A Swiss lawyer accused of helping U.S. clients conceal millions of dollars in offshore accounts pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit tax fraud in federal court in New York on Friday and has been telling prosecutors how he helped American clients use secret accounts to hide assets from the Internal Revenue Service.
Edgar Paltzer, 57, admitted Aug. 16 in federal court in New York that he conspired to commit tax fraud by helping U.S. clients hide millions of dollars from the IRS. He was indicted on April 16 with a Swiss banker, Stefan Buck.
Paltzer, a former partner of Swiss law firm Niederer Kraft & Frey, was first charged in April on one count of conspiracy alongside Stefan Buck, then head of private banking at Bank Frey & Co AG.
Frey, the bank's founder, had also been a partner in Niederer Kraft & Frey. But he resigned on April 25, with Niederer Kraft at the time saying it "concluded that it was in the best interests" of the law firm.
The indictment accused Paltzer and Buck of conspiring with U.S. taxpayers from 2000 through at least 2012 to help them hide their Swiss accounts from the Internal Revenue Service.
The case shed light on Bank Frey, one of the smaller Swiss private banks with just 1.9 billion Swiss francs ($1.54 billion) under management last year.
Prosecutors say the bank gained U.S. clients as the Justice Department pursued other banks.
U.S. authorities say that by the third quarter of 2012, about 44 percent of the bank's assets under management were for U.S. taxpayers.
The number had grown 300 percent between February 2009 and February 2012 amid prosecutions of rival banks UBS AG and Wegelin & Co.
Paltzer is cooperating with U.S. authorities in their broader investigation of how foreign banks and advisers helped American clients evade taxes.
His cooperation offers U.S. investigators a rare inside look at how Swiss bankers and advisers used sham trusts and corporations and moved cash and jewelry across borders to hide their assets from the IRS. He admitted that he acted as a financial intermediary to opening bank accounts in Switzerland in the name of entities he formed for U.S. citizens, knowing they intended to evade taxes.
Since 2008, the U.S. government has charged at least 90 people in a crackdown on offshore Tax Evasion, including 24 Bankers, Lawyers and Advisers.
He agreed to pay restitution and forfeit fees he earned from his crime, which carries a potential 5 year prison term. As a cooperator, prosecutors have agreed to submit a letter to the sentencing judge outlining his assistance to the U.S.
The Swiss government unveiled a plan in July that could potentially allow the banks to cooperate with U.S authorities, who are seeking penalties of as much as $10 billion.
U.S. prosecutors haven't just targeted offshore tax evasion in Switzerland. In July, Liechtenstein's oldest bank, Liechtensteinische Landesbank AG, agreed to a $23.8 million settlement to avoid criminal charges for opening and maintaining undeclared bank accounts for U.S. citizens and turn over .
The case is U.S. v Paltzer, 13-cr-00282, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).
Edgar Paltzer, 57, admitted Aug. 16 in federal court in New York that he conspired to commit tax fraud by helping U.S. clients hide millions of dollars from the IRS. He was indicted on April 16 with a Swiss banker, Stefan Buck.
Paltzer, a former partner of Swiss law firm Niederer Kraft & Frey, was first charged in April on one count of conspiracy alongside Stefan Buck, then head of private banking at Bank Frey & Co AG.
The indictment accused Paltzer and Buck of conspiring with U.S. taxpayers from 2000 through at least 2012 to help them hide their Swiss accounts from the Internal Revenue Service.
The case shed light on Bank Frey, one of the smaller Swiss private banks with just 1.9 billion Swiss francs ($1.54 billion) under management last year.
Prosecutors say the bank gained U.S. clients as the Justice Department pursued other banks.
U.S. authorities say that by the third quarter of 2012, about 44 percent of the bank's assets under management were for U.S. taxpayers.
The number had grown 300 percent between February 2009 and February 2012 amid prosecutions of rival banks UBS AG and Wegelin & Co.
Paltzer is cooperating with U.S. authorities in their broader investigation of how foreign banks and advisers helped American clients evade taxes.
His cooperation offers U.S. investigators a rare inside look at how Swiss bankers and advisers used sham trusts and corporations and moved cash and jewelry across borders to hide their assets from the IRS. He admitted that he acted as a financial intermediary to opening bank accounts in Switzerland in the name of entities he formed for U.S. citizens, knowing they intended to evade taxes.
Since 2008, the U.S. government has charged at least 90 people in a crackdown on offshore Tax Evasion, including 24 Bankers, Lawyers and Advisers.
He agreed to pay restitution and forfeit fees he earned from his crime, which carries a potential 5 year prison term. As a cooperator, prosecutors have agreed to submit a letter to the sentencing judge outlining his assistance to the U.S.
The Swiss government unveiled a plan in July that could potentially allow the banks to cooperate with U.S authorities, who are seeking penalties of as much as $10 billion.
U.S. prosecutors haven't just targeted offshore tax evasion in Switzerland. In July, Liechtenstein's oldest bank, Liechtensteinische Landesbank AG, agreed to a $23.8 million settlement to avoid criminal charges for opening and maintaining undeclared bank accounts for U.S. citizens and turn over .
The case is U.S. v Paltzer, 13-cr-00282, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).
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