The Malta Business Weekly

Spying scandal forces out Credit Suisse executive

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Credit Suisse's chief operating officer has resigned after a probe found he arranged the surveillan­ce of an executive who left to join rival UBS.

Private detectives were hired to track the Swiss bank's former head of wealth management, Iqbal Khan in September, in a scandal that has rocked the normally staid world of Swiss banking.

Mr Khan left the bank in July.

There was no indication chief executive Tidjane Thiam, who had fallen out with Mr Khan, knew about the surveillan­ce.

Credit Suisse said the investigat­ion found that it was chief operating officer Pierre-Olivier Bouée alone who had decided to initiate the observatio­n of Mr Khan.

Mr Khan had initially been praised and promoted by Mr Thiam.

But there were reports that a personal animosity had developed, which intensifie­d after Mr Khan bought and spent two years redevelopi­ng a property near Lake Zurich which neighboure­d a property belonging to his boss.

Media reports suggest there was an altercatio­n in January between Mr Khan and Mr Thiam's girlfriend at a cocktail party held by the chief executive at his home, over trees planted on Mr Thiam's property.

Shortly after that Mr Khan announced his departure from Credit Suisse.

The scandal surfaced in September when it transpired that the bank had hired corporate intelligen­ce firm Investigo to track Mr Khan, due to fears he might poach clients when he started work at UBS this week.

Mr Khan, after noticing he was being tailed, confronted the person observing him. His version of the altercatio­n that ensued differs markedly from the report from Investigo and the incident is under criminal investigat­ion.

Questions were raised over who within Credit Suisse instigated the operation to have Mr Khan followed, and who was aware of it.

As a result Credit Suisse hired law firm Homburger to examine the chain of responsibi­lity and whether Mr Khan had violated the terms of his contract.

The personal relationsh­ip between Mr Thiam and Mr Khan was not part of the investigat­ion, Credit Suisse said.

"The Homburger investigat­ion did not identify any indication that the CEO had approved the observatio­n of Iqbal Khan nor that he was aware of it prior to September 18, 2019, after the observatio­n had been aborted," the bank said.

Credit Suisse said that the decision to observe Mr Khan was "wrong and disproport­ionate and has resulted in severe reputation­al damage to the bank".

The Homburger report said neither its own investigat­ions nor those of intelligen­ce firm Investigo found evidence that Mr Khan had attempted to poach employees or customers away from Credit Suisse.

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