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April 17, 2009 4:01 PM

IRS: Swiss Bank Kept U.S. Accounts Secret

(AP)  Swiss bank UBS AG used coded language in internal e-mails and memos, created hundreds of sham offshore entities and lied to U.S. officials in an elaborate scheme to conceal the overseas accounts of wealthy Americans, the Internal Revenue Service claimed in federal court documents.

The IRS filed the documents this week seeking to force the bank to turn over records for an estimated 52,000 U.S. customers who allegedly violated American tax laws by concealing Swiss accounts worth at least $14.8 billion.

"UBS systematically violated and circumvented its obligations .... all in order to help its U.S. clients conceal from the IRS their Swiss accounts at UBS," IRS agent Daniel Reeves said in the affidavit, which charges that the scheme ran from 2000 to 2007.

The internal bank e-mails and memos obtained by the IRS were included in the 305-page filing.

A UBS spokesman declined comment Friday, noting only that UBS has previously said it will fight the IRS effort - known as a "John Doe summons" - to learn the identities of these thousands of American clients. Earlier this week, UBS agreed to pay $780 million and disclose up to 300 UBS account holders to avoid criminal prosecution for those transactions.

According to the IRS, UBS allegedly staged training sessions so that "client advisers" could travel frequently to consult with secret U.S. customers without attracting the attention of tax agents or law enforcement officials. They were told to keep "an irregular hotel rotation" and falsely claim on customs forms that they were in the U.S. on pleasure, not business.

UBS also maintained a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week "hot line" for advisers to call if they ran into trouble with authorities, according to one UBS document filed with the court.

"Travel laptops were to have a generic UBS PowerPoint presentation to show U.S. authorities in the event of a border search," the IRS affidavit said.

The documents show UBS was worried that U.S. officials might tap their advisers' telephones or eavesdrop on cell phone conversations. No one was allowed to bring a printer to the U.S. out of fear that creation of a document might trigger criminal liability, according to one document.

At least one UBS adviser used code language in e-mails to describe his business dealings, adding that "orange" meant euros; "green" was U.S. dollars; and "blue" signified British pounds. The e-mail from this adviser, "Dieter," said that a "C" was $100,000, a "nut" was $250,000 and a "swan" $1 million.

The e-mail goes on to describe a transaction involving "2.5 orange nuts" and "2.05 green nuts," ending with "all clear?"

Another method to hide dealings with U.S. account holders was to create fake entities and corporations in other countries, according to the IRS affidavit. In 2004, the IRS filing said, UBS planned to create about 900 of these "dummy" entities to conceal Americans' Swiss accounts.

"In truth, the accounts were owned and controlled by U.S. taxpayers," the IRS affidavit said.

UBS was apparently upfront at first with its rich American customers about the illegal nature of the secret accounts, according to one internal e-mail.

The IRS said a declaration that clients were asked to sign flatly stated: "I would like to avoid disclosure of my identity to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service." But that did not go over well with the Americans, according to a 2000 UBS e-mail included in the IRS filing.

"This sentence was refused by many clients, provoked angry outcries and we were being told, which if signed, fully incriminates a U.S. person of criminal wrongdoing should this document fall into the wrong hands," according to the e-mail. It said the offending language was replaced with this: "I consent to the new tax regulations."

A 2003 e-mail also describes ongoing concern at UBS about the risks the bank was taking and the possibility that an IRS amnesty program for offshore tax evaders might lead to prosecution of banks.

"The bank should be able to demonstrate that, where certain bank employees have been active in setting up offshore structures for U.S. persons, these employees have been asked to leave," said the e-mail presented by the IRS to the court. "Immediate action is required in order to build up a defence (sic) against a possible future criminal case against the bank."

U.S. District Judge Alan Gold has scheduled a hearing Monday afternoon on the IRS lawsuit. In a filing Friday, UBS lawyers asked that Gold not embark on a fast-track process sought by U.S. officials because of the "extraordinary importance, consequences and international implications of these issues."

The IRS lawsuit was filed in Miami because two criminal prosecutions of UBS executives have taken place in South Florida, including that of ex-private banker Bradley Birkenfeld. Birkenfeld, who helped a California billionaire evade taxes, has pleaded guilty and is cooperating extensively with U.S. investigators.

For more info:
  • IRS Declaration On UBS (pdf)
    By AP Legal Affairs Writer Curt Anderson
  • © 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
    Add a Comment See all 26 Comments
    by ffoulkes-2009 February 23, 2009 6:24 AM EST
    The single biggest problem with SSI today is the disability scams going on. When you have lawyers with commercials on national TV saying that they will get you disability payments something is wrong. I know of 4 cases where there is nothing to prevent these people from working.

    Some examples one woman is the stage manager for a little theater, she makes $500 and $600 wedding cake ( I bought one)she also teaches cooking and candy making, yet she gets SSI disability for arthritis. I saw one woman on TV who was getting disability because she didn''t like to be around people. And if that is not enough I have Nephew who is as dumb as owl sheet and he is drawing disability.

    The ironic thing is you can''t report any of these people unless you have their SSN just try and get it.

    Posted by dink217 at 04:05 PM : Feb 22, 2009
    _______________
    The really rediculous thing is that many people who really do have a disability NEED these attorneys to get their benefits while others are out playing softball and bowling with their 'disabilities'. Many even with attorneys still are unable to get disability. I know a guy who is bound to a wheelchair a large part of the time. He has periods he could work, but large periods he is unable due to extreme pain in his joints (knees, ankles, hips) however his hands work, so he is considered only 80% disabled. The US SSI refused him on this basis. Go figure.
    Reply to this comment
    by kuching88 February 23, 2009 3:34 AM EST
    To think the Swiss will enforce U.S. tax code is an unreasonable expectation.

    They just are not that into us.
    Reply to this comment
    by payasyougo February 23, 2009 2:01 AM EST
    "IRS: Swiss Bank Kept U.S. Accounts Secret"
    ----

    And I thought they were Swiss accounts in a Swiss Bank.
    Reply to this comment
    by perk235 February 23, 2009 1:38 AM EST
    There needs to be an investigation of Phil Gramm and his relationship with UBS.
    Posted by jbrown88881 at 05:37 PM : Feb 22, 2009
    -----------------------
    Yes, Phil Gram was head of global services. He was also the co-sponsor of two critical bills that de-regulated the financial industries. One is the Gramm/Leach/Bliley Act and the other is the Commodities Modernization Act.

    These two bills, and especially the Commodities Modernization Act, are at the root of the current world-wide meltdown. This Act deregulated derivatives, which are the weapons of mass destruction that Warren Buffet warned about in 2004.
    Reply to this comment
    by stevador39 February 23, 2009 12:44 AM EST
    Former Senator Phil Gramm was an employee of UBS AG. Just what his role was in this massive tax scam should be investigated.
    Reply to this comment
    by eddom949 February 23, 2009 12:25 AM EST
    Grab the computers and back them up. The rich can pay for the forensics from -guess- the Swiss bank accounts. And they can take as long as they want.
    Reply to this comment
    by jbrown88881 February 22, 2009 8:37 PM EST
    There needs to be an investigation of Phil Gramm and his relationship with UBS.

    Or was it just coincidence how much he did to benefit the Swiss banker to the world's tax criminals?
    Reply to this comment
    by jbrown88881 February 22, 2009 8:29 PM EST
    "Yada, yada, yada...this''ll never go anywhere because the list will have so many dumpocrapic US congressmen and women on the list...

    Just like Comrade Obungler doesn''t want presidential e-mails disclosed because it''ll show dumpocrapic duplicity and complicity....


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Posted by WiccaOne


    On point 1, if any of them are, let them get charged just like anyone else. The Dems are dumping Burris. Whom did the REpugs ever get rid of for dishonesty? eh? . . . . . I'm waiting? . . . . . who?


    On point 2, you should approve that Obama is following the lead of your Dear Beloved Leader Bushit, shouldn't you? I mean, if he really does that, which is unclear at present, he'd be more like a Repugniscum, wouldn't he? . . . eh?
    Reply to this comment
    by dink217 February 22, 2009 7:08 PM EST
    ..SSI would not have been a bad idea if congress had not robbed it over the decades to pay for other things it had no business being used for...misappropriation of funds ,normal citizens would go to jail for things like this.

    Posted by tincup356 at 07:31 AM : Feb 22, 2009

    The single biggest problem with SSI today is the disability scams going on. When you have lawyers with commercials on national TV saying that they will get you disability payments something is wrong. I know of 4 cases where there is nothing to prevent these people from working.

    Some examples one woman is the stage manager for a little theater, she makes $500 and $600 wedding cake ( I bought one)she also teaches cooking and candy making, yet she gets SSI disability for arthritis. I saw one woman on TV who was getting disability because she didn't like to be around people. And if that is not enough I have Nephew who is as dumb as owl sheet and he is drawing disability.

    The ironic thing is you can't report any of these people unless you have their SSN just try and get it.
    Reply to this comment
    by dink217 February 22, 2009 7:07 PM EST
    ..SSI would not have been a bad idea if congress had not robbed it over the decades to pay for other things it had no business being used for...misappropriation of funds ,normal citizens would go to jail for things like this.

    Posted by tincup356 at 07:31 AM : Feb 22, 2009

    The single biggest problem with SSI today is the disability scams going on. When you have lawyers with commercials on national TV saying that they will get you disability payments something is wrong. I know of 4 cases where there is nothing to prevent these people from working.

    Some examples one woman is the stage manager for a little theater, she makes $500 and $600 wedding cake ( I bought one)she also teaches cooking and candy making, yet she gets SSI disability for arthritis. I saw one woman on TV who was getting disability because she didn't like to be around people. And if that is not enough I have Nephew who is as dumb as owl sheet and he is drawing disability.

    The ironic thing is you can't report any of these people unless you have their SSN just try and get it.
    Reply to this comment
    See all 26 Comments
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