September 17, 2011
Reuters
The
U.S. pursuit of offshore tax evaders is widening to include Israel, where U.S.
authorities are scrutinizing three of Israel’s largest banks over suspicions
their Swiss outposts helped American clients evade taxes, people briefed on the
matter said.
The
banks under scrutiny by the U.S. Justice Department’s criminal tax division are
Bank Hapoalim, Bank Leumi le-Israel BM and Mizrahi-Tefahot, the sources said.
The
shift to Israel from Switzerland, for years the main focus of the Justice
Department’s campaign against offshore private banking secrecy, signals the
broadening of a landmark probe by the agency that began in 2007 with UBS AG,
Switzerland’s largest bank.
The
shift also opens up a potential sore spot in the historically close
relationship between the United States and Israel, a key diplomatic and
military ally in the Middle East that is the biggest recipient of U.S. aid ~
$3.1 billion last year.
U.S.-Israeli
relations have come under strain in the past year, after Obama’s drive to
relaunch direct peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians collapsed,
although both sides say their decades-old alliance remains unshaken.
The
scrutiny of the three Swiss branches of the Israeli banks is at an early stage
and has not reached the level of that of Credit Suisse, which received a target
letter from the Justice Department in July, or of HSBC Holdings, a major
European bank, and Basler Kantonalbank, a Swiss cantonal bank, said the people
briefed on the matter.
U.S.-SWISS
ARRANGEMENT CITED
Aviram
Cohen, a spokesman for Bank Leumi in Tel Aviv, wrote in an e-mailed statement
on Thursday that
“the request was for general statistical data. It appears that this data was to serve as a basis for a comprehensive arrangement between the Swiss and American Authorities. Obviously, Bank Leumi Switzerland is cooperating fully with the Authorities, in accordance with Swiss Law and under legal advisement.”
A
spokesman for the Bank of Israel, the country’s central bank, said on Thursday
the agency
“cannot comment on questions that refer to specific banking corporations.”
One
person briefed on the matter said the U.S. Justice Department
“tries to deal with the entity, not the government” in its crackdown on tax evasion.
The
scrutiny comes during a wide-ranging campaign by the Justice Department to
force nearly a dozen Swiss banks now under scrutiny to pay collectively
billions of dollars in fines and admit to criminal wrongdoing.
The
focus turned to Israel with a letter dated August 31 from the second-highest
law enforcement official in the United States, Deputy Attorney General James
Cole. Cole gave the three Israeli banks, along with seven Swiss banks, until
September 23 to produce broad statistical information on their Swiss operations
with U.S. clients.
The
data requested, according to people briefed on the matter, cover the types of
accounts disclosed by UBS in 2009 as part of a deal with the Justice Department
to settle U.S. charges that it enabled scores of wealthy Americans to evade
billions of dollars in taxes. It also covers other types of accounts, including
those opened after the UBS settlement with the Justice Department in February
2009.
Under
its settlement, UBS entered into a deferred-prosecution agreement, paid a $780
million fine, admitted to criminal wrongdoing, and eventually disclosed details
for clients who had unreported accounts of at least 1 million Swiss francs
(about $1.15 million) or who owned sham company accounts with that total. The
accounts in question covered 2001 through 2008.
10
BANKS
While
UBS turned over client names, the Cole letter requests only broad, statistical
information on how many American taxpayers hold those types of accounts at the
10 banks covered in the letter, the persons briefed on the matter said. In
addition to the three Israeli banks, institutions that received the letter
include Credit Suisse AG; HSBC; Julius Baer and Wegelin, both smaller private
banks, and Basler Kantonalbank.
All
the banks are being questioned on suspicion of having enabled wealthy Americans
to evade taxes, a criminal offense, through unreported bank accounts, people
briefed in the matter said. Some banks, including Credit Suisse, also are
suspected of lying to the U.S. Federal Reserve and providing unlicensed banking
services to American clients.
American
officials are concerned that the 10 banks appear to have accepted hidden money
from American clients who fled UBS in the wake of its scrutiny and assertions
by Swiss officials that offshore tax evasion would not be tolerated under the
cloak of Swiss bank secrecy rules, the people briefed on the matter said.
Swiss
banks argue that U.S. laws, which do not distinguish between tax fraud and tax
evasion, should not apply to Switzerland. The Alpine country has a tradition of
financial secrecy that punishes the disclosure of client data.
ED:
The banking cartel made sure to establish Switzerland as a safe place to place
their illegally gotten gains. This is one reason the country never goes to war,
its sole raison d’être is protection of funds. Most notably this includes funds
stolen and kept from Holocaust survivors and their descendants who have not
been able to reclaim their pre-WWII holdings.
David
Garvin, a tax lawyer in Miami representing American clients of offshore banks,
said,
“Israel isn’t really anxious to be viewed as turning people over.”
A
spokesman for the Israeli embassy in Washington did not respond to questions.
ED:
Hmmm how strange for such an open-to-investigation, honest institution!
NO
COMMENT
Benny
Shoukron, a spokesman for Mizrahi-Tefahot in Tel Aviv, did not respond to
requests for comment. Ofra Preuss, a spokeswoman for Bank Hapoalim in Tel Aviv,
referred calls to the bank’s Swiss branch in Zurich, Bank Hapoalim
(Switzerland), saying,
“They’re separate from us.”
A
spokeswoman for the Swiss branch declined to return calls requesting comment.
ED:
I rest my case on their openness and intrinsic honesty!
Datan
Dorot, a tax lawyer in Miami who represents U.S. clients of Israeli banks, said
that bankers from an Israeli branch of Bank Leumi called his clients about six
weeks ago to tell them they needed to close their accounts at the bank’s Swiss
branches because of scrutiny by the Justice Department.
Many
of his clients, Dorot said, hold dual U.S.-Israeli citizenship and had opened
their Israeli accounts with Israeli passports and not disclosed their U.S.
citizenship ~ a factor that makes them U.S. taxpayers.
ED:
Interesting that people like Chertoff, for example, are Israel firsters, but
when it comes to greed, they are American!
As the Zionist criminal Rabbi Steven Wise put it, “I have been an American for 64 years but I have been a Jew for thousands of years.”
Dorot
said Bank Leumi’s advice that clients close the accounts ~ and presumably open
new accounts elsewhere ~ could cause problems for the clients because the U.S.
Internal Revenue Service does not consider merely closing the account to be
enough; the U.S. taxpayer must also report the account to the IRS and pay taxes
on it. “The Israeli banks are suggesting a very bad idea,” Dorot said.
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