Mr.Bank

Deutsche Bank slammed with $150 million fine for failing to flag Jeffrey Epstein’s shady transactions

New York regulators fined Deutsche Bank $150 million Tuesday and slammed the lender for “mistakes and sloppiness” in its relationship with accused sex-trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

Authorities said Deutsche Bank’s “significant compliance failures” allowed Epstein to conduct hundreds of transactions totaling millions of dollars that should have prompted additional scrutiny.
The penalties, which also relate to Deutsche Bank (DB)’s ties to scandal-ridden financial institutions Danske Bank Estonia and FBME Bank, are the first enforcement actions by regulators against a bank for dealings with Epstein.
The New York State Department of Financial Services said Deutsche Bank failed to detect “many subsequent suspicious transactions” conducted by the late multimillionaire, who died by suicide in August 2019 while awaiting trial on federal charges accusing him of operating a sex-trafficking ring involving girls as young as 14 at his Manhattan mansion and his Palm Beach estate.

The suspicious transactions flagged by the regulator included payments to individuals who were publicly alleged to have been Epstein’s co-conspirators in sexually abusing young women — as well as payments to Russian models, school tuitions for several women, hotel expenses and direct payments to numerous women with Eastern European last names.
Regulators said Deutsche Bank, Germany’s largest bank and one with a history of legal problems in the United States, failed to properly monitor account activity conducted on behalf of the registered sex offender “despite ample information that was publicly available” linked to his earlier criminal misconduct.
In a statement, Deutsche Bank acknowledged its “error of onboarding Epstein in 2013 and the weaknesses in our processes, and have learnt from our mistakes and shortcomings.” The bank said it immediately contacted law enforcement to offer assistance after Epstein’s arrest. It has also invested nearly $1 billion in training, controls and operational processes and has hired more than 1,500 people to its financial crime team.
“Our reputation is our most valuable asset and we deeply regret our association with Epstein,” the bank said. DFS credited Deutsche Bank’s “exemplary cooperation” with the investigation.
The order sheds some light on Epstein’s financial dealings, which have long been a source of mystery and, DFS said, may be fit for criminal inquiry.
Among several red flags, Epstein was using more than $200,000 in cash annually, DFS said, writing that “whether or to what extent those payments or that cash was used by Mr. Epstein to cover up old crimes, to facilitate new ones, or for some other purpose are questions that must be left to the criminal authorities, but the fact that they were suspicious should have been obvious to Bank personnel at various levels.”

‘Terrible criminal history’

Epstein faced a federal investigation in 2006 regarding accusations he preyed on and sexually abused underage girls. He ultimately signed a non-prosecution deal with federal prosecutors in Miami the following year that allowed him to plead guilty to two state prostitution charges and serve just 13 months in a Florida state prison.
“Despite knowing Mr. Epstein’s terrible criminal history, the bank inexcusably failed to detect or prevent millions of dollars of suspicious transactions,” Linda Lacewell, superintendent of New York State DFS, said in a statement.
According to the regulator, the bank was repeatedly made aware of past accusations against Epstein and his alleged accomplices as soon as he became a client.
In April 2013, DFS says, a junior account executive flagged Epstein’s plea deal and prison sentence in a memorandum to be sent to senior bank executives. Another person working on the account sent the memo to senior executives and noted in a message “how lucrative the relationship could be,” the DFS order says, citing “[e]stimated flows of $100-300 [million] overtime [sic] (possibly more) w/ revenue of $2-4 million annually over time.”
In late 2014 and through 2015, DFS order adds, the bank’s anti-financial crime department identified Epstein red flags including a federal court ruling that would grant alleged victims access to his plea deal details and “additional allegations in the press regarding Mr. Epstein’s relationships with a prominent former U.S. politician and a member of a European royal family.”
Two of the bank’s executives agreed to explore the issues and met Epstein at his New York home, where one asked him “about the veracity of the recent allegations and appeared to be satisfied by Mr. Epstein’s response,” DFS says.
When bank executives met to discuss the Epstein relationship about a week later, they had kept no recorded minutes from the meeting even though bank policy required it, the order says. Later that day, according to the order, one executive emailed another to say the committee was “comfortable with things continuing” with Epstein, and that another committee member had “noted a number of sizable deals recently.”


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