Credit Suisse

Credit Suisse Fined $510 Million for $4 Billion Tax Evasion Scheme

Credit Suisse Services pleaded guilty to conspiring to help wealthy US taxpayers evade taxes via undeclared offshore accounts, resulting in a $510 million fine. This involved falsifying records and processing undocumented transactions totaling over $1 billion, representing a breach of a prior 2014 plea agreement with the US government. The scheme concealed over $4 billion from the IRS across at least 475 accounts primarily held in Singapore. The guilty plea follows a 2023 Senate Finance Committee report finding continued tax evasion assistance after the 2014 settlement. As part of the agreement, Credit Suisse Services and its acquirer, UBS, will fully cooperate with ongoing investigations.

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Credit Suisse’s Nazi Ties Deeper Than Previously Revealed

New evidence from Credit Suisse archives, unearthed by independent ombudsman Neil Barofsky, reveals previously unknown accounts linked to Nazi entities, including the SS. This discovery, detailed in a letter to the US Senate, suggests Credit Suisse’s Nazi ties were more extensive than previously thought and contradicts claims of full cooperation with past investigations. The findings appear to support earlier US Senate allegations of insufficient cooperation by the bank. UBS, Credit Suisse’s acquirer, has committed to a thorough accounting of these accounts.

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