HSBC is the world's fifth largest bank. It's also the go-to bank for Mexican drug cartels to launder their money to provide legitimacy to their otherwise illegal crime syndicates
according to a new lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of Texas. That lawsuit seeks to recover damages from the bank on behalf of families whose loved ones have become victims of Mexican drug cartels. The lawsuit accuses HSBC of having lax anti-money laundering policies in its Mexican operations described by the lawsuit as "a culture of recklessness and corruption."
“Despite repeated warnings from authorities that drug proceeds were being laundered through HSBC-Mexico in USD accounts and that HSBC was, according to one drug lord, ‘the place to launder money,’ HSBC Mexico continued to accepted billions of USD deposits each year, which it then exported to HSBC US.”
WhoWhatWhy notes that HSBC is no stranger to money laundering accusations. It paid a $1.9 billion fine to the U.S. government in 2012 and admitted it failed to establish an effective anti-money laundering program. HSBC hired now-FBI Director James Comey to help get its house in order following that investigation. WhoWhatWhy notes the uniqueness of the lawsuit in that it characterizes the activities of drug cartels as terrorist organizations and seeks redress under a law enacted post 9/11 that allows victims to recover from organizations that support the perpetrators of terrorism. To support its contentions, the lawsuit reads:
“Beheadings, torture, public hangings of mutilated corpses, military-style assaults, grenade attacks, car bombings, and kidnappings are daily occurrences in many Mexican cities, and the cartels ensure that these acts are publicly displayed as a mechanism to intimidate and control the civilian population and the government.”
The suit alleges that HSBC’s actions, or inactions, amounted to knowingly providing “continuous and systematic material support to the cartels and their acts of terrorism by laundering billions of dollars for them. As a proximate result of HSBC’s material support to the Mexican drug cartels, numerous lives, including those of the plaintiffs, have been destroyed.”
You can read the full text of the lawsuit by clicking
here.
5 comments:
Hong Kong-Shanghai-Banking-Corporation (HSBC) originally was established to facilitate the opium trade in early 1800's. Not a surprise that they are the go to bank world wide for illegal drug operations. The Clipper ships of the 19th century were the forerunners of the Cigarette boats of the 1980's and 1990's.
I think we can be pretty certain the Too Big to Fail, Too Big to Jail rule apply in this case.
We have learned important lessons form the crash of 2008, The Republicrat Party will insulate the top brass of these Financial Institutions from any jail time.
Uh, Flogger, the banksters who have been jailed or who will be jailed over the past 7 years of Obama Corruptions amount to a very small number....an irrational number perhaps?
Both sides are guilty of letting Wall Street skate.
There was a time even the President of the United States was guilty of crimes and pardoned September 8, 1974.
No one should be too big to jail.
HSBC is more known domestically as usurious lender HFC - Household Finance.
Post a Comment