Bank of China held in contempt of court in US for refusing to hand over Gucci, Yves Saint Laurent counterfeiting suspects account details

A US judge has held the Bank of China in contempt for refusing to turn over account information of Chinese suspects accused of selling counterfeit luxury goods.
US District Judge Richard Sullivan in Manhattan, firing off the latest salvo in the battle between China and the United States over financial transparency and national sovereignty, held that the bank must pay a fine for withholding its customers' records.
Sullivan said he would probably decide on the amount of the penalty by Monday.
The records sought involve Chinese entities that were sued in 2010 by subsidiaries of luxury goods conglomerate Kering, including Gucci Group, Bottega Veneta and Yves Saint Laurent.
Bank of China itself is not a defendant in that lawsuit.
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The companies subpoenaed the Bank of China seeking records of the alleged counterfeit sellers' accounts, but the state-owned bank argued that it could not turn over the records without violating Chinese privacy law. The bank also said the New York court had no jurisdiction over it.