HSBC”s Swiss private banking arm has agreed to fork over nearly USD 200 million in unpaid taxes, improper fees and fines after confessing to helping Americans evade federal taxes, the Justice Department announced Tuesday.
“HSBC Switzerland conspired with US account holders to conceal assets abroad and evade taxes that every American must pay,” Stuart Goldberg, acting chief of the department”s tax division, said in a statement.
“Banks, asset managers and other financial firms enable such crimes — and we will hold these institutions to account, right along with the taxpayers that use them to facilitate and disguise illegal activities.”
Federal prosecutors say that for a decade starting in 2000, the Geneva-based HSBC Private Bank helped American customers hide offshore assets from US authorities, using code named and numbered accounts, hold-mail agreements and shell corporations in tax havens like Panama, Liechtenstein and the British Virgin Islands.
In 2002, the bank had more than 720 undeclared US client relationships with a total value of more than USD 800 million — five years later, this had reached almost USD 1.3 billion, according to the Justice Department.
Under the terms of a settlement, conspiracy charges filed against the bank will not prosecuted for a period of three years “to allow HSBC Switzerland to demonstrate good conduct.”
However, the settlement does not mean individuals will not be prosecuted separately, the statement said.
HSBC has agreed to pay USD 60.6 million in unpaid taxes while forfeiting another USD 71.9 million in fees earned on the undisclosed accounts in addition to a USD 59.9 million penalty.
US authorities have aggressively pursued Swiss banks for enabling tax evasion by Americans. In 2009, UBS AG agreed to pay USD 780 million to resolve allegations it had conspired to impede the work of the US Internal Revenue Service.
That resulted in the collection of USD 6 billion in back taxes.
However the Justice Department said Tuesday that when the UBS investigation became public in 2008, HSBC Switzerland did not immediately cease business on behalf of US clients — helping some close their accounts in ways that kept the assets hidden, such was making withdrawals in cash.