U.S. Building Criminal LIBOR InvestigationReported by Huffington Post on Sunday, 15 July 2012 (on July 15, 2012)
|
 WASHINGTON, July 14 (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department is building criminal cases against several financial institutions and their employees related to the manipulation of interest rates, The New York Times reported on Saturday.
Citing government officials close to the case who spoke on condition of anonymity, the Times said traders at Barclays Plc were among the individuals against whom Justice was building cases. Authorities expect to file charges against at least one bank later this year, the newspaper reported.
Investigators in Washington and London last month struck a $450 million settlement with Barclays in a rate-rigging case, but the deal does not shield Barclays employees from criminal prosecution. The criminal and civil investigations have focused on how banks set the London interbank offered rate, or Libor.
Libor is used to determine borrowing casts for trillions of dollars in financial products, including mortgages, credit cards and student loans. The Times said cities, states and municipalities in the United States were also trying to determine whether they suffered loses due to rate manipulation and some had filed suit.
With the prospect of possible criminal charges, several financial institutions, including at least two European firms, are scrambling to arrange deals with the government, the Times reported, citing lawyers close to the case.
Given the broad scope of the Libor case and the number of institutions thought to be involved, the investigations could provide authorities with a "signature moment" to hold big banks accountable for misdeeds during the financial crisis, which hit global markets from late 2007, the newspaper said.
Still, the investigation is unusually complex, could continue for years and end in settlements rather than indictments, the Times said, citing officials close to the case.
Links: Full news story
|
|
|
| Recent related news |
| |
Huffington Post 7 hours ago | Not too many Hollywood franchises hit their stride five movies in, but in 2011, "Fast & Furious 3-6"... |
Huffington Post 10 hours ago | No matter how gruesome a crime might be -- whether it is the 1999 Columbine school shooting, the 1995... |
guardian.co.uk 10 hours ago | Google's Eric Schmidt has suggested they will be used for surveillance, but those who make them... |
DailyFinance 1 day ago | Filed under: Investing
LONDON -- Successful investors use a disciplined approach to picking... |
guardian.co.uk 3 days ago | Dimon won his battle with shareholders and remains CEO and chairman, but his ego is masking problems... |
| |
guardian.co.uk 4 days ago | Witnessing blatant police cruelty convinced the award-winning lawyer to make deaths in custody his... |
guardian.co.uk 4 days ago | Glencore and Vitol among those receiving 'request for information' as part of cross-border... |
Zero Hedge 1 week ago | · Mine union threatens to bring South Africa to 'standstill' (Reuters)
· Russia Raises Stakes in... |
guardian.co.uk 1 week ago | Robert Halfon MP pushes for serious fraud investigation after European commission raids on BP, Shell... |
| |
|
|