Co-conspirator Deutsche Bank

Umm… the Mueller stuff is not going away. It is true beyond a reasonable doubt that Unidicted Co-conspirator Bottomless Pinocchio has been laundering money for years and years. It’s also true there’s a convictable Quid Pro Quo in the Moscow Tower deal but we’re going to highlight instead Unindicted Co-conspirator Bottomless Pinocchio’s Bank of last resort- Deutsche Bank.

Deutsche Bank’s U.S. Unit Kept Danske’s Shady Billions Flowing
By Tom Schoenberg, Jesse Hamilton, and Sonali Basak, Bloomberg News
April 3, 2019

Compliance workers for Deutsche Bank AG flagged some of at least $150 billion in transactions that the bank’s U.S. subsidiary handled for a tiny Estonian unit of Danske Bank A/S, according to a former compliance officer.

It’s not clear how urgently the Florida team warned executives at Deutsche Bank Trust Co. Americas. But when workers sought broader scrutiny of certain clients, they got a familiar response from some higher-ups, the officer said: Shut up, focus on the transaction in front of you, file your paperwork and move on.

Internal documents, court records and interviews with dozens of people — including more than 20 current and former employees of the troubled German lender — show that its U.S. unit largely resisted strict money-laundering compliance for years. The insider accounts help explain why Deutsche’s U.S. subsidiary kept handling Danske’s business after competitors quit.

Although U.S. executives routinely promised regulators they’d get tough, former staffers say such efforts were often disregarded in favor of cozy relationships with overseas customers. The suspicious billions kept flowing — not just from Danske’s Estonian branch, but from various clients that would eventually be snared in other global money-laundering scandals.

Deutsche’s U.S. trust company, which houses a global transaction bank, a private wealth unit and a lender, has attracted attention for the hundreds of millions of dollars in loans it extended to President Donald Trump’s real estate business. But it’s now the focus of a Federal Reserve probe into the Danske affair, according to a person briefed on the situation who asked not to be named because the regulator’s work isn’t yet public. The U.S. Department of Justice has also sought information from the bank, two other people have said.

(I)n cases where the bank wasn’t accused of any wrongdoing, it also provided banking services for:

  • Russia’s Sberbank PJSC while the government-controlled bank was involved in a years-long scheme that funneled millions to a man in the U.S. who admitted to smuggling $65 million worth of potential nuclear technology to Russia, according to federal prosecutors;
  • Kenyan fraudsters who scammed U.S. income tax refunds using identities stolen from Indiana sex offenders;
  • and a Colombian drug cartel that received payments from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration as part of an undercover operation. The payments, disguised as profits from auto-parts sales, were transferred into a Deutsche account and exhibited what a DEA undercover agent called “obvious red flags.”

Today, Deutsche Bank Trust Co. Americas is one of the last Wall Street banks that’s actually on Wall Street. Former employees say the subsidiary — housed in a skyscraper that’s sheathed in glass and lined with mahogany paneling — has been a kind of legal mirage for most of its existence. The unit provides an entrée for Deutsche Bank to operate as a lender in America, those people said, but its U.S.-based executives have had little authority.

For foreign banks like Danske, the unit opens an industrial-scale teller window into the U.S. financial system that their customers can use — what’s known as a correspondent banking relationship. Of course, when the plumbing fails, the results can be unpleasant.

In Danske’s case, Danish regulators say Estonian employees covered up money-laundering violations for years. The bank has admitted that roughly $230 billion that passed through that unit between 2007 and 2015 — much of it from Russian clients — was suspicious. A person familiar with the matter confirmed that at least $150 billion flowed through Deutsche Bank, and one report put the figure at about $185 billion.

Banks’ efforts to prevent money laundering revolve around three words: “Know your customer.” U.S. rules under the Bank Secrecy Act require bankers to keep tabs on who they’re doing business with. The goal is to keep criminals and terrorists from plowing illicit cash into legitimate investments.

In Jacksonville, that task fell to an office that was understaffed and overly permissive, insiders recall. It was akin to assembly-line work with little review of potential clients and transactions, said a former employee who added that the organization’s willingness to bank just about anybody was a running joke.

Files submitted to compliance workers from overseas often lacked detail about who was transmitting money, according to former workers and legal filings in the 2016 lawsuit. Specialists hired to advise the bank on gaps in its monitoring systems were instead assigned to review individual transactions that those systems had flagged. They were often rebuffed by New York executives or supervisors in New Jersey if they singled out particular customers for deeper scrutiny.

