FRANKFURT, Sept 27 — Germany's second-largest lender Commerzbank AG is being investigated by the Manhattan US attorney for alleged violations of money-laundering laws, the Wall Street Journal reported.
After failing to land high-profile criminal cases stemming from the 2008-09 financial crisis, US authorities have focused on other types of criminal activity within the financial industry, including money laundering, tax evasion and sanctions violations.
Sources told Reuters earlier this month that Commerzbank was nearing a settlement with US authorities over its dealings with Iran and other countries under US sanctions. One person said it was expected to pay about US$650 million (RM2.1 billion).
The Manhattan US attorney is now investigating allegations Commerzbank had lax controls for detecting and preventing money laundering, the WSJ reported, citing unnamed sources briefed on the investigation.
It said US officials were now considering whether to resolve the sanctions probe and the money laundering investigation in one settlement, which could delay a solution and add hundreds of millions of dollars to the potential penalties Commerzbank could pay.
Commerzbank declined comment.
A number of banks have already been penalised over sanctions and money laundering infringements. French bank BNP Paribas pleaded guilty earlier this year to two criminal charges and agreed to pay almost US$9 billion to resolve accusations it violated US sanctions against Sudan, Cuba and Iran. — Reuters