Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Prosecutors: Bank to pay over $100M
NEW YORK — Deutsche Bank agreed Friday to pay fines and penalties of more than $100 million to avoid a criminal prosecution on charges it participated in a foreign bribery scheme.
Lawyers for the bank waived its right to face an indictment on conspiracy charges during a teleconference with a federal judge in New York City.
According to court papers, Deutsche Bank bribed intermediaries to make deals in Saudi Arabia between 2009 and 2016, labeling the payments as “referral fees” for consultants. In one instance around 2012, the bank paid one of its fixers $1,087,538 “and caused those payments to be falsely recorded in the company’s books, records and accounts,” the papers said.
Other intermediaries demanded financing for a yacht and for a house in France as compensation, the papers said.
The penalties against Deutsche Bank included a criminal fine of $85,186,206 and a payment of $43,329,622 to settle a related U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission action, prosecutors said.
A Deutsche Bank spokesman, Dan Hunter, declined to comment on the specifics of the case. But he said that the deferred prosecution agreement showed that the bank was taking responsibility for its actions and that its cooperation with federal authorities “reflect our transparency and determination to put these matters firmly in the past.”
The resolution comes in the waning days of the administration of President Donald Trump, who had a longtime personal business association with a bank.