A coke-smuggling wrestler delays Credit Suisse's return to boring banking

Credit Suisse said in a pre-trial statement that it "unreservedly rejects as meritless all allegations in this legacy matter raised against it and is convinced that its former employee is innocent"

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Credit Suisse

Hugo Miller | Bloomberg 

Credit Suisse
The Zurich bank and a former client relationship manager are accused of failing to prevent money laundering by customers

A cocaine-smuggling Bulgarian wrestler and briefcases stuffed with banknotes are hampering scandal-weary Group’s bid to return to boring banking.

The Zurich bank, which has suffered a slew of bad headlines over the past two years, and a former client relationship manager went on trial on Monday accused of failing to prevent money laundering by customers working with the fighter-turned-criminal.

The Bulgarian, later convicted for drug offenses, allegedly tapped his friends to use Zurich branches of to launder proceeds from his drug smuggling.

Swiss prosecutors can press criminal charges against banks if they believe those institutions didn’t do enough to screen clients and their cash for obvious ties to illicit activity. The woman ex-manager, who can only be named as E. under Swiss reporting restrictions, accepted deposits of used bank notes that regularly exceeded 500,000 euros ($564,000) at a time, according to the 515-page indictment.

E. carried out the transactions despite “strong indications as to the criminal origin of the funds, without clarifying or sufficiently clarifying the economic background of the transactions and without checking the plausibility of the explanations and supporting documents,” said prosecutors.

Credit Suisse said in a pre-trial statement that it “unreservedly rejects as meritless all allegations in this legacy matter raised against it and is convinced that its former employee is innocent.”

Cocaine balls

The case dates to 2008 when prosecutors opened a probe into a Bulgarian wrestler whose training funding had dried up after the collapse of the Iron Curtain, fell in with a mafia clan and had turned to drug trafficking to make cash.

From 2002 to 2012, he organised the import of tens of tonnes of cocaine into Europe, using boats, planes and drug mules willing to swallow cocaine-packed rubber balls. He was sentenced to a 20-year prison sentence in Italy in 2017, and also convicted by courts in Romania and Bulgaria.

Two of his associates are also on trial at the federal criminal court in Bellinzona, accused of participation in organized crime and aggravated money laundering.

E. actively assisted the drug ring to launder 16 million francs and, overall, helped obscure the illicit origins of transactions worth more than 140 million Swiss francs, according to the prosecutors.

If convicted E. could face up to five years in prison. But for Credit Suisse, any potential penalties would be lower in Switzerland than other jurisdictions such as the U.S. If found guilty, the bank risks a maximum fine of just 5 million francs.

Historic precedent

The trial comes as the 166-year-old bank has staggered from one setback to another. First there was a corporate spying scandal involving senior executives, then Credit Suisse’s involvement with doomed finance company Greensill Capital, and its billions of dollars of losses from the implosion of one of its trading customers, Archegos Capital Management. Last month brought the abrupt resignation of Chairman António Horta-Osorio.

For all the indictment’s tawdry details, the case stands out for another reason: it’s the first time that a Swiss bank faces a criminal trial in Switzerland.

Falcon Bank was found guilty by the same court on similar charges in December and fined 3.5 million Swiss francs ($3.8 million). But now-defunct, Zurich-based Falcon was owned by Abu Dhabi investors.

Bank sinks to $2-bn fourth-quarter loss (Agencies)

Credit Suisse on Thursday capped a scandal-ridden year with a $2.2-billion quarterly loss and said 2022 earnings would be weighed down by restructuring and compensation costs. Though Switzerland’s second-biggest bank had flagged a large fourth-quarter loss, it was still steeper than expected.

Analysts pointed to slides in revenue across most of its business segments, in addition to hefty legal costs for its investment bank, while many of its rivals have posted robust results. Credit Suisse also flagged a decline in adjusted pre-tax income for the first quarter.

The bank’s shares, which have lost just over a third of their value since the start of 2020, slid 5.6 per cent in intra-day trade.

Net income attributable to shareholders for the year tumbled to a 1.6 billion franc loss versus a profit of 2.7 billion in 2020. The bank gave its senior bankers an additional long-term award to try to cushion the blow of a 32 per cent cut to its regular bonus pool. The firm is braced for exits of dealmakers and traders in coming months.

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First Published: Fri, February 11 2022. 00:37 IST
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