In such cases, staff members were directed to file routine “suspicious activity reports,” or SARs, a basic legal requirement in cases where bank employees consider a source of funds to be questionable. Such filings record potentially problematic activity but don’t trigger government reviews on their own. Often, they simply languish at the Treasury Department.

Deutsche executives’ public responses to the Danske case tend to sidestep concerns about “know your customer” efforts. Because their bank had a correspondent relationship with Danske, they’ve argued that the Danish bank was the only customer they were required to know — not clients who were banking with Danske.

“The primary duties rest with the bank that has the immediate contact with the client,” said Karl von Rohr, Deutsche Bank’s co-deputy CEO and legal head, on Feb. 1.

As Douglas Sloan, then a financial crimes investigative chief for Deutsche’s U.S. unit, said in testimony in December 2017: “We don’t know our customers’ customer on the other side of the planet.”

But it’s not that simple. U.S. banking laws require correspondent banks to make sure their customers are policing their own clients — especially on big transactions. Another bank clearly had qualms about Danske; JPMorgan Chase & Co. ended its correspondent relationship with Danske’s Estonian branch in 2013. Bank of America Corp. cut off its relationship with the unit in May 2015. Deutsche Bank was the last to break with Danske later that year.

Like other correspondent banks, it relies on a largely automated system called “straight-through processing,” or STP. That system checks names and places against government risk lists and other factors. For years, executives have bestowed an “STP Excellence Award” on customers that successfully move money through Deutsche’s system while raising the fewest red flags. The awards have sometimes gone to questionable recipients.

Cyprus-based FBME Bank Ltd. won eight of them through 2013, according to news releases. The Treasury Department later accused that bank of having weak money-laundering controls that allowed customers to conduct more than $1 billion in suspicious transactions through various correspondent accounts, including one with Deutsche Bank’s U.S. unit, from 2006 to 2014. Treasury officials said FBME helped organized crime and terror groups move money, evade sanctions and develop banned weapons. Deutsche Bank wasn’t accused of wrongdoing in the case.

The “mirror trades” scandal surfaced another issue: Warning bells sounded at the U.S. investigations unit after another European bank questioned some of the transactions, but the unit failed to follow up, according to an internal Deutsche report and a 2017 consent order issued against the bank by New York’s Department of Financial Services. Beyond that, the German bank didn’t even deem Russia to be at high risk for financial crime until late 2014 — much later than its peers — according to that 2017 order.

Accessory not After the Fact, but Complicit during Commission of the Crime.

You know, Corporations are fictional aggregations of money that are given permission by the State to operate and are a relatively recent development Historically. It is fully within the State’s power, particularly for criminal activity but in fact for any random reason (monopolistic practices and sheer bigness) that is politically acceptable, to revoke that permission and force dissolution and distribution or seizure of assets.

It’s called the “Corporate Death Penalty” and I am a staunch advocate.

They’re not really people. That’s just a line inserted a century and a half ago by a corrupt clerk.

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from> around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Ian Bassin and Justin Florence: Trump’s Acts Show the Urgent Need to Curb the Imperial Presidency

In the post-Watergate era, most Americans have taken for granted that a president would not fire an F.B.I. director investigating him, or replace an attorney general for insufficient loyalty to the president’s personal interests. Dangling a pardon before potential witnesses to influence their testimony? Unheard of.

Whatever one’s feelings about the end of the Mueller investigation, the Barr letter makes one thing clear: The guardrails that were established after Watergate against these types of abuses have been smashed. We still need to see the full Mueller report, but unless corrective steps are taken, Mr. Trump and Mr. Barr will have changed, perhaps profoundly, the shape of presidential power, and in troubling ways.

It’s therefore up to Congress and the 2020 presidential candidates to step in and harden the policies that for 40 years prevented improper political interference in law enforcement.

They can do this by enacting comprehensive legislation to codify rules and practices that were previously voluntary. Those who subscribe to the Barr memo view of expansive executive power might claim that such legislation would violate the Constitution. On the contrary, such legislation would help enforce it.

Michelle Cottle: Trump the Punisher

Once more, President Trump stands ready to dazzle with his willingness to sacrifice the national interest on the altar of his political whims.

For days, the president has been indulging in one of his made-for-TV teasers by threatening to shut down the United States-Mexico border. Not beef up the Border Patrol. Not tighten security at ports of entry. Just hang up a “Closed” sign and call it a day.

