Exclusive:
Standard Chartered to scour records for money
laundering, with penalty at stake
Send a link to a friend
[August 12, 2014]
By Brett Wolf
(Reuters) - Standard
Chartered Plc will soon begin sifting through a mountain
of data for signs of possible money laundering or other
criminal activity, as a result of faults in the software
critical to its anti-money laundering compliance
program, two sources with knowledge of the matter said. |
The outcome of this review could affect any penalties regulators
impose on the bank for anti-money laundering lapses.
Because Standard Chartered <STAN.L> clears about two million U.S.
dollar transactions each month, the process of poring through the
data will be "a huge piece of work" that could take months, said one
of the sources. Both sources spoke on condition of anonymity as they
are not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.As previously
reported by Reuters, holes in the British bank's anti-money
laundering net were uncovered by a monitor imposed by the New York
Department of Financial Services (DFS) in 2012. At that time, DFS
and federal authorities took separate actions against Standard
Chartered, fining the bank a total of $667 million for violating
U.S. sanctions by hiding transactions linked to Iran.
As a result of the latest problem, Standard Chartered is once again
under scrutiny from the DFS, the bank disclosed when announcing its
earnings last week. A penalty of more than $100 million and an
extension of the monitorship is possible beyond its anticipated end
in early 2015, another source said.
A spokeswoman for Standard Chartered declined to comment.
A spokesman for the DFS also declined to comment.
The findings of Standard Chartered's pending transaction review,
known as a "look back," could affect the severity of any penalties
imposed by DFS, one of the sources with knowledge of the issue said.
The more crime proceeds that flowed through the bank, the more it
likely will have to pay, the source said.
The bank has done extensive planning for the review with help from
an external consultant and is coordinating with the DFS to ensure it
approves of the plan, one of the sources said.
The bank installed the problematic transaction-monitoring software
system late last decade. It was supposed to flag suspect
transactions, and then bank compliance staff could see whether there
were signs of possible criminal activity that needed to be reported
to authorities, said the other source.
[to top of second column] |
However, the so-called "detection scenarios" that tell the system
what activity to flag for human review were not properly calibrated,
the source said.
UNTESTED SCENARIOS
Although just "a handful" of the monitoring system's dozens of
detection scenarios were flawed, the errors went uncorrected for
years because the bank failed to properly test them, the source
said. While the bank thought certain transaction patterns were under
automated scrutiny, they were not. "Nobody knew, people assumed it
was being tested," the source said.
No one to date has been fired or disciplined over the matter, the
source said.
Most of the scenarios have been corrected and efforts are underway
to fix the others, the source said, adding that the bank plans to
move to a new transaction-monitoring system early next year.
(Reporting by Brett Wolf of the Compliance Complete service of
Thomson Reuters Accelus in St. Louis)
(Editing by Randall Mikkelsen and Martin Howell)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright
2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|