PARIS: Swiss banking giant UBS will go on trial in France for establishing a wide-ranging tax fraud scheme totalling billions of euros, legal sources told AFP on Monday.

UBS will be charged with illegal banking practices and dissimulating tax fraud, the sources said, adding UBS’s French subsidiary will also go on trial for complicity.

Five UBS top managers are also facing trial, including Raoul Weil, the former third-in-command at UBS.

The French subsidiary’s former number two, Patrick de Fayet, has entered a plea bargain procedure, they said.

France opened a probe into UBS after former employees blew the whistle over the bank’s alleged system of setting up dual bookkeeping to hide the movement of capital into Switzerland between 2004 and 2012.

The bank’s staff allegedly approached French clients, from wealthy businessmen to sports stars, during receptions, golf tournaments or concerts to convince them to hide their money in Switzerland.

“My honour will finally be cleared,” said former UBS internal auditing chief Nicolas Forissier, one of the whistle blowers. “The company is going to have to face the truth.” Forissier was summarily sacked by UBS in 2009 for “gross misconduct”.

In total, at least 9.76bn euros ($10.5bn) were kept from the French tax man, according to the national financial crimes unit.

‘AGGRAVATED LAUN­DER­ING’: In June last year, French prosecutors recommended that UBS face trial for “aggravated laundering of tax fraud proceeds” while its French branch be judged for complicity in these crimes.

The move followed failed negotiations over a plea bargain.

“Those negotiations failed in particular because prosecutors and the bank could not agree on the sum that the bank would have to pay,” said one source close to the case.

UBS has always denied any wrongdoing, saying there was no proof for its implication in any such alleged scheme.

On Monday, it said it rejected both “the allegations and the nature of the charges brought”, a UBS spokesman told AFP in Paris.

The trial will offer the bank “the possibility of responding to the accusations brought against it”, the spokesman said, adding UBS was hoping for a “fair trial”.

A lawyer for the bank, Denis Chemla, said the charges contained “no special surprises” and called them “unfounded”.

FIVE BILLION AT STAKE: According to documents that German authorities handed over to French investigators, deposits from some 38,000 French clients with UBS amounted to a total of around 13bn Swiss francs ($13bn), a source close to the case told AFP. Not all these clients are suspected of tax fraud, the source said.

Published in Dawn, March 21st, 2017

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