As the White House tells it, the failures of Mexico and congressional Democrats to stop illegal crossings have left the president no choice: The influx of drugs, criminals and other undesirables has reached the point where drastic action is required.

Mr. Trump is nothing if not a man of drastic action, or at least ominous vows of drastic action.

Dismayed critics have rushed to object that shutting the border will do nothing to solve the humanitarian strains caused by the flood of migrant families from Central America — that such a move will, in fact, make things only worse by disrupting the legal flow of people and commerce, wreaking social and economic havoc.

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Brexit Extension

The Brexit situation is very confusing and one reason I don’t burden you with the daily details is that it is still quite fluid.

In recent developments there have been a series of non-binding votes on competing Brexit Plans, the most successful of which proposed a Customs Union/Single Market solution. True Brexiteers are appalled because it also (must actually because the EU says so) includes the continued Free Movement of people within the CU/SM and that won’t do at all because it’s always been about keeping out the bloody Wogs (Racism) anyway. All the crap about making Britain able to craft great new Trade Deals that allow for the importation of Chlorinated Chicken (dipped in Bleach to sanitize them and perfectly acceptable in the U.S. because we eat any kind of Mega Agribusiness garbage) is mere gaslighting to disguise the Bigotry. There is no argument among Economists that Brexit will cause a substantial decline in their Economy any more than there is argument among legitimate Scientists (as opposed to Wacky Crackpot Mad ones) about Global Warming.

What they did manage to pass was what we in the States would call a Motion to Proceed to debate a proposal delaying Brexit for a period of time, at least a year and perhaps 2. If adopted it’s likely the EU would accept it since their only quibble with a more short term delay is the necessity to hold Elections for the European Parliament which are scheduled this Summer. Britain would be forced to elect Representatives.

Now Brexiteers view this as unreasonable because they have no patience for postponement and they realize that their political support is melting away like ice cream on a hot sidewalk. They’d just as soon have a Crash Out April 12th (just 9 days folks!) and May has been angling for a short extension to May (the Month) 22nd avoiding the dreaded prospect of holding MEP Elections.

The EU has made it clear that she’s not going to get that.

She’s also opened negotiations with Jeremy Corbyn which has many Tories acting as if she is participating in some Satan summoning ritual involving carnal activity with goats and the blood of Christian babies. The Labour position, which Corbyn has reluctantly accepted because he’s a Left Euroskeptic, is the CU/SM with a Second Referendum which is, actually, entirely reasonable.

Of course what Corbyn is angling for is a General Election where he thinks Labour will beat the Tories like a rug, and he’s probably right. That’s why the Tories fear it so much, it will be a bloodbath for them and it’s the only stick May has left to keep her job.

I can’t imagine she’ll keep it much longer anyway. She’s clearly lost control of about half her Party and has already offered her resignation if Parliament passed her Brexit Scheme which is dead Jim, dead.

The clock keeps going tick tock (9 Days!) and true Brexiteers are desperately trying to tie up Parliament so that a No Deal Brexit (their preferred solution) sorta kinda happens by default.

It just might work.

Cartnoon

Salad Is Hard

The Breakfast Club (Que Sera)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

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This Day in History

Martin Luther King Jr. gives speech before assasination; Bruno Richard Hauptmann electrocuted for kidnap and murder of Charles Lindbergh’s son; President Harry Truman signs Marshall plan; Jesse James shot to death; Pony Express begins service; Actor Marlon Brando born.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

A man can fail many times, but he isn’t a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.

John Burroughs

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A Timeline Of Perfectly Normal Events And Behavior

No need to look into this any further.

Cody’s Showdy

What we already know is in the Mueller Report because it’s in the Public Domain and has been admitted to by the principals.

Nothing to see here.

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from> around the news medium and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Paul Krugman: Republican Health Care Lying Syndrome

Even Trump supporters don’t believe the party’s promises.

There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and Republican claims about health care.

O.K., it’s not news that politicians make misleading claims, some more than others. According to a running tally kept by Daniel Dale of The Toronto Star, as of Monday morning, Donald Trump had said 4,682 false things as president.

But G.O.P. health care claims are special, in several ways. First, they’re outright, clearly intentional lies — not dubious assertions or misstatements that could be attributed to ignorance or misunderstanding. Second, they’re repetitive: Rather than making a wide variety of false claims, Republicans keep telling the same few lies, over and over. Third, they keep doing this even though the public long ago stopped believing anything they say on the subject.

This syndrome demands an explanation, and I’ll get there eventually. Before I do, however, let’s document the things that make G.O.P. health care lies unique.

