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TD BANK PLEADS GUILTY TO CONSPIRACY TO COMMIT MONEY LAUNDERING, FINED $3 BILLION

Canada-based TD Bank pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering. The bank is the largest to do so and will pay approximately $3 billion in a settlement with U.S. authorities who said that the financial institution’s lax practices allowed significant money laundering over multiple years.

“TD Bank created an environment that allowed financial crime to flourish,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said. “By making its services convenient for criminals, it became one.” “High-level executives were aware of serious issues with TD Bank’s anti-money laundering program, but failed to correct them, and employees openly joked about how easy it seemed to be for criminals to launder money there,” Garland said.

In one case, a man moved more than $470 million in drug proceeds and other illicit funds through TD Bank branches, bribing employees with more than $57,000 in gift cards. The man chose TD Bank because it had the “most permissive policies,” more than once depositing more than $1 million in cash in a single day and then moving the funds out of the bank with checks or wire transfers. It continued despite employees expressing concern about what he was doing. “There were also piles of cash dumped on a bank’s counters and ATM withdrawals that totaled 40 times to 50 times higher than the daily limits”, said Philip Sellinger, U.S. attorney in New Jersey.

In a separate scheme, five employees worked with criminal organizations to open and maintain accounts that were used to launder $39 million to Colombia, including drug proceeds. There, the same Venezuelan passports were used to open multiple accounts, but the Bank did not identify the problem until one of the employees was arrested.  In a third scheme, a money laundering network had accounts for at least five shell companies that moved more than $100 million in illicit funds, but the Bank did not file a required suspicious activity report until law enforcement alerted it.

“From fentanyl and narcotics trafficking, to terrorist financing and human trafficking, TD Bank’s chronic failures provided fertile ground for a host of illicit activity to penetrate our financial system,” said Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo. The Bank’s “long-term, pervasive, and systemic deficiencies in its policies over a period of nine years allowed such abuses to flourish”, Prosecutors said.

The bank is the 10th largest in the United States, and its CEO said the company takes full responsibility and has been cooperating with the investigation. It’s been taking steps to fix its U.S. anti-money laundering program, including appointing new leadership and adding hundreds of new specialists, according to TD Bank Group CEO Bharat Masrani. “We know what the issues are, we are fixing them. As we move forward, we’re ensuring that this never happens again,” Masrani said. “And I’m 100% confident that we get to the other side and emerge even stronger.”

Nevertheless, two dozen people have been prosecuted for involvement in money-laundering schemes, including two TD Bank employees and the investigation is ongoing. TD Bank has also agreed to major restructuring of the corporate compliance program in its U.S. operations, as well as three years of monitoring and five years of probation.