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LLB-Vaduz to pay US 'lost taxes'

July 31, 2013

Liechtenstein's second largest bank has agreed to pay the United States millions in undeclared revenue and lost taxes from US citizens. In return, the US says it will drop its investigation of the tax haven.

GettyImages 154736217 An employee at a money changer counts USD 100 bills in Manila on October 25, 2012. AFP PHOTO/NOEL CELIS (Photo credit should read NOEL CELIS/AFP/Getty Images)
Image: AFP/Getty Images

The Liechtensteinische Landesbank AG (LLB-Vaduz) agreed to pay the US Department of Justice nearly $23.8 million (17.95 million euros). The settlement ended a probe into LLB-Vaduz's practices from 2001 to 2011, during which time US authorities suspected it of facilitating tax evasion for US citizens.

"[LLB-Vaduz] has reached a definitive solution to the US taxation dispute," the bank said in a statement on Tuesday.

Under the agreement, the Vaduz-based bank will pay $16.3 million in revenue from undeclared assets belonging to US depositors. US authorities are to receive $7.5 million in lost tax revenue.

It also provided US authorities with information on 200 US clients, according to the news agency AFP.

The US Department of Justice agreed to halt further prosecution, freeing the Liechtenstein bank from the prospect of criminal charges or fines.

"This non-prosecution agreement addresses the past wrongful conduct of LLB-Vaduz in allowing US taxpayers to evade their legal obligations through the use of undisclosed Liechtenstein bank accounts," US Assistant Attorney General Kathryn Keneally said.

US authorities also agreed to acknowledge LLB-Vaduz' bank reforms beginning in 2008, which required all clients to declare their income before the investigation had begun.

"As a result of new Liechtenstein legislation, US taxpayers who thought that they had obtained the benefit of Liechtenstein's tax secrecy laws have learned that their bank files were turned over on the request of the Department of Justice," Keneally said.

kms/jm (AFP, dpa)

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