New York state today accused global banking giant Standard Chartered
of hiding about 60,000 secret transactions with the Iranian government,
involving a whopping USD 250 billion, and exposing the US financial
system to terrorists, weapon dealers and drug kingpins.
The UK-based bank, which has significant presence across the world,
has also been found to have deficient money laundering controls in its
outsourcing of work to India, found a probe by New York State Department
of Financial Services.
"For almost ten years, SCB (Standard Chartered Bank) schemed with the
Government of Iran and hid from regulators roughly 60,000 secret
transactions, involving at least USD 250 billion, and reaping SCB
hundreds of millions of dollars in fees," the New York state department
said in a 27-page order."SCB's actions left the US financial system vulnerable to terrorists,
weapons dealers, drug kingpins and corrupt regimes, and deprived law
enforcement investigators of crucial information used to track all
manner of criminal activity," it added.
The order further said SCB had assured the Department in May 2010
that it would take immediate corrective actions on issues previously
raised by the US Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).
Notwithstanding that promise, the state department's last regulatory
examination of the banks' New York branch in 2011 identified continuing
and significant BSA/AML (Banking Secrecy Act/Anti Money Laundering)
failures.
Among these, the bank was outsourcing its "entire OFAC compliance
process for the New York branch to Chennai, India, with no evidence of
any oversight or communication between the Chennai and the New York
offices."
Part of the US Department of Treasury, the OFAC is the designated
government agency for preparing list of entities with whom US citizens
and entities are barred from doing any business.
The other failures included an OFAC compliance system that lacked the
ability to identify misspellings and variations of names on the OFAC
sanctioned list.
Also, there was no documented evidence of investigation before
release of funds for transactions with parties whose names matched the
OFAC-sanctioned list.
The order against Stanchart by New York state comes close on the heel
of the US Senate's Permanent Committee on Investigations report on July
17 charging another UK-based global bank HSBC of exposing the US
financial system to terrorist financing and money laundering risks.
In that probe too, HSBC's staff in India had come under the scanner
for deficiencies in their role as "offshore reviewers" of the global
banking giant's compliance to safety mechanism against money laundering
and terrorist financing.
The Senate sub-committee probe found that HSBC's Anti-Money
Laundering (AML) Compliance Department, which included employees in
India, was highly inadequately staffed and deficiencies were found in
the quality of the work done by HSBC's "offshore reviewers in India",
who were used for clearing a major backlog of suspected transaction
alerts at the bank.
The New York State Financial Services Department said its order
against Stanchart follows an "extensive investigation (that) included
the review of more than 30,000 pages of documents, including internal
SCB e-mails that describe willful and egregious violations of law."
Source: NDTV
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