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HSBC Singapore, HK and India hands over names

SQguy

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HSBC has handed over names to US and EU officials names of people having offshore deposit accounts. End of free banking in Singapore. Other banks are in talks to do the same.
 

halsey02

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HSBC has handed over names to US and EU officials names of people having offshore deposit accounts. End of free banking in Singapore. Other banks are in talks to do the same.

We go back to the old days of stuffing the money in biscuit tins, under the pillow, in matteresses....

no one will know...
 

Received_by_Kings

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HSBC has handed over names to US and EU officials names of people having offshore deposit accounts. End of free banking in Singapore. Other banks are in talks to do the same.

Oh no, does that mean the financial hub dream is now dashed?

Alright next, Goal 2014. You can do it guys come on!
 

QXD

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Generous Asset
http://us.mobile.reuters.com/mobile...www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE66614O20100707

HSBC clients scrutinized in U.S. tax evasion probe
Wed, Jul 07 08:07 AM EDT

By Clare Baldwin and Joe Rauch

NEW YORK/CHARLOTTE, North Carolina (Reuters) - The Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation into whether some HSBC Holdings Plc clients may have failed to disclose offshore accounts, lawyers familiar with the probe said on Tuesday.

The London-based bank has become the latest focus of a widening federal probe into U.S. citizens believed to have stored billions of dollars of assets in offshore accounts to avoid scrutiny by domestic tax authorities.

HSBC clients have received a June 21 letter from Kevin Downing, a senior litigator at the Justice Department who oversaw the UBS probe, that says they are subjects of a criminal investigation. Reuters obtained a copy of the letter.

A Justice Department representative did not immediately return an email request for comment.

Last year, Switzerland's UBS AG admitted to criminal wrongdoing for helping U.S. clients evade taxes. It agreed to pay a $780 million penalty and hand over details on more than 250 client accounts, and later agreed to disclose names of 4,450 wealthy U.S. clients to tax investigators.

Tax lawyers said the letter received by HSBC clients resembles similar correspondence in the UBS case.

While Downing's letter does not mention the bank by name, it was intended for a client with an HSBC account, according to a lawyer who has a client who received it. That lawyer asked not to be named because the probe is not public.

Another lawyer said two HSBC clients who have contacted him held their funds in offshore accounts in India, totaling more than $1 million each.

"It was not a friendly letter," said that lawyer, Robert McKenzie, a partner at Arnstein & Lehr LLP in Chicago.

Gareth Hewett, an HSBC spokesman in Hong Kong, declined to comment, but said the bank "fully supports government moves for appropriate disclosure by its citizens" and "does not condone or assist tax evasion."

UBS CASE SEEN AS "LEVERAGE"

Downing's letter was earlier reported by Bloomberg News, which said the probe also reaches to HSBC clients with accounts in Singapore, citing three people familiar with the matter.

"The IRS had scored a very important victory against UBS, and is using that victory as leverage against other banks," said Asher Rubinstein, a partner at Rubinstein & Rubinstein LLP in New York, who does not have clients who received the letter but has represented UBS clients.

Rubinstein said he was not sure whether Singapore offered bank clients any greater ability to keep accounts secret. "It is a signatory to various tax information exchange agreements with foreign governments," he said. "You can bet Singapore is going to help other countries in criminal tax investigations."

In his letter, Downing advised recipients not to destroy or alter documents related to their overseas accounts, saying this could constitute obstruction of justice.

Recipients who had already retained counsel were advised to contact the Justice Department, Downing wrote.

One lawyer said IRS agents have visited three of his clients to discuss offshore bank accounts they had with HSBC.

This lawyer declined to be identified or to name his clients because the investigation is not public.

Several lawyers who have represented UBS clients said they expect the government to pursue its tax evasion probe for many years, likely targeting clients at many banks and accounts in several countries.

"It is important from the government's perspective to send a message that UBS was not a blip on the radar screen, but the beginning of a sustained enforcement campaign," said Peter Hardy, a partner at Post & Schell in Philadelphia. "It's not just Europe, and it's not just UBS."

