This
is something that Mike Ruppert has been talking about for several
years. The narcotics trade keeps the economy going.
HSBC
exposed: Drug money banking, terror dealings
International
banking giant HSBC may have financed terrorist groups and funneled
Mexican drug money into the US economy through its lax policies, a
damning Senate report reveals. The bank’s bosses have apologized
for the misconduct.
RT,
17
July, 2012
David
Bagley, HSBC’s Head of Group Compliance, admitted during a Senate
subcommittee hearing that the company had made a number of lapses,
adding that he planned to resign.
“I
recognize that there have been some significant areas of failure,”
Bagley told the US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigation. “I
have said before and I will say again: despite the best efforts and
intentions of many dedicated professionals, HSBC has fallen short of
our own expectations and the expectations of our regulators.”
Irene
Dorner, CEO and President of the bank's American operation (HBUS),
told the panel that HSBC deeply regrets the lapses in oversight,
apologizing for the company's mistakes.
Senator
Carl Levin, the chairman of the subcommittee, gave details of one
such intricate scheme to launder cash between 2006 and 2009.
“Because
our tough AML (anti-money laundering) laws in the United States have
made it hard for drug cartels to find a US bank willing to accept
huge unexplained deposits of cash, they now smuggle US dollars across
the border into Mexico and look for a Mexican bank, or ‘casa de
cambio’ to take the cash.,” Levin noted.
“Some of those casas
de cambio had accounts at HB Mexico, which, in turn, took all the
physical dollars that it got, transported them by armored car or
aircraft back across the border to HBUS for deposit in its US
Banknotes account, completing the laundering cycle.”
The
Senator welcomed HSBC’s apologies, but said it also had to be held
accountable. He called on the bank to consider shutting down its
Mexican affiliate, as well as other banks suspected of providing
funding for terrorists.
Earlier,
Levin said “the culture at HSBC was pervasively polluted for a long
time.”
The
findings are the results of a year-long Senate probe into HSBC’s
activities, highlighting systemic negligence throughout the bank’s
international structure. The probe was published in a 340-page report
in Washington on Tuesday.
Financing
terror and flouting the rules
HSBC’s
activities in Saudi Arabia were brought into question in the report,
specifically referencing banking with Al Rajhi Bank. The
investigation claims the Saudi bank has links to financing terrorism
based on evidence gathered after the September 11 attacks.
Information
collated by investigators suggests one of Al Rajhi’s founders was
an “early financial benefactor of al-Qaeda.”
HSBC
forbade its affiliates from doing business with the Saudi bank in
2005, but this policy was overturned only a few months later when the
banks resumed dealings.
In
addition, the report cites dealings with two Bangladeshi banks
thought to have links with terrorist organizations.
"From
an oversight perspective, the failure of accountability here is
dramatic," Senator Levin commented.
The
probe also details how the bank bypassed US safeguards that protect
against transactions potentially involving terrorists, drug lords,
and rogue regimes.
The investigations committee alludes to almost
25,000 transactions to Iran amounting to over $19 billion conducted
through the bank's US office over a period of seven years. The bank
did not disclose that the funds were being sent to Iran.
Narco-banking
The
reports cities HSBC’s activities in Mexico, highlighting the fact
that the country was treated as a long-risk client despite being a
known hub for drug trafficking and money laundering.
It
gives reference to the banking conglomerate’s Mexican affiliate
transporting a total of $7 billion in hard cash to HBUS from 2007 to
2008. The sheer quantity of capital transferred raised concerns that
some of it came from illegal drugs sales in the US.
The
report also implicates the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC), a US financial regulator, for failing to regulate HSBC’s
activities.
The
OCC reported multiple failings on the part of HSBC in 2010 to
implement anti-money laundering measures, namely its failure to
monitor $60 trillion in bank transfers and 17,000 account alerts
detailing suspicious activity.
The
Senate report lays the blame for HSBC’s negligence over the past
six years partly at the feet of the OCC for its lack of action in
spite of consistent evidence of the banks money laundering issues.
"We
have learned a great deal working with the subcommittee on this case
history and also working with US regulatory authorities, and
recognize that our controls could and should have been stronger and
more effective in order to spot and deal with unacceptable behavior,”
HSBC said in a statement. The bank also emphasize that they had
already taken “concrete steps” to address the issues including
drastic changes to “strengthen compliance, risk management and
culture."
The
new report comes after the UK’s largest bank revealed it would have
to pay a $1 billion fine to US authorities for money laundering
offenses committed between 2004 and 2010.
