Probers Want U.S. To Block Assets Of Cuba at UBS
The New York Sun
October 14, 2005 Edition > Section: Foreign > Printer-Friendly Version
BY MEGHAN CLYNE - Staff Reporter of the Sun
October 14, 2005
URL: http://www.nysun.com/article/21478
WASHINGTON - Congressional investigators probing whether the world's largest "wealth
management" firm, UBS, may have laundered $5 billion in American currency for
state sponsors of terrorism are pushing for the American government to block or
seize any assets that may be held by the Castro regime at the Swiss bank's vault
in Zurich, according to correspondence obtained by The New York Sun.
The efforts are part of an ongoing probe into alleged money laundering by the
Swiss bank that gained steam this week after Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a
Republican of Florida, announced that the House International Relations
Committee will launch an investigation this session.
In April 2003, American troops liberating Iraq found $762 million in American
cash in hideouts belonging to Saddam Hussein. American investigators traced the
banknotes to UBS and the Extended Custodial Inventory Program. The program, run
by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in cooperation with international banks,
allowed clients to exchange old banknotes for new ones. One condition of the
program was that American currency neither be distributed to nor accepted from
nations against which America maintains economic sanctions.
It was in violation of those terms that UBS procured $3.9 billion in American
banknotes for Cuba, $1 billion for the Islamic Republic of Iran, $30 million for
Libya, and less than $1 million for Yugoslavia in transactions discovered by
American investigators as they probed the mysterious Iraqi stash. UBS was
sanctioned by the Swiss Banking Commission and the Federal Reserve, to which the
Swiss bank paid a $100 million fine in May 2004.
Cuba, Iran, and Libya appear on the State Department's official list of state
sponsors of terrorism. As a result, Ms. Ros-Lehtinen has asked that regulatory
agencies investigate the possibility of seizing or freezing any assets remaining
in those accounts.
In a letter from November 2004 to Treasury Secretary Snow, Ms. Ros-Lehtinen
wrote that "since the ECI deposits to the Cuban and Iranian accounts in UBS were
illegally obtained, Treasury should consider seeking to seize the funds in these
accounts in an amount equal to the total value of the illegal transactions - an
amount close to $5 billion."
In a response dated January 2005, the director of the Treasury Department's
Office of Foreign Assets Control, Robert Werner, wrote that while under the
Iranian Transactions Regulations there are no provisions for blocking assets in
the Iranian UBS account, "Funds in accounts under U.S. jurisdiction in which
there is an interest in the government of Cuba or a Cuban national are required
to be blocked under the Cuban Assets Control Regulations by operation of law."
Mr. Werner continued: "Regarding possible violations of the Trading with the
Enemy Act or the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, with respect to
Cuba, if it is found that a person subject to U.S. jurisdiction is involved,
appropriate action will be taken."
UBS has maintained that it "strongly rejects" any allegations of wrongdoing,
adding that the bank has not been found to have laundered money.
Treasury Department officials said yesterday that, with certain exceptions,
American jurisdiction obtains in cases involving a "U.S. person," including
American citizens abroad or foreigners operating in America. For the purposes of
determining jurisdiction, they said, American institutions and banks count as "U.S.
persons." Foreign branches of American banks, they said, are subject to
jurisdiction, as are American branches of a foreign bank.
According to press accounts, the Justice Department has been investigating the
possibility that a New York "nexus" was involved in the UBS transactions. The
Treasury Department would not comment on the specifics of the UBS case, which,
it said, has been transferred to the Justice Department. Treasury, it added, can
freeze assets only as part of a civil action, whereas the seizure of funds in
the Cuban ac count would have to be handled by a different branch of the
American government with the authority to prosecute criminal infractions, such
as the Department of Justice.
A Justice Department official said yesterday in an e-mail: "We claim the right (supported
by our statutes) to seek forfeiture of any funds involved in terrorist financing
or US embargo violations, even if it is located in foreign bank accounts." The
official declined to comment on specifics of the UBS case.
According to congressional staff familiar with discussions between UBS and
investigating congressmen, the Swiss bank has yet to indicate that the Cuban
account - fed by monthly shipments of American banknotes flown from Havana to
Zurich on a jet designated by the Castro regime specifically for that purpose,
according to congressional investigators - has been closed. Lawmakers have
expressed concern that the account with UBS may still be used to launder money
for various illegal activities undertaken by the Castro dictatorship, such as
narco-terrorism, using non-American currency.
On October 22, 2004, six months after UBS paid the $100 million fine, the
International Financial Action Task Force Against Money Laundering adopted
Resolution IX, which, according to a Task Force press release, "calls on
countries to stop cross-border movements of currency and monetary instruments
related to terrorist financing and money laundering and confiscate such funds."
According to the release, the resolution "also calls for enhanced information-sharing
between countries on the movement of illicit cash related to terrorist financing
or money laundering."
Three days later, on October 25, Mr. Castro announced that he was ending the use
of American dollars as the currency of the Cuban economy, encouraging the use of
Euros, Swiss francs, and other foreign banknotes instead.
A congressional staffer said the Swiss bank has pointed out that it is not
illegal for Cubans to hold Swiss bank accounts, and that the problem stemmed
from the involvement of the Federal Reserve program and American banknotes.
A spokeswoman for UBS, Christine Walton, told the Sun earlier this week,
referring to the Federal Reserve program: "UBS has already confirmed it has
exited the banknotes business," adding that "UBS has no relationships with Cuban
individuals who would classify as 'politically exposed persons,'" such as Mr.
Castro. Ms. Walton said that this means no accounts in the names of Cuban "politically
exposed persons" are held at UBS, but she said this did not include institutions
of the Castro regime such as the Cuban National Bank. Ms. Walton said UBS
declined to comment on individual account holders.
Reached late yesterday afternoon, Ms. Walton declined to comment on the status
of the Cuban account or about the pressure from Capitol Hill to freeze or seize
Cuban assets that may remain in the Cuban UBS account if it has not yet been
closed, citing the difficulty of reaching the appropriate UBS officials late in
the day.
October 14, 2005 Edition > Section: Foreign > Printer