Los Angeles Times

Bank unit settles money laundering case

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Dutch lender Rabobank’s California subsidiary agreed Wednesday to forfeit $369 million after a long-running investigat­ion concluded the unit was used to launder millions of dollars in Mexican drug money.

The subsidiary, Rabobank National Assn., also pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Jill Burkhardt did not provide details during a brief hearing, but Rabobank said last month that the subsidiary probably would acknowledg­e that employees hid informatio­n from regulators nearly five years ago.

It marks one of the largest U.S. settlement­s involving the laundering of Mexican drug money, though it’s still only a fraction of the $1.9 billion that Britain’s HSBC agreed to pay in 2012.

The Rabobank settlement surpasses the $160 million that Wachovia Bank agreed to pay in 2010.

Rabobank attorney James Cavoli declined to speak with reporters outside the courtroom. Company representa­tives did not respond to a phone message and emails seeking comment.

Last month, former bank subsidiary compliance officer George M. Martin agreed to cooperate with authoritie­s in a deal that delays his prosecutio­n for two years.

Martin, a vice president and anti-money-laundering investigat­ions manager, acknowledg­ed he oversaw policies and practices that blocked or stymied investigat­ions into suspicious transactio­ns.

He said he acted at the direction of supervisor­s, or at least with their knowledge.

He told investigat­ors that he and others allowed millions of dollars to pass through the bank without adequate scrutiny, despite being warned about the client.

Investigat­ors said the business came from a Mexican customer who made more than $10 million in suspicious transactio­ns. They said a bank in Calexico — a California city on the Mexico border — wanted more business.

Authoritie­s seized the account in 2011 on suspicion it was being used to move millions of dollars in drug proceeds.

Martin and others were accused of failing to alert authoritie­s to other suspicious activity at branches in Calexico and Tecate, another border town.

In 2009 and 2010, investigat­ors say, employees allowed a Mexican client to withdraw nearly $500,000 in amounts just under federal reporting requiremen­ts, even though the client had been reported to the Treasury Department at least 25 times for suspicious activity.

The efforts to hide suspicious activity occurred from 2009 to 2012.

U.S. authoritie­s began investigat­ing the bank in 2013.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? RABOBANK National Assn. pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press RABOBANK National Assn. pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States.

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