HSBC
Executive Resigns At Senate Money Laundering Hearing
HSBC
Holdings Plc (HSBA)’s head of group compliance, David Bagley, told
a Senate hearing he will step down amid charges the bank gave
terrorists, drug cartels and criminals access to the U.S. financial
system by failing to guard against money laundering.
18
July, 2012
Bagley
was among at least six HSBC executives who testified before the
Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations today after the
panel released a 335-page report describing a decade of compliance
failures by Europe’s biggest bank. London- based HSBC enabled drug
lords to launder money in Mexico, did business with firms linked to
terrorism and concealed transactions that bypassed U.S. sanctions
against Iran, Senate investigators said in the report.
“As
I have thought about the structural transformation of the bank’s
compliance function, I recommended to the group that now is the
appropriate time for me and for the bank for someone new to serve as
the head of group compliance,” Bagley said. “I have agreed to
work with the bank’s senior management towards an orderly
transition of this important role.”
Irene
Dorner, president and chief executive officer of HSBC North America
Holdings Inc., was also among executives who appeared before the
committee.
Risk
‘Sinkhole’
“The
problem here is that some international banks abuse their U.S.
access,” Senator Carl Levin, the Michigan Democrat who heads the
subcommittee, said at the start of the hearing. “The end result is
that the U.S. affiliate can become a sinkhole of risk for an entire
network of bank affiliates and their clients around the world playing
fast and loose with U.S. rules.”
Senate
investigators focused on New York-based HSBC Bank USA NA as a “nexus”
for U.S. dollar services and transfers. Senator Thomas Coburn of
Oklahoma, the subcommittee’s senior Republican, pointed out that
HSBC isn’t alone and that “similar problems exist at other
banks.”
Senior
executives from HSBC, credited with providing millions of pages of
documents for the investigation, expressed contrition and promised
changes in response to the findings after Levin said the bank’s
failings should provide sufficient cause for U.S. regulators to
consider revoking its charter.
“I
recognize that there have been some significant areas of failure,”
Bagley said at the hearing. “HSBC has fallen short of our own
expectations, and the expectations of our regulators.”
Paul
Thurston, head of HSBC’s retail banking and wealth management unit,
said the company will close the Mexico unit’s U.S. dollar accounts
in the Cayman Islands, a jurisdiction that Levin said is “known for
secrecy and money laundering.”
Terrorist
Links
The
lender ignored links to terrorist financing among its customer banks,
including Riyadh, Saudi Arabia-based Al Rajhi Bank, which had ties to
terror groups through its owners, according to the report. Internal
documents show HSBC decided to cut ties with the bank before
reversing itself under pressure from Al Rajhi, which received
shipments of $1 billion in cash from HSBC’s U.S. operation from
2006 to 2010, according to the report.
HSBC’s
U.S. unit “offers a gateway for terrorists to gain access to U.S.
dollars and the U.S. financial system,” according to the report.
“HSBC has a legal obligation to take reasonable steps to ensure it
is not dealing with banks that may have links to or facilitate
terrorist financing.”
Mohammad
Al Yami, an Al Rajhi spokesman, didn’t respond to an e-mail
requesting comment on the report.
Some
of HSBC’s alleged dealings with state sponsors of terror and
Mexican drug dealers were earlier reported by Bloomberg Markets
magazine.
U.S.
Fine
An
article in the July 2005 issue documented the bank’s ties to Iran,
Libya, Sudan and Syria. It reported the U.S. Treasury Department had
fined HSBC for a transfer in April 2000 of $100,000 benefiting the
Taliban, which at the time was running Afghanistan, and providing
Osama bin Laden with the base from which he plotted the Sept. 11
attacks.
Then-HSBC
CEO Stephen Green wrote a letter in response, saying, “This was a
singular and wholly irresponsible attack on the bank’s
international compliance procedures.”
A
story in the magazine’s August 2010 issue reported that an
investigation by the Mexican Finance Ministry found that drug dealers
used shell companies to open accounts at HSBC.
HSBC
bolstered its presence in Mexico in 2002 when it bought the nation’s
fifth-largest bank, Grupo Financiero Bital SA, better known as Bital,
which Senate investigators found had a history of deficiencies in
anti-money-laundering controls. At the time, Bital had “no
recognizable compliance or money- laundering function,” Bagley
wrote in an internal e-mail.
