Sweden's financial supervisory authority said Thursday it was fining Swedbank $385 million for failing to properly combat money laundering in its Estonian operations. "Swedbank AB has had serious deficiencies in its management of the risk of money laundering in its Baltic operations," Finansinspektionen (FI) said in statement.
As a result, Swedbank was given a warning and a fine of four billion Swedish kronor (361 million euros). The decision came after parallel investigations by Swedish and Estonian financial authorities. "Despite several internal and external reports warning about deficiencies in the Baltic subsidiaries and the risk of money laundering, the bank did not take proper and sufficient action," FI said.
A separate criminal investigation in Estonia would now determine "whether money laundering or other criminal acts have taken place". The fine is the latest turn in a scandal sparked by suspected money laundering through Baltic, and specifically Estonian, subsidiaries of several Scandinavian Banks.
Danske Bank was the first to become ensnared in the scandal and its then chief executive Thomas Borgen resigned in September 2018 after the Danish lender admitted that a large part of transactions worth some $235 billion that had transited its Estonian branch between 2007 and 2015 were "suspicious".
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