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17 August 2012 / Richard Moorhead
Issue: 7527 / Categories: Features , Profession
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On the wire

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Richard Moorhead toys with ethical dilemmas & regulatory barriers

Whether the Standard Chartered Bank (SCB) allegations have been sexed up to aid the US in its geopolitical battle for financial supremacy or not, they raise interesting concerns as regards the role of professionals in the process. In broad terms, the bank stands accused of “wire-stripping” information from transactions with Iranian clients involving perhaps $250bn and earning the bank hundreds of millions of dollars in fees. Crucially to the politics of the situation, the transactions are not just alleged to be sanction busting: some of SCB’s client banks are claimed to finance terrorist groups.

Due diligence?

The allegations centre on removing information that would have flagged the payments as Iranian from the wire transfer messages to prevent the payments being flagged and investigated in the US to see if they breached sanctions rules. SCB’s case appears to be that the payments were of a type not subject to sanctions (so-called U-turn transactions permitted until 2008), and had been subject to the necessary due

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Taylor Rose—Jessica Draganescu & Emily Hewlett

Taylor Rose—Jessica Draganescu & Emily Hewlett

Firm strengthens growth strategy and group litigation capability with senior hires

Farrer & Co—Richard Lane

Farrer & Co—Richard Lane

Londstanding London firm appoints new senior partner

Bird & Bird—Sue McLean

Bird & Bird—Sue McLean

Commercial team in London welcomes technology specialist as partner

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Pathfinder courts—renamed ‘Child focused courts’—are to be rolled out nationally, following a successful pilot where backlogs halved and cases were resolved up to seven and a half months faster
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Centuries-old burial laws would be overhauled, under Law Commission proposals to address the burgeoning problem of shortage of cemetery space
The government has committed an extra £32m to women’s charities and services tackling addiction, trauma, abuse and homelessness
The Financial Ombudsman is poised for major reform to return it to a simple, impartial dispute resolution service
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