Laurence H. Tribe: Congress must investigate Trump. But it must also be strategic about it

Rarely have the demands of constitutional democracy and the rule of law been in greater tension with the imperatives of progressive politics. Fidelity to the constitution and the primacy of law over naked power call for a determined effort by Congress to unearth the full truth about Donald Trump’s actions leading up to the election, and since assuming office.

Congress has a duty to look into the president’s offenses in seizing the White House and whether, having arrived at the pinnacle of power, he obstructed efforts to uncover the details of his corrupt ascent and to disclose the many facets of his interference with investigations into those details.

At the same time, one would have to be politically blind not to see that the vast majority of voters care far less about those matters than about kitchen table issues like health care and economic opportunity for this generation and the next. People have become all but immune even to undeniable evidence that Donald Trump is guided not by our national interest but by his own greed for power and by the leverage that hostile foreign nations are able to exert over his decisions. Ironically abetted by the daily barrage of frightening revelations about their leader, Americans have become so eager to move on that they have little patience left for seemingly abstract matters of legal principle and democratic legitimacy.

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Trump’s Fictional Wealth

As everyone knows by now, and what every New Yorker has known since the 80’s, Donald Trump is a con artist who lie and cheat even when he is winning. Most bankers and contractors eventually learned the hard way, losing millions along the way. Donald probably only ran for president because he saw it as a good scam to make money off of. Because of his unexpected win thanks to the Russians and some very stupid people in three states, all his cons are now catching up to him.

When Donald Trump wanted to make a good impression — on a lender, a business partner, or a journalist — he sometimes sent them official-looking documents called “Statements of Financial Condition.”

These documents sometimes ran up to 20 pages. They were full of numbers, laying out Trump’s properties, debts and multibillion-dollar net worth.

But, for someone trying to get a true picture of Trump’s net worth, the documents were deeply flawed. Some simply omitted properties that carried big debts. Some assets were overvalued. And some key numbers were wrong.

For instance, Trump’s financial statement for 2011 said he had 55 home lots to sell at his golf course in Southern California. Those lots would sell for $3 million or more, the statement said.

But Trump had only 31 lots zoned and ready for sale at the course, according to city records. He claimed credit for 24 lots — and at least $72 million in future revenue — he didn’t have.

He also claimed his Virginia vineyard had 2,000 acres, when it really has about 1,200. He said Trump Tower has 68 stories. It has 58.

Now, investigators on Capitol Hill and in New York are homing in on these unusual documents in an apparent attempt to determine whether Trump’s familiar habit of bragging about his wealth ever crossed a line into fraud.

The statements are at the center of at least two of the inquiries that continue to follow Trump, unaffected by the end of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation. On Wednesday, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform said it had requested 10 years of these statements from Trump’s accounting firm, Mazars USA.

And earlier this month, the New York state Department of Financial Services subpoenaed records from Trump’s longtime insurer, Aon. A person familiar with that subpoena, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe an ongoing investigation, said “a key component” was questions about whether Trump had given Aon these documents in an effort to lower his insurance premiums.

Both inquiries stemmed from testimony last month by Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen, who told Congress that Trump had used these statements to inflate his wealth — and then sent them to his lenders and his insurers.

The entire article by David A. Fahrenhold and Jonathan O’Connell of The Washington Post is worth reading.

A very wealthy older woman I know who lived in Trump tower in the 90’s while her Central Park condo was being renovated got to know Trump. He tried to get her to invest in one of his scams but being a wise woman, she passed on his offer. During lunch one day, she told me she believed Trump was either broke or leveraged so badly that he had no “wiggle room” to finance his projects. Knowing about his habit of not paying contractors and cheating banks and reading this article, I believe my older friend is very correct. Trump is broke and, because he’s president (ugh), it’s all coming back to bite him.

David Fahrenthold spoke with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow about documents showing Donald Trump presenting a distorted picture of his financial holdings to make himself appear to have more wealth, and whether such lying comes with any legal liability for Trump.

Cartnoon

The Watermelon War

The Breakfast Club (Fools)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

 photo stress free zone_zps7hlsflkj.jpg

This Day in History

Pope John Paul II Dies at 84; President Woodrow Wilson asks Congress to declare war on Germany; Juan Ponce de Leon lands in Florida; Falkland Islands seized from Britain; Hans Christian Andersen Born.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

Who is more foolish? The fool or the fool that follows it?

Alec Guinness

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