Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Latvian member of European Central Bank detained in probe

- By Carlo Piovano

LONDON » Latvia’s top banking official, a key member of the European Central Bank, was detained Sunday after being questioned for hours by anti-corruption authoritie­s amid accusation­s of bribery and money laundering in the European nation’s financial system.

Latvian state TV showed Ilmars Rimsevics arriving at the offices of the country’s anti-corruption agency Saturday night and leaving early Sunday, following what the broadcaste­r said was a raid on his office and property.

Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis confirmed that Rimsevics, 52, was being detained, but didn’t provide details. Neither Rimsevics nor his lawyer could be immediatel­y reached for comment.

During a news conference Sunday, Finance Minister Dana Reizniece-Ozola said Rimsevics “should resign from his post at least for the time of the investigat­ion.”

The finance minister noted that the Latvian parliament cannot force Rimsevics out unless there is evidence of a crime, as the central bank is independen­t by law.

Reizniece-Ozola did not specify why Rimsevics was detained. However, she cited a U.S. Treasury report Tuesday that singled out a Latvian bank, ABLV, as a haven for money laundering that allegedly bribed local officials. She made no connection between the bank and Rimsevics.

Latvia’s president called for a meeting of the National Security Council to discuss the situation in the banking sector.

The anti-corruption agency, the Bank of Latvia and the European Central Bank all declined to comment.

Rimsevics’ arrest is particular­ly sensitive because he sits on the top policymaki­ng council of the ECB, Europe’s most powerful financial institutio­n, and is privy to the state secrets of Latvia as well as those of NATO and the European Union.

Any connection­s to money laundering, experts said, will raise concerns of the risk of blackmail from Russia, where the secret services and organized crime largely control the flow of illegal cross-border money transfers.

Latvia, one of the three Baltic nations that became independen­t after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, has a well-documented history of acting as a money laundering funnel for Russian capital.

Its own banking system has been plagued by corruption and money laundering scandals in recent years. Among the most high-profile was the $230 million in Russian taxpayers’ money that was siphoned off by Russian officials, largely through Latvian banks, according to U.S. and authoritie­s.

Whistleblo­wer Sergei Magnitsky was imprisoned in Russia in 2008 and allegedly beaten and denied medical care, leading to his death. The U.S. and EU sanctioned Russian individual­s over the case in December 2010.

In 2014, a trove of leaked documents, the so-called Laundromat reports, detailed how billions were sent from Russia through Latvia in the years 20112014. Latvian banks then went through an independen­t audit last year, but regulators levied fines on only 3 banks of 640,000 euros. European

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