Warren, Six Other Senators Demand Jerome Powell Investigate Trump Deutsche Bank Transactions

“Now the new big story is that Trump made a lot of money and buys everything for cash”, an exasperated Donald Trump tweeted, at 7:20 AM on May 20.

“But where did he get all of that cash?”, the president proceeded to ask, referring to his pronoun self in the third person on the way to delivering the following unhinged screed:

Could it be Russia? No, I built a great business and don’t need banks, but if I did they would be there…and DeutscheBank………..was very good and highly professional to deal with – and if for any reason I didn’t like them, I would have gone elsewhere….there was always plenty of money around and banks to choose from. They would be very happy to take my money. Fake News!

He was upset at an article that appeared in The New York Times the previous evening.

The Times had just reported that multiple former employees of Deutsche Bank (including anti-money laundering experts) along with the bank’s own computer systems at one point flagged a series of transactions tied to entities controlled by Trump and Jared Kushner as potentially suspicious.

The sources – one of whom was named, photographed and interviewed extensively for the story – say they recommended that the transactions in question be referred to the Treasury department for review. Deutsche Bank, according to the Times, chose not to file a series of so-called “suspicious activity reports” prepared by junior employees with the government.

All in all, the story was not flattering for Deutsche, but for Trump, it was especially bad, because it gave Maxine Waters and Adam Schiff still more ammunition for their ongoing probes into the president’s relationship with the embattled bank.

Deutsche, Kushner Companies and Trump all claimed the report was either meritless or misleading.

Read the whole story

Well, on Thursday, the Times reported that a handful of Democratic senators are angling to have the Fed review those suspicious transactions.

That’s according to a letter penned by Senator Chris Van Hollen who, as the Times writes, “also asks Fed officials for information about their interactions with Deutsche Bank, including whether they have investigated the issues that several former bank employees raised in the Times article.”

(Note: The letter is public, and it’s copied in full below, but because it was the Times whose original reporting prompted the senators to call on the Fed, we thought it was only fair to link to their Thursday article) 

The letter, addressed to Jerome Powell himself (and also to John Williams), asks the Fed to assess whether Deutsche Bank’s handling of the situation was in compliance with anti-money-laundering laws. To wit, from the letter:

Only by conducting a thorough review of the full range of this activity can we better understand what happened in these cases; what practices, procedures, or personnel may need to be changed at the bank; and what regulators should do to ensure the Federal Reserve’s ability effectively to monitor compliance with anti-money laundering laws.

If you’re wondering whether this is being framed as a test of the Fed’s independence from Trump amid the president’s relentless verbal assault on the central bank, the answer is “absolutely”.

“This is a test of the Fed’s independence,” Van Hollen told the Times. “It would be gross negligence if they weren’t investigating.”

Needless to say, this is likely to make Trump even more wary of the Fed, an institution he has variously suggested is related (at least tangentially) to a “deep state” plot to usurp him.

The president has repeatedly referred to the central bank as the “greatest threat” to his presidency, and has assailed Jerome Powell on so many occasions that it’s impossible to catalogue them all. In March, during an inflammatory rant at CPAC, Trump mocked the “gentleman at the Fed”, eliciting low boos from the scant few attendees who understood what he was talking about. During the same speech, Trump decried a conspiracy to “take me out with bullsh*t”.

Three days after the original Times article referenced in lawmakers’ letter to the Fed was published, Trump lost a bid to block Capital One and Deutsche from turning over documents to Congress. The case will be heard by an appeals court at some point over the coming months.

In addition to Van Hollen, six other senators signed the letter to Powell. One of them is Elizabeth Warren.


Full letter

Dear Chairman Powell and President Williams:

We write in response to a New York Times article printed on May 19, 2019, alleging that senior Deutsche Bank Wealth Management officials repeatedly ignored the recommendations of their own anti- money laundering compliance experts that the bank file suspicious activities reports (SARs) on transactional activity tied to President Donald Trump, including Trump business entities and the Trump Foundation, and companies owned or controlled by his son-in-law Jared Kushner or his family.

As you are aware, Deutsche Bank has deep ties to President Trump and Mr. Kushner. Deutsche Bank has been the President’s largest lender and extended him lines of credit when other financial institutions would not.  This overdependence on Deutsche Bank and the heightened potential for conflicts of interest it poses is made more troubling because the President has refused to make any effort to address conflicts of interest or disclose his extensive global financial ties, as other Presidents and candidates have done in the past.

