Wegelin, Oldest Swiss Private Bank, Ordered To Pay $57.85 Million After Admitting To Aiding Tax Evasion

Storied Swiss Bank Gets Wrist Slap For Tax Evasion
FILE - In this Jan. 27, 2012 file picture the headquarters of the Bank Wegelin und Co, is photographed in St. Gallen, Switzerland. The U.S. Justice Department says it has indicted Switzerland's oldest private bank, claiming it conspired with Americans and others to hide more than US $1.2 billion in client assets from the Internal Revenue Service. Justice officials said Thursday Feb. 3, 2012 that they also seized more than US$16 million from Wegelin & Co.'s correspondent bank in the U.S. The move comes about a month after U.S. authorities indicted three client advisers at the St. Gallen, Switzerland-based bank on similar charges. Wegelin has denied violating Swiss law over the past decade. (AP Photo/KeystoneEnnio Leanza,File)
FILE - In this Jan. 27, 2012 file picture the headquarters of the Bank Wegelin und Co, is photographed in St. Gallen, Switzerland. The U.S. Justice Department says it has indicted Switzerland's oldest private bank, claiming it conspired with Americans and others to hide more than US $1.2 billion in client assets from the Internal Revenue Service. Justice officials said Thursday Feb. 3, 2012 that they also seized more than US$16 million from Wegelin & Co.'s correspondent bank in the U.S. The move comes about a month after U.S. authorities indicted three client advisers at the St. Gallen, Switzerland-based bank on similar charges. Wegelin has denied violating Swiss law over the past decade. (AP Photo/KeystoneEnnio Leanza,File)

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A U.S. court on Monday sentenced Wegelin & Co, the oldest Swiss private bank, to pay $57.85 million after it admitted to helping wealthy Americans evade taxes.

The sum ordered by U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff in New York was on top of $16.3 million in forfeitures already obtained by authorities after the federal government accused Wegelin of conspiring to assist U.S. taxpayers hide $1.2 billion in secret Swiss bank accounts. The judge questioned whether the size of the settlement appropriately reflected the extent of wrongdoing that the government alleged.

The bank, which sold off most of its business during the investigation and is now planning to close, pleaded guilty to conspiracy in January.

Rakoff followed prosecutors' recommendations and imposed a $22.05 million fine and ordered $20 million in restitution. He also entered an order finalizing $15.82 million in forfeitures, which he preliminarily approved at the time of the guilty plea.

But while Rakoff approved the settlement deal, he said there was a "funny tension" between the U.S. Justice Department's decision not to seek the maximum $40 million fine and its assertion Wegelin acted with "extreme willfulness."

Rakoff said even including the $16.3 millon the government recovered in April 2012 by seizing money in its U.S. correspondent account, Wegelin will be giving up just 12 percent of the 560 million Swiss francs ($613 million) it earned after it sold most of its assets to Raiffeisen Switzerland last year.

"Not much pain there, is there?" Rakoff said.

Rakoff also sentenced the bank to one month of probation.

Wegelin was indicted in February 2012 after prosecutors said the bank began going after U.S. clients of UBS AG once the Justice Department's probe of that bank became public in 2008. UBS agreed to pay a $780 million fine to end the probe in 2009.

The case is U.S. v. Wegelin & Co, et al, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, 12-cr-00002.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)

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