NatWest: a failure to apply the smell test 

Bank fined nearly £265m for money laundering scandal 

NatWest
NatWest: didn’t smell a rat
(Image credit: Dave Rushen/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

NatWest has been fined nearly £265m for failing to stop a money-laundering scheme that lasted five years, took in around 50 branches nationwide, and featured “black bin liners” stuffed so full of cash “that one branch’s two floor-to-ceiling safes proved ‘inadequate’ for storing it all”, said Rupert Jones in The Guardian.

The case centres on the Bradford jeweller Fowler Oldfield – which deposited around £365m from 2012 to 2016, when it was shut down after a police raid. It is the first time a UK bank has faced criminal prosecution by the Financial Conduct Authority under anti-money-laundering laws. When the money laundering was at its height, up to £1.8m of cash was deposited daily – quite an achievement for a supposed “scrap gold” dealer, which had told the bank it had an annual turnover of £15m.

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