Lowest
Rating
From
2000 to 2009, HSBC gave its lowest risk rating to Mexico “despite
overwhelming information indicating that Mexico was a high-risk
jurisdiction for drug trafficking and money laundering,” Senate
investigators wrote. HSBC’s Mexican clients included casas de
cambio, or currency-exchange firms, that were identified in U.S.
Treasury Department warnings as hubs for laundering drug money.
Wells
Fargo & Co. (WFC)’s Wachovia Bank unit paid $160 million in
2010 to resolve a criminal probe that cartels were using such
exchange houses to launder cash through the lender.
HSBC’s
Mexican bank shipped $7 billion in bulk cash to the firm’s U.S.
bank in 2007 and 2008. That was more than all HSBC affiliates and
other banks in Mexico and left U.S. and Mexican authorities concerned
that the volumes could only be supplied by the illegal drug trade,
according to the report.
‘Rubber-Stamping’
Risk
In
2007, the head of Latin America compliance sent an e- mail to a
colleague condemning the Mexican affiliate for “rubber-stamping
unacceptable risks,” according to the report.
“What
is this, the School of Low Expectations Banking?” the executive,
John Root, wrote in the e-mail.
Leopoldo
Barroso, a former HSBC anti-money-laundering director, told company
officials in an exit interview that he was concerned about civil and
criminal sanctions and that there were “allegations of 60 percent
to 70 percent of laundered proceeds in Mexico” going through HSBC’s
affiliate, according to the report.
The
report also cited HSBC’s violations of Treasury Department
sanctions on dealings with Iran, which the U.S. is working to isolate
from the global banking system. The sanctions, enforced by the Office
of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, seek to punish Iran for operating
a nuclear program outside international inspection. Internal
communications show the U.S. bankers were aware that some of the
transactions were linked to Iran in violation of U.S. sanctions.
Outside
Audit
An
outside audit by Deloitte LLP showed that 25,000 transactions
totaling more than $19.4 billion involved Iran, according to the
report. Of those, as many as 90 percent passed through the bank’s
U.S. accounts with no disclosure of ties to Iran, the report shows.
Senate investigators documented similar transactions from a list of
other prohibited jurisdictions including North Korea, Cuba, Sudan and
Burma.
Bank
documents also showed HSBC’s U.S. unit cleared dollar transactions
through U.S. accounts for at least six Iranian banks.
Since
2009, the U.S. Justice Department entered deferred- prosecutions
agreements with six banks over OFAC violations, including ING Groep
NV (ING), Barclays Plc (BARC), ABN Amro Holding NV, Credit Suisse
Group AG (CSGN) and Lloyds Banking Group Plc. (LLOY) Most violations
involved stripping information from wire-transfer documentation to
hide the role of a banned person or country.
Manhattan
Investigation
HSBC
has said that it’s cooperating with investigations by the Justice
Department, Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, Federal Reserve
and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency into possible Iran
sanctions violations. It’s also cooperating in unrelated probes by
the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service into whether it
helped Americans evade taxes through HSBC India.
The
bank may face a fine from regulators of as much as $1 billion
according to some estimates, James Antos, an analyst at Mizuho
Securities Asia Ltd. wrote in a note to investors today.
“This
is an overhang that will be impossible to ignore when results are
announced” for HSBC’s first half on July 30, wrote Antos.
Many
of the Iran transfers described in the Senate report involved
so-called U-turn transactions, which were allowed under Treasury
regulations before November 2008. Those rules let U.S. banks process
dollar payments involving Iran that began and ended with non-Iranian
institutions.
U-Turn
Transactions
In
2005 and 2006, HSBC processed about 1,800 U-turn transactions through
a correspondent account at JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) The report
quoted an e-mail from HSBC Middle East Deputy Chairman David
Hodgkinson, who wrote that HSBC’s U.S. unit was “unwilling to
process them for reputational-risk reasons.”
The
Senate probe also accuses the OCC, the primary regulator of HSBC’s
U.S. bank, of failing to treat repeated findings of violations in
money-laundering controls with sufficient weight. The OCC tolerated
severe money-laundering deficiencies “for years,” according to
the report, while HSBC’s examiners were suggesting action to their
supervisors at the agency.
“We
agree with the concerns reflected in each of the recommendations and
will take actions in response,” Comptroller of the Currency Thomas
Curry said in testimony prepared for the hearing.
Anti-money-laundering
deficiencies will threaten banks’ safety-and-soundness ratings, as
recommended by the report, he said.


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