly scrutinise ‘increasing­ly large cash deposits’.

Fowler Oldfield was shut down in 2016 and its assets are in the hands of the police, who are still investigat­ing.

Prosecutio­ns have already resulted in several defendants from the Merseyside area being sentenced in the past two years, including men who transporte­d the cash.

Prosecutor­s said a courier would be summoned by text message and did not know how much was in each bag he dropped off at Fowler Oldfield, according to a local newspaper report.

They would then hand the cash to Fowler Oldfield’s reception and were usually given an envelope containing a token for proof of delivery. The men were paid for transporti­ng the money.

Bags were then unpacked in a counting room behind closed doors at Fowler Oldfield and the amount from each courier recorded in a ledger. But it was this ledger and CCTV footage that later helped investigat­ors to identify the couriers, after West Yorkshire Police’s economic crime unit raided the site in 2016.

Police were supported by the National Crime Agency, often dubbed Britain’s answer to the FBI, with 12 people arrested for money laundering offences. When sentencing four couriers, crown court Judge

Colin Burn noted that they had been targeted for recruitmen­t because of their debts, often from gambling.

One man feared that if he had not delivered the money there would be consequenc­es for himself and his family.

According to a liquidator report in January, Fowler Oldfield’s assets are still held by police. It still owes £1.7m to Natwest in overdrafts and loans, while £10.5m is owed to other unsecured creditors.

Police investigat­ions into the money laundering remain ‘ongoing’, according to the liquidator’s report.

A source familiar with the probes said a remarkable aspect was the simple methods employed. ‘Money laundering these days can be complicate­d,’ the source said, adding that the convicted men were ‘doing it the old-fashioned way’.

Natwest has stated that it has cooperated with the criminal probe and that it took its antimoney-laundering responsibi­lities ‘extremely seriously’. The Bank’s chief executive, Alison Rose (pictured), said that Natwest had ‘invested very significan­tly in systems and controls to prevent money laundering.’

No individual­s have been charged, and there is a hearing listed at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court on April 14.

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 ??  ?? Shut down: Police raided Fowler Oldfield back in September 2016
Shut down: Police raided Fowler Oldfield back in September 2016

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