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Eric Holder rejected 'the theory that certain financial institutions … should be considered immune from prosecution due to their sheer size and their influence on the economy'. Photo: AFP

Too big to jail? No bank above the law, says US Attorney General

Criminal charges could be filed within weeks following tax evasion probes of European banks

AFP

United States Attorney General Eric Holder warned that no financial institution should consider itself "above the law", amid investigations into alleged tax evasion and money laundering by European banks.

Probes of BNP Paribas and Credit Suisse are almost completed and criminal charges could be brought within "a few weeks", a senior US official said on condition of anonymity.

And the reported that Credit Suisse was about to reach an agreement with the US Justice Department to pay a US$1 billion fine and plead guilty to helping wealthy Americans evade taxes by sheltering their funds abroad.

The Swiss bank's rival UBS paid US authorities US$780 million in 2009.

A company’s size will never be a shield from prosecution or penalty
US ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC HOLDER

BNP Paribas is under investigation over allegations of money laundering and breaching US financial sanctions against certain third parties, the senior US official said.

"There is no such thing as 'too big to jail'," Holder said on Monday.

He did not name the French and Swiss banking giants, but his weekly audio message warned that the Justice Department would "follow the facts wherever they lead".

US law enforcement and regulatory authorities have been criticised since the financial crisis of 2008 for not bringing criminal charges against some institutions and individuals accused of fraud.

But Holder, whose department oversees the FBI and its financial crimes task force, denied that the US was unwilling to prosecute the pillars of the international banking system.

He rejected "the theory that certain financial institutions … should be considered immune from prosecution due to their sheer size and their influence on the economy".

Holder said: "To be clear: no individual or company, no matter how large or how profitable, is above the law.

"When laws indeed appear to have been broken - and the evidence supports the allegations - a company's size will never be a shield from prosecution or penalty."

Holder said he was personally monitoring the status of the investigations and was dedicated to seeing them completed.

The probe carried out by the Justice Department, the Treasury and financial services regulators in New York must determine if BNP, as well as French banks Credit Agricole and Societe Generale, laundered money and broke US embargoes by doing business with countries such as Cuba and Iran, a source close to the investigation said.

The said BNP Paribas is in talks with US authorities to reach an out-of-court settlement.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: No bank is 'above the law', says US attorney general
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