Mystery over euros being flushed down toilets at UBS branch in Geneva

Police have extracted tens of thousands of euros in soiled bills, many of which appear to have been cut with scissors
Mara Bernath
File Photo. A picture illustration of euro banknotes taken in the central Bosnian town of Zenica. Photo: Reuters
File Photo. A picture illustration of euro banknotes taken in the central Bosnian town of Zenica. Photo: Reuters

Geneva Swiss prosecutors are trying to figure out why someone apparently attempted to flush tens of thousands of euros down the toilet at a Geneva branch of UBS Group AG.

The first 500-euro ($597) bills were discovered several months ago in a bathroom close to a bank vault containing hundreds of safe deposit boxes, according to a report in Tribune de Geneve confirmed by the city prosecutor’s office. A few days later, more banknotes turned up in toilets at three nearby restaurants, requiring thousands of francs in plumbing repairs to unclog the pipes.

In all, police have extracted tens of thousands of euros in soiled bills, many of which appear to have been cut with scissors.

While destroying banknotes isn’t a crime in Switzerland, “there must be something behind this story,” said Henri Della Casa, a spokesman for the Geneva Prosecutor’s Office. “That’s why we started an investigation.”

He declined to discuss the case further. UBS also declined to comment on the incident at its branch on the Rue de la Corraterie in downtown Geneva. Bloomberg