(Reporting by Clare Baldwin and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Joe Rauch in Charlotte, N.C.; Kelvin Soh in Hong Long and Kevin Lim in Singapore, Editing by Chris Lewis, Gary Hill)

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manokie

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However

Sinkie rely on corrupt money from Indo, China, Thai etc

US should check all corrupt money instead of American tax evaders

:o
 

QXD

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
This is old news lah... Every few mths some one will claim the sky is falling....

http://network.nationalpost.com/np/...ey-sloshes-to-singapore-from-switzerland.aspx

Network.nationalpost.com, 21 Aug 2009, Diane Francis

Swiss banking secrecy crackdown: Singapore next

The Swiss sting
The Swiss have been surrounded for decades by mountains of snow and dirty money.
That’s why it is indeed welcome news that Washington has been able to pry open Switzerland’s bank secrecy laws this week. UBS will hand over information on the accounts of 4,450 wealthy Americans.
But this should be just the beginning and the next big target should be Singapore, according to Washington-based attorney Jack Blum.
“As a result of the pressure on Switzerland, a lot of the client bank accounts have been shifted off to Singapore. UBS said [last year] it will cooperate in giving up the names, so billions fled and it all appears to be heading to Singapore,” he said in a recent telephone interview.
Singapore is the “preferred destination” for Wall Street denizens, according to Singaporean opposition politicians. Who knows? Maybe some of Madoff’s billions are there.

Bankers are accessories
Singapore maintains that it has weeded out criminals. But that’s what the Swiss said too. There is no way a bank can determine who is behind the person or entity with the numbered bank account. It’s an excuse trying to mask the fact that secrecy havens are willing accessories to crimes.
“Crooks set up offshore corporations in the British Virgin Islands, get a bank account in Singapore or in the Pacific islands or in a trust in the Isle of Man and there’s no way to crack through all of that at the moment,” said Blum.
This is why the UBS deal must be only the beginning of a global crackdown. Governments worldwide have incurred enormous debts to pull the world back from its economic brink, due to banking malpractice, and tax evaders must be pursued to help ease the burden on all taxpayers.

Secrecy invented in 1934
The Swiss invented the secret, numbered bank account to help Jews and others hide money from the Nazis. But the Nazis used this service too because secrecy enables despots, drug cartels and tax evaders of every race, religion and nationality to evade taxes and detection.
Swiss bank accounts have facilitated corruption worldwide and involved high-profile cases in Pakistan, Africa and South America. The late Yasser Arafat stashed $300 million safely away in Switzerland, and safely out of the reach of the Palestinian people to whom it belonged. Likewise, every tinpot dictator, terrorist organization, kickback artist, tax cheat and drug dealer in the world likely has a Swiss gnome protecting his money from police, other crooks, tax authorities and ex-wives.

UBS nickname: used to be smart
This UBS precedent was the result of investigations which followed revelations from a UBS whistleblower about the bank’s “offshore” marketing techniques such as smuggling diamonds in toothpaste tubes for clients.
But UBS is only the tip of the iceberg.
Last week, allegations were made in an Italian court by the daughter of the late Gianni Agnelli, whose family owns Fiat which is Italy’s largest industrial empire, that there was US$1 billion hidden in Lugano banks that her mother was hiding from her.
This dirty money business has gone on for years and there are trillions sloshing around in dozens of countries from Liechtenstein to the Channel Islands, Cayman Island, Vanuatu, Austria plus others.
The Swiss must now also force Credit Suisse and other financial intermediaries to cooperate with foreign tax and police authorities. This bank also came under fire in the 1990s when the World Jewish Congress discovered that there was no effort to help find the heirs to accounts of Jews who were murdered or who disappeared in the Second World War. The money was being used by the bank.
The Swiss have been targeted for some time and now Singapore plus others must become the focus. Ending bank secrecy will reap many benefits for the world such as finding out if public officials and politicans are on the take.

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SQguy

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It is not old news. Also many indo and thai guys have US green card or citizenship and they are also covered.....
 

longbow

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Think given fiscal deficits, EU& US in search for $.

Only way out is to give up citizenship of these countries before probe. Once kena probe give up citizenship is pointless.

Look for more HNW becoming Singaporeans. With Singapore passport can visit USA with no visa, stay for 90 days each time. So no diff for these HNW people.

Think Singapore saw this move.
 
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