The
agreement is the latest in the U.S. Department of Justice's
long-running pursuit of Swiss banks for helping people evade
U.S. taxes, resulting in billions of dollars in settlements,
fines and restitution from financial institutions in Switzerland
including UBS and Credit Suisse.
U.S. prosecutors said on Thursday that the Swiss bank admitted
wrongdoing including helping clients defraud the Internal
Revenue Service and entered a three-year deferred prosecution
agreement after being accused of conspiring to help clients
evade U.S. taxes and file false tax returns.
Zurich's oldest private bank, Rahn+Bodmer was founded in 1750
and last year had 13.6 billion Swiss francs ($14.71 billion) of
client assets under management. It will cooperate with the
Justice Department's crackdown on offshore tax evasion.
Neither Rahn+Bodmer nor its New York-based lawyer responded to
requests for comment.
Rahn+Bodmer admitted to having from 2004 to 2012 held undeclared
accounts on behalf of approximately 340 U.S. taxpayers who
together evaded about $16.4 million of U.S. taxes in that
period, the Justice Department said.
Its alleged misconduct included opening accounts under
pseudonyms or "sham" foundations in Liechtenstein and Panama,
and for clients who were exiting UBS Group AG and other Swiss
banks.
Rahn+Bodmer agreed to pay a $7.4 million fine, forfeit $9.7
million of fees, and make $4.9 million of restitution.
UBS agreed in 2009 to pay a $780 million penalty to settle U.S.
charges it helped wealthy U.S. clients evade taxes, and handed
over names and data on thousands of client accounts, helping
kick off numerous settlements involving other Swiss financial
institutions.
($1 = 0.9244 Swiss franc)
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York and John Miller in
Zurich; editing by Matthew Lewis and Jason Neely)
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