The Hamilton Spectator

Former head of Danske Bank’s Estonian branch found dead

Aivar Rehe was in charge duriong period when it allegedly laundered $230 billion

- DOMINIC CHOPPING AND PATRICIA KOWSMANN

STOCKHOLM—An executive who led the bank branch at the center of a $230-billion money-laundering scandal in Estonia has been found dead in a suspected suicide.

Aivar Rehe, the 56-year-old former chief executive of Danske Bank’s Estonia branch, had been missing since Monday morning when he left his home in Tallinn on foot. His family raised an alarm and search teams had been looking for him since.

Danske is being investigat­ed by authoritie­s in the U.S., Estonia, Denmark and France for allegedly facilitati­ng the laundering of about $230 billion (U.S.) by non-Estonians—primarily Russians—through its branch in Tallinn between 2007 and 2015. Despite being warned of possible wrongdoing at the branch for years, including by a whistleblo­wer in 2014, the bank only disclosed the problems in 2017 under pressure from news reports.

The bank has acknowledg­ed it reacted “too late and slowly.”

Several officers who worked in both the branch and the Danish headquarte­rs of Danske Bank have been named as suspects in separate investigat­ions in Estonia and Denmark. Estonia’s prosecutor­s’ office said Mr. Rehe wasn’t a suspect in its continuing criminal investigat­ion. Denmark’s prosecutor­s’ office declined to comment on whether Mr. Rehe was a suspect in its probe.

Estonian Police and Border Guard Board spokeswoma­n Tuuli Härson said Mr. Rehe’s body was found Wednesday morning close to his home.

“There are no signs of violence on the body, and there is no indication of an accident,” a police statement said. The case is being treated as suicide, a person familiar with the investigat­ion said.

Mr. Rehe headed the Danish bank’s branch in Estonia between 2006 and 2015.

In an interview with Estonian newspaper Postimees in March, Mr. Rehe said he believed the bank had proper money-laundering controls and checks in place.

Asked if he felt any responsibi­lity, he added: “Of course I feel. Naturally. I have led the bank [for] 10 years, these were my people. All the 500 people, naturally.”

Danske Bank said, “We are saddened to learn of the death of Aivar Rehe, the former head of our Estonian branch.”

The scandal has erased more than 60% of the stock-market value of Denmark’s largest bank and forced the resignatio­n of its star chief executive last year. It has also tarred the reputation of the country, often ranked among the world’s most transparen­t.

Transfer of illicit money out of Russia particular­ly through countries in the Baltic region into Europe has been of particular concern to U.S. authoritie­s, given part of the laundered money often ends up in the U.S.

The Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission are investigat­ing Danske’s money-laundering allegation­s following a complaint made by the whistleblo­wer years ago that also identified Deutsche Bank AG, which is supervised by U.S. regulators, for processing U.S. dollar transactio­ns for Danske’s Estonian branch as a correspond­ent bank. On Wednesday, Frankfurt prosecutor­s showed up at Deutsche Bank’s headquarte­rs in Germany in search for Danske-related documents.

“Deutsche Bank has comprehens­ively examined the facts of the matter and has voluntaril­y provided the requested documents as far as possible,” the bank said.

 ?? KASPER PALSNOV AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE FILE PHOTO ?? Danske Bank is being investigat­ed for allegedly facilitati­ng the laundering of about $230 billion by non-Estonians — primarily Russians — through its branch in Tallinn between 2007 and 2015.
KASPER PALSNOV AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE FILE PHOTO Danske Bank is being investigat­ed for allegedly facilitati­ng the laundering of about $230 billion by non-Estonians — primarily Russians — through its branch in Tallinn between 2007 and 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada