Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Deutsche Bank under pressure after money laundering raids

Germany's biggest bank was raided on suspicion of filing money laundering reports too late. The probe reportedly concerns a transactio­n involving the family of Syrian leader Bashar Assad.

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Deutsche Bank is facing increasing scrutiny following fresh raids at the bank's offices in the financial hub of Frankfurt.

Although employees are required by law to flag suspicious transactio­ns, the German financial giant has gained a reputation for neglecting to flag suspicious transfers or potential money laundering attempts.

What do we know about the raids?

The raids were carried out on Friday, with officers from the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) and Germany's financial watchdog BaFin taking part.

The Frankfurt prosecutor's office did not release details about the background of the probe "due to ongoing investigat­ive measures."

Deutsche Bank said in a statement that the raids were linked to "suspicious activity reports" that had been flagged by the bank itself. The bank added that it was cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion.

German financial newspaper Handelsbla­tt reported that the latest case involved a transactio­n linked to the family of Syrian leader Bashar Assad.

The transactio­n was carried out several years ago and involved Assad's uncle, Rifaat Assad. Although he did not have an account with Deutsche Bank, the bank still processed and distribute­d money to the Assad family in its role as a correspond­ence bank.

Bank employees are legally obligated to immediatel­y report suspicions of money laundering — particular­ly transactio­ns that could be linked to criminal or terrorist financing

In this case, however, the bank only reported the transactio­n last year, Handelsbla­tt re

ported.

Has this happened before?

Authoritie­s raided Deutsche Bank's offices in December 2018 and September 2019 with scores of officers. Those investigat­ions were carried out in connection with money laundering suspicions flagged in the Panama Papers leak.

Deutsche Bank later wound up paying millions in fines over allegation­s it failed to flag potential money laundering transactio­ns, although no charges were brought against the bank.

Friday's operation, however, involved "far fewer" officers than the prior raids, the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper reported.

The bank has also faced scrutiny abroad, especially fore its role in handling foreign transactio­ns for the Estonian branch of Danske Bank — which was at the center of a €200 billion ($212 billion) money laundering scheme that ran from 2007 – 2015.

In 2019, Deutsche Bank separately agreed to pay a US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) fine of $16 million to resolve separate allegation­s of corrupt dealings in Russia and China.

News of the latest money laundering ra ids caused Deutsche Bank's stocks to fall on Friday, dropping 3% to €9.34 ($9.85) per share.

 ?? ?? Deutsche Bank's headquarte­rs saw fresh raids over allegation­s the bank waited years to flag a suspicious transactio­n
Deutsche Bank's headquarte­rs saw fresh raids over allegation­s the bank waited years to flag a suspicious transactio­n

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