The Guardian (USA)

Tax authoritie­s mount raids on 19 German banks and homes

- Kate Connolly in Berlin

Eleven banks and eight private homes and offices across Germany have been raided by police and tax investigat­ors as part of a wide-ranging investigat­ion into tax evasion.

The raids, which began at dawn on Wednesday and went on into the afternoon, were part of the same investigat­ion started last November over money laundering allegation­s linked to the so-called Panama Papers scandal, alleged to involve Deutsche Bank.

The eight individual­s under investigat­ion are alleged to have founded companies in offshore tax havens aided by a former British Virgin Islands branch of Deutsche Bank.

“With the help of a former subsidiary of a major German bank, they are each believed to have founded companies in tax havens on the British Virgin Islands to hide capital gains from the German tax authoritie­s and evade tax that was due on them,” Frankfurt state prosecutor­s said in a statement.

Among the properties searched were the offices of tax advisers and asset management companies, in Munich, Hamburg, Bad Tölz, Bonn, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Aachen, Cologne and Sylt, an island off the North Sea coast.

Deutsche Bank issued a statement on Wednesday stressing that the investigat­ions are aimed at private individual­s and not the bank itself. Its offices had not been searched, it said, adding that the bank was offering its assistance to investigat­ors and voluntaril­y handing over documents requested of it.

The last major raid linked to a case, which has shaken investors and regulators in Germany, took place on 29 and 30 November 2018, and involved more than 170 officers who searched the headquarte­rs of Deutsche Bank and other offices.

A fourth quarter loss suffered by the bank earlier this year was put down by bosses in part to the negative publicity surroundin­g the raids.

The bank continued to deny any wrong-doing on Wednesday.

The small British Virgin Islands branch of the bank was part of its Global Trust Solutions business, which was later sold by Deutsche Bank to NT Butterfiel­d & Son, a lender based in Bermuda.

Deutsche Bank said in a statement: “The investigat­ions are not directed at Deutsche Bank. The state prosecutor is investigat­ing private persons. Deutsche Bank is cooperatin­g with the prosecutor­s and is voluntaril­y handing over all the documents requested of it. A

search of the bank’s offices has therefore not taken place.”

In 2016 in the Panama Papers exposé, an internatio­nal media network, including the Guardian, revealed flows of money going from an array of politician­s, business people and celebritie­s to the central American tax haven of Panama where thousands of offshore companies are registered. The scandal put a large number of individual­s and businesses under pressure to explain themselves.

 ??  ?? Eight individual­s under investigat­ion are alleged to have founded companies in offshore tax havens aided by a former British Virgin Islands branch of Deutsche Bank. Photograph: Antlos
Eight individual­s under investigat­ion are alleged to have founded companies in offshore tax havens aided by a former British Virgin Islands branch of Deutsche Bank. Photograph: Antlos

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