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Commonwealth Bank of Australia hit with class action suit over money-laundering rule breaches
A Commonwealth Bank logo adorns an Automatic Tellar Machine located in Sydney in this picture taken November 12, 2014. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

SYDNEY, Oct 9 — An Australian lawfirm formally filed a class action suit against Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) on behalf of shareholders today, accusing it of failing to disclose widespread breaches of anti-money-laundering rules.

The lawsuit by law firm Maurice Blackburn against the nation’s biggest lender follows one by the federal agency AUSTRAC, which has accused it of more than 53,000 breaches of anti-money laundry rules — breaches which have exposed it to billions in dollars of fines.

The suit, which had been previously flagged by Maurice Blackburn and litigation financier IMF Bentham Ltd, said shareholders had suffered a significant share drop in the wake of AUSTRAC’s accusations. The law firm’s statement today did not specify the level of damages sought.

CBA has not disputed that it processed tens of thousands of illicit transfers but argues the breaches were largely caused by a software glitch and contests its level of responsibility. A CBA spokesman had no immediate comment today.

The bank’s stock is down 8.5 per cent since AUSTRAC announced its civil lawsuit against CBA in August. CBA shares were up 0.7 per cent by mid-morning , in line with the broader market. — Reuters

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