The Mail on Sunday

HSBC faces ‘dirty money’ lawsuits

As bank giant’s shares sink to new low...

- By Helen Cahill and Adam Luck

TWO American law firms have started building class action law suits against HSBC and Standard Chartered following allegation­s the banking giants failed to crack down on money laundering.

Labaton Sucharow and Schall Law, which both have a track record of pursuing vast l egal claims against listed companies, said they have begun investigat­ing the blue chip firms after leaked files caused their share prices to plunge on Monday.

Class action l a ws u i t s a l l o w multiple claims against a single defendant. They are common in America where they have been successful­ly used against Briti sh firms and are i ncreasingl­y e mployed o n this side of the Atlantic.

The Mail on Sunday revealed in June that HSBC faces a separate £1.3 billion class action legal claim for its i nvolvement in a fi l m scheme used for tax avoidance.

A cache of files released last weekend allegedly show HSBC continued to move dirty cash for clients it already suspected of nefarious activity.

The bank raised the alarm over irregular transactio­ns in 2,100 suspicious activity reports (SARs) filed with the US Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network between 2000 and 2017.

Banks are supposed to stop moving cash or shut down accounts if they have evidence of criminal activity. But the reports claimed HSBC did not take action.

HSBC’s share price plunged to its lowest level since 1995 following the allegation­s – falling 5.3 per cent on Monday to £2.88.

Standard Chartered shares fell 5.8 per cent on the same day to £3.38.

Labaton Sucharow lawyer David Schwartz said he is investigat­ing the events that led to the document leak, dubbed the FinCen files.

Brian Schall of Schall Law has urged investors to contact his firm if they suffered losses of $100,000 or more as the banks’ share prices fell. A legal source said: ‘There are listing obligation­s that require the disclosure of material events.

‘It’s about whether the representa­tions made by the banks at the time someone bought their shares were true or not.

‘It doesn’t surprise me at all that firms are considerin­g taking legal action when shareholde­r value has been reduced by so much in such a short timeframe. That follows a pattern of cases that were brought after the financial crash.’

A spokesman for HSBC said: ‘Starting in 2012, HSBC embarked on a multi-year journey to overhaul its ability to combat financial crime across more than 60 jurisdicti­ons. During that period, the monitor fulfilled his role of identifyin­g issues and making recommenda­tions for improvemen­t and concluded HSBC became a safer bank each year as a result of the bank’s efforts.’

Standard Chartered declined to comment on the potential claims.

A Standard Chartered whistleblo­wer, former executive Julian Knight who first revealed his identity in The Mail on Sunday last year, said he believes the leaked dossiers will aid his landmark legal case.

Knight claims he was forced out of Standard Chartered Bank (SCB) after raising the alarm about client companies suspected of helping Iran to sidestep US sanctions.

The Mail on Sunday revealed last year that Knight had provided US investigat­ors with a list of SCB clients, which he suspected were fronts for the Iranian military and its nuclear programme. Knight, a former RAF pilot, now points out that many of the firms on his original list have cropped up on the FinCen l eak despite Standard Chartered rubbishing his claims. He said: ‘The FinCen leak vindicates our case because it has disclosed many of the same sanctioned and sanctionab­le companies t hat I disclosed t o US investigat­ors.’

Last year SCB was fined £900 million for breaching US sanctions after it was found the bank had been dealing with Iranian, Cuban and Sudanese entities.

Knight was based in Dubai as global head of transactio­n banking foreign exchange. He said he alerted the bank about its online trading system in 2011.

Among the SCB clients he disclosed to US investigat­ors were Blom Bank, Byblos Bank, both from Lebanon, and the Turkish Halk Bank. All three have been disclosed in the FinCen leak as being the subject of SARs at Standard Chartered. Blom and Byblos are also being sued by the families of US military personnel in a court case, which targets companies they say helped fund Iranian terror networks. Knight, and a US whistleblo­wer who cannot be named for legal reasons, are locked in a legal battle with the US government over a landmark compensati­on claim.

Standard Chartered said: ‘ The [ whistleblo­wer’s compensati­on] lawsuit has been dismissed and the false allegation­s underpinni­ng it have been thoroughly discredite­d by the US authoritie­s who undertook a comprehens­ive investigat­ion into the claims and said they were “meritless” and did not show any violations of US sanctions.

‘ The bank is not in mediation regarding these scurrilous claims and looks forward to appellate affirmatio­n of the dismissal.’

 ??  ?? SWOOP: A police raid in the global war on drugs which spawns dirty money
SWOOP: A police raid in the global war on drugs which spawns dirty money

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