Tax
LGT Denies Wrongdoing as Accuser Has His Day in Court

LGT, which is owned by
Liechtenstein's royal family, strongly rejected that it used
sophisticated and simple ruses to help clients move assets around
the world and evade taxes, an accusation a former bank employee
made to US lawmakers, according to a report by
Bloomberg.
LGT routinely routed clients' money through networks of shell
companies in the British Virgin Islands,
Panama, and
Nigeria, Heinrich Kieber told the US Senate's Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations in a videotaped statement. Mr
Kieber said he learned about the bank's secretive practices when
he worked from 2000 to 2002 on a project to scan LGT documents
into computers.
The comments come in a continuing US Congressional probe into how LGT and UBS allegedly helped US citizens to evade US taxes. The affair has put the spotlight on the traditionally secretive banking regimes in the Alpine states and their relations with nations such as the US.
"I began to realize the very questionable business that LGT was
often involved in and the dubious clients they were serving,''
said Mr Kieber. In addition to tax evasion, Mr Kieber said the
files showed a "strong indication to corruption, links to
dictators, or business deals to avoid a
US embargo”.
Mr Kieber, a computer technician, sparked a global tax scandal in
February after selling confidential bank records on 1,400
accounts to German authorities for as much as €5 million. He
testified at a Senate hearing on offshore banking practices by
LGT and UBS. Offshore tax evasion deprives the
US treasury of $100 billion a year, the committee says.
Mr Kieber gave Senate investigators 12,000 pages of documents, which provided much of the information in a 114-page panel report released last night.
LGT spokesman Michael Robinson was quoted as saying that the bank
questions Mr Kieber's credibility and "strongly rejects any
allegations of conducting, or assisting in, illegal activities.''
Mr Kieber stole confidential client data from the bank and has
been convicted of fraud in an unrelated case, said Mr Robinson,
whose
Washington public relations firm represents LGT.