Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Secrecy Act violations cost U.S. Bancorp

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NEW YORK — U.S. Bancorp said Thursday it will pay $613 million in fines and penalties to settle allegation­s that the bank had poor anti-money laundering controls, which put the bank repeatedly at risk of being used as a conduit for criminals.

The $613 million penalty is being split between multiple federal agencies. The bank will pay $453 million to the U.S. Treasury through the Southern District of New York; $70 million to the Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network, a government agency tasked with handling money laundering cases; $15 million to the Federal Reserve; and $75 million to the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency.

Regulators say the Minneapoli­s-based bank “willfully” violated the Bank Secrecy Act, failing to report suspicious activity. Bank employees failed to fill out reports appropriat­ely, impeding the ability for law enforcemen­t to do their jobs.

In one case involving Scott Tucker, a former profession­al race car driver who was sentenced to more than 16 years in prison for an illegal payday lending scheme in January, U.S. Bank employees willfully did not file appropriat­e suspicious activity reports to regulators and deliberate­ly ignored potential flags for years. Tucker moved more than $2 billion in revenue through accounts at U.S. Bank that were tied to his illegal payday lending scheme, the Justice Department said Thursday.

In a statement, U.S. Bank said it has restructur­ed and enlarged its anti-money laundering program. The penalty was already accounted for in the bank’s financial results, so there will not be a material impact on the company’s first quarter results, the bank said.

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