In recent years, Deutsche Bank has been the subject of numerous enforcement actions, including with respect to misconduct for the structuring and financing of fraudulent tax shelters, manipulation of benchmark interest rates, money laundering, and facilitation of tax evasion by U.S. taxpayers through undisclosed accounts in its Swiss bank. Deutsche Bank has also been cited for misconduct by Germany and the United Kingdom. The U.S. branch coordinated with Deutsche Bank entities overseas to process dollar-denominated funds through the U.S. in violation of sanctions laws and regulations.  Last year, its headquarters in Germany was raided by government officials — the third large-scale raid conducted at Deutsche Bank since 2012 — with officials reportedly looking into its activities involving the creation and servicing of hundreds of offshore shell corporations.

In light of these most recent press accounts, and Deutsche Bank’s extensive history of violations, which have prompted huge penalties for the bank, we urge you to undertake a thorough evaluation of the Bank’s compliance with Bank Secrecy Act and Anti- Money Laundering regulations with respect to the Trump and Kushner-related activities identified by Deutsche Bank compliance staff as suspicious.  Only by conducting a thorough review of the full range of this activity can we better understand what happened in these cases; what practices, procedures, or personnel may need to be changed at the bank; and what regulators should do to ensure the Federal Reserve’s ability effectively to monitor compliance with Anti- Money Laundering laws.

Given the seriousness of these allegations, and the bank’s history of misconduct, we ask that you respond to the following questions no later than June 24, 2019:

  1. Have examination and supervisory staff from the Fed Board or NY Fed met with the whistleblowers in the New York Times story to hear detailed accounts of their experience and the patterns of conduct they describe?
  1. Please describe your efforts to investigate these allegations of whistleblowers regarding the pattern they describe of senior Deutsche Bank wealth management officials’ persistent refusal to file SARs on politically-exposed persons whose activity would normally require elevated scrutiny, including Trump and Kushner-affiliated entities whose activity had been identified as suspicious by bank compliance experts.
  1. Have you been able to determine, in consultation with Deutsche Bank officials, how many such SARS were quashed, and over what period? Have you independently assessed the rationale/s provided by senior managers for not filing these SARs, and are you satisfied that they were consistent with the law and AML/BSA best practices?
  1. Who were the Private Wealth Management or other bank decision makers involved in these decisions? Did the decision involve senior executives, including risk management personnel?
  1. What was the precise role of the Special Investigations Unit within Deutsche Bank with respect to these Trump and Kushner-related transactions?
  1. Have you required Deutsche Bank officials to undertake an internal audit or other review of these decisions and, if so, have you offered guidance on the scope and purpose of the review, and independently assessed its findings and conclusions?
  1. Were the initial suspicious activity concerns identified by Deutsche Bank compliance staff triggered by concerns about the originators of the funds, the recipients of the funds, or both? Did any of the activity involve entities located overseas? Did any implicate “companies involving prominent Russians,” as whistleblowers allege?
  1. Has anyone from the White House or the Department of Treasury communicated with the Fed Board or NY Fed regarding Deutsche Bank, including instructions related to the release of documents to Congress or to law enforcement? If so, please describe any such contacts.
  1. Deutsche Bank has failed its stress test in three of the last four years, has been required to address deficiencies in its resolution plan, and last year filed a $3 billion quarterly loss.  Given these systemic managerial failures in addition to concerns about compliance with BSA/AML requirements detailed above, what plans do regulators have for reforming Deutsche Bank’s management? Will regulators be subjecting Deutsche Bank to heightened supervisory and regulatory standards?
  1. As a regulator, what are your expectations for internal control and risk management procedures regarding a large complex institution like Deutsche Bank, to address circumstances where its automated system has identified potentially suspicious activity, and compliance staff have independently assessed that activity and prepared a SAR filing and supporting documentation on high profile clients, including politically exposed persons, but more senior officials refuse to file them with FinCEN? What are your expectations regarding the extent, and documentation, of such internal deliberations for later review by regulators? Were those expectations met in this instance? In general, what penalties are banks subject to for failing to file SARs on such suspicious activity identified by their staff?
  1. Please describe in detail your oversight process for handling internal whistleblowers who provide your agency, or other financial regulators, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, with information regarding the banks you supervise. How do you coordinate review and assess such complaints, on what timetable, and at what level do you initially engage with officials of the bank? What provisions are made for elevation to senior officials, and if necessary to the bank’s Board, regarding resolution of such complaints?

Thank you for your consideration.

 

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2 thoughts on “Warren, Six Other Senators Demand Jerome Powell Investigate Trump Deutsche Bank Transactions

  1. It would be “gross negligence” to investigate suspicious and likely criminal behavior. That’s some solid double think.

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