Danish Woman Remanded Over Laundering of $4.5 Billion in Danske Bank Scandal
COPENHAGEN - A Danish woman was remanded in custody on
Wednesday over her alleged involvement in a money laundering case in which more
than 30 billion Danish crowns ($4.5 billion) was channelled through Danske
Bank's Estonian branch, Denmark's public prosecutor said on Wednesday.
The 49-year old Danish citizen faced preliminary questioning
at Copenhagen city court on Wednesday, where she was put into custody for 21
days, the prosecutor told Reuters.
The woman, whose name is protected by a publication ban, had
been extradited to Denmark from Britain, where she had been kept in custody,
the prosecutor said, adding she had ties to Russia.
During questioning, the woman said she had been shocked when
police came to her house in England in July last year and confiscated computers
and phones.
"I was in shock, because I know with 100%, 200%
(certainty) that I have done nothing wrong," she said, according to local
news wire Ritzau.
The case, in which two other people have also been charged,
came to the authorities' attention during an investigation into one of the
world's biggest money laundering scandals at Danske Bank, Denmark's biggest
lender.
Danske is being investigated by authorities in several
countries after more than 200 billion euros in suspicious transactions flowed
through its Estonian branch from 2007 to 2015.
Danske Bank declined to comment on the case.
A 47-year old woman was also remanded in custody in May in
Copenhagen city court in the same case, shortly after she was sentenced to
almost four years in prison in a separate case of money laundering worth 140
million crowns.
The three suspects are possibly the first in Denmark to be
subject to concrete legal action in connection with the money laundering case,
apart from Danske Bank employees.
Charges brought against former chief executive Thomas Borgen
and eight senior managers have been dropped by the Danish public prosecutor.
The charges against the three suspects allege they laundered
money via several limited partnerships, all of which had bank accounts in
Danske's now shuttered Estonian branch, between March 2008 and March 2016.
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