NatWest bank fined $351 million for failing to prevent money laundering
NatWest has been fined $350.9 million for failing to prevent
the laundering of nearly $528 million, capping the first criminal money
laundering case against a British bank.
The fine would have been north of $396 million, but a
deduction was made for the bank’s guilty plea, the judge said.
A criminal gang deposited hundreds of million in cash at
around 50 branches of NatWest, prosecutors for Britain’s financial regulator
said on Monday, with at least one individual outlet receiving more than $52
million.
Couriers walked through the streets of British towns
carrying bags of cash they then deposited at the bank’s branches before the
scheme was busted by police, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) told the
judge.
One person in Walsall arrived at a branch with so much cash
in bin liners — $925,000 — that they broke and the money had to be repacked in
hessian bags, the FCA’s lawyer Clare Montgomery said, adding the cash also did
not fit in the branch’s floor-to-ceiling safes.
The state-backed bank had previously pleaded guilty in
October to three criminal charges of not adequately monitoring customer
accounts between 2012 and 2016.
NatWest is Britain’s biggest business bank and is still
majority taxpayer-owned after a 59 billion pound-plus state bailout during the
financial crisis.
The FCA said NatWest failed to monitor suspect activity by a
client – Fowler Oldfield, a Bradford-based gold dealer and jeweler liquidated
after a police raid in 2016 – that deposited about $482 million pounds,
including $349 million in cash.
At its height, as much as $2.38 million was being deposited
in cash daily, and the customer became NatWest’s most lucrative in the area,
Montgomery said.
NatWest failed to properly investigate numerous warnings
generated by its financial crime systems, miscategorized the customer as lower
risk than it was, and staff investigating the warnings lacked sufficient
experience and knowledge, the FCA lawyer said.
One rule designed to flag suspicious activity was disabled
by NatWest because it created too many alerts, “so the bank decided it should
be deactivated”, Montgomery said.
The National Crime Agency (NCA) at one stage raised concerns
at the sheer quantity of Scottish bank notes being deposited many miles away in
England, which it said was an indicator of potential crime, the FCA said.
One of the bank’s cash centers in Washington, north-east
England, voiced concern about the high volume of Scottish notes being deposited
and said they had a “musty smell,” which the judge said could be indicative of
storage rather than regular business use.
The NCA did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
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