Philippine Daily Inquirer

6 bank execs charged in $81-M cyberheist

- —REUTERS

The country’s antimoney laundering body has filed charges against five officials of Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) bank and a former treasurer who “willfully ignored” suspicious activity that led to tens of millions of dollars vanishing after a heist on Bangladesh’s central bank.

Unknown cyber criminals tried to steal nearly $1 billion from the Bangladesh Bank in February in what was one of the biggest bank heists ever.

They succeeded in transferri­ng some $81 million via an account at the New York Federal Reserve to four accounts in fake names at an RCBC branch in Manila. Most of the cash was quickly withdrawn and laundered through multiple channels.

In a 97-page complaint to the justice ministry, the AntiMoney Laundering Council (AMLC) said former RCBC treasurer Raul Tan, three retail banking officials and two workers at the branch where cash was withdrawn were guilty of money laundering because they should have noticed something was wrong and intervened immediatel­y.

Only about $15 million has been recovered and returned to Bangladesh, with another $2.7 million frozen. The rest of the funds changed hands several times and vanished in the Philippine casino industry.

No arrests have been made despite investigat­ions by the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, Interpol, Bangladesh police and authoritie­s in the Philippine­s.

Tan resigned as the bank’s treasurer in April.

The AMLC complaint, seen by Reuters on Wednesday and filed on Nov. 18, covers three retail banking workers and two customer relations officers at its Jupiter branch in Makati City. The complaint was based on evidence gathered from the bank.

“Tan was in a position to order enhanced due diligence based on the red flags,” it said.

“Tan could have convened the antimoney laundering committee to act on these red flags,” the AMLC said, adding Tan “willfully ignored them and failed to conduct thorough investigat­ion,” as required by law and the bank’s regulation­s.

Tan’s actions showed he had “knowledge that the funds transacted represente­d the proceeds of an unlawful activity,” it said.

RCBC, in a statement, said its own probe had found no official from the head office involved in the transactio­n, which was initiated and carried out by the Jupiter branch.

“Wewelcome the charges as an opportunit­y to conclusive­ly prove that our executives acted properly and had no knowledge or participat­ion in any money laundering,” CEO and president Gil Buenaventu­ra said.

Longtime RCBC client, casino owner and agent Kim Wong had admitted during a Senate inquiry that he received millions of the loot from two Chinese gamblers but did not know it was stolen. He denies involvemen­t in the heist and has returned $15 million of around $35 million he said he received.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines