TD Bank fined $3bn in historic money laundering settlement
- Published
TD Bank, one of Canada's biggest lenders, has agreed to pay more than $3bn (£2.3bn) and pleaded guilty to criminal charges in the US after allowing drug cartels and other criminals to transfer hundreds of millions of dollars in illicit funds.
Prosecutors said the bank operated with inadequate guards against money laundering for nearly a decade, failing to act even when staff flagged obvious cases of abuse, such as a customer making daily deposits of $1m in cash.
The lender is now facing restrictions on its growth in the US - as well as the biggest fine ever under anti-monetary laundering law.
The chief executive of TD Bank said the bank was taking "full responsibility" for its failures.
Bharat Masrani said the bank had the financial strength to weather the situation and would be making "the investments, changes and enhancements required to deliver on our commitments".
The bank said it would be a multi-year process, but it had already taken some steps to overhaul its anti-money laundering programme, adding more than 700 new staff specialised in the issue.
"This is a difficult chapter in our bank's history. These failures took place on my watch as CEO and I apologise to all our stakeholders," he said on Thursday.
Mr Masrani announced last month he would retire in April 2025 after a decade at the bank's helm.
TD Bank is the largest lender in US history to plead guilty to failures under the Bank Secrecy Act and the first to plead guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering, the US justice department said.
The growth restriction its US retail business faces under its agreement with regulators is unusual - reserved for severe cases of wrongdoing, such as the fake account fraud uncovered at Wells Fargo several years ago.
Attorney General Merrick Garland said the bank was cooperating with the investigation and further individual prosecutions were expected.
“By making its services convenient for criminals, TD Bank became one,” he said.
At a press conference announcing the charges, US officials said the bank - the 10th largest in the US - had "starved" its compliance programmes of investment, even as it grew.
By 2018, it failed to monitor more than 90% of the transactions on its network, activity worth more than $18tn, prosecutors said at a press conference.
The gaps in compliance were so well-known internally that staff joked that the bank's motto - "America's most convenient bank" - was marketed toward criminals, they said.
Officials said one customer used TD Bank to launder more than $470m in drug proceeds, making large cash deposits and bribing staff with gift cards.
The scheme allowed payments from fentanyl users to flow back to drug networks in Mexico and China, officials said.
Officials said another scheme involved participation of five bank staff, who helped to issue dozens of ATM cards, facilitating the transfer of $39m in illicit funds to Colombia.
TD is the sixth largest bank in North America by assets and serves over 27.5 million customers around the world.
The settlement announced on Thursday will include a period of outside monitoring.
The penalties includes $1.8bn to the justice department and $1.3bn to the Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, as well as payments to other regulators including the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve.
Shares plunged more than 5% on the news.