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UBS bank appeals French tax evasion fine a second time

UBS bank building
UBS maintains that the evidence presented in court was insufficient to show guilt. Keystone / Sebastian Gollnow

Switzerland’s largest bank, UBS, says it will once again appeal a fine handed out by a French court for tax evasion offences.

On December 13, a Paris appeal court confirmed a previous ruling that UBS was criminally guilty of assisting French tax evaders but reduced the penalty from €4.5 billion (CHF4.7 billion) to €1.8 billion.

The bank, which has always maintained that there is insufficient evidence to show such guilt, said on Monday that it would appeal to a higher court.

“This enables UBS to thoroughly assess the verdict of the Court of Appeal and to determine next steps in the best interest of its stakeholders,” the bank said in a statementExternal link.

UBS was originally found guilty in 2019 of seeking out French clients and advising them to hide their money in Swiss accounts. The court heard that the offences took place between 2004 and 2012 with the bank courting wealthy clients at lavish events.

The bank had chosen to argue its case in court after attempts to negotiate a settlement with the French authorities broke down.

Following the 2019 verdict, the bank stated that: “The conviction is not supported by any concrete evidence, but instead is based on the unfounded allegations of former employees who were not even heard at the trial.”

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What measures should countries take to protect themselves against tax evasion?

An appeal court in Paris has confirmed that Swiss bank UBS is guilty of having assisted French tax evaders – but reduced the penalty from €4.5 billion (CHF4.7 billion) to €1.8 billion. A former UBS employee-turned whistleblower, whose testimony sparked the French investigation, thinks this sends a mixed message. Media leaks, such as the Pandora Papers…

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