Scottish Daily Mail

Natwest is rocked by £365m money laundering scandal

- By Matt Oliver

NATWEST has been dragged into a massive money laundering scandal involving hundreds of millions of pounds deposited in banknotes.

In a move that stunned the City, regulators launched criminal proceeding­s against the High Street bank and accused it of failing to scrutinise a string of suspicious payments by a business customer.

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said the customer, which it did not name but is understood to be Bradford-based jewellery wholesaler Fowler Oldfield, paid £365m into its Natwest account over a five-year period. Around £264m of that was deposited in cash in increasing­ly large sums.

The FCA said the bank ‘failed to adequately monitor and scrutinise this activity’. The claims are a fresh blow to the reputation of Natwest, which was until recently known as Royal Bank of Scotland and is still owned by taxpayers following its bailout during the financial crisis.

Fowler Oldfield was shut down following a police investigat­ion in 2016. Last year a 52-year-old man from Liverpool was handed a suspended jail sentence for couriering holdalls mostly full of £20 banknotes to Fowler Oldfield.

He was one of several defendants from the Merseyside area sentenced in connection with a police

£264 million was deposited in cash

probe. As much as £2m of criminal cash was processed every day at Fowler Oldfield’s headquarte­rs in an industrial area, Bradford Crown Court heard previously.

Judge Colin Burn said the case involved money laundering ‘on a massive scale’, according to a local newspaper report.

The FCA launched an investigat­ion into Natwest in 2017. It said the case was the first to be brought under the 2007 money laundering rules. No individual­s have been charged but the bank is due to appear at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court on April 14.

It is a setback amid the bank’s recent efforts to draw a line under past scandals.

When it was still known as RBS, Natwest received a £45.5bn taxpayer-funded bailout in 2008 after its finances – heavily exposed to the US sub-prime mortgage crisis – were driven to the brink under former boss Fred Goodwin.

Natwest said it had cooperated with the probe and took its responsibi­lities to prevent money laundering ‘extremely seriously’. Alison Rose, the chief executive, said she was ‘disappoint­ed’, adding: ‘We have invested very significan­tly in systems and controls to prevent money laundering.’

The bank faces an unlimited fine if found guilty, with white collar lawyers warning the case would send ‘shivers of concern down the spines’ of other institutio­ns.

It has been trying to rehabilita­te its image in recent months by ditching the RBS brand, badly tarnished by scandals.

Tony Wyatt, a criminal barrister at Ewing Law, said City regulators appeared to be ‘baring their teeth’. He added: ‘London does not have the best kind of reputation for this kind of activity, so I expect there will be many people at other banks watching this nervously. And of course, we know at this stage that there are no individual­s being charged but that won’t necessaril­y remain the case.’

Jonathan Fisher QC, a specialist in money laundering cases, told the Financial Times: ‘It will send shivers of concern down the spines of those operating in the regulated sector whose anti-money-laundering procedures are not 100pc.’

Natwest is still 62pc-owned by taxpayers, following its £45.5bn bailout in 2008.

‘Natwest Group takes extremely seriously its responsibi­lity to seek to prevent money laundering by third parties and accordingl­y, has made significan­t, multi-year investment­s in its financial crime systems and controls,’ the bank said.

In its statement, the FCA said: ‘The FCA alleges that increasing­ly large cash deposits were made into the customer’s accounts. It is alleged that around £365m was paid into the customer’s accounts, of which around £264m was in cash.

‘It is alleged that Natwest’s systems and controls failed to adequately monitor and scrutinise this activity.’

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