JPMorgan Settles With Federal Authorities in Madoff Case - NYTimes.com:
by Ben Protess and Jessica Silver-Greenberg
On Tuesday, five years after [Bernard]. Madoff’s arrest set off a panic on Wall Street and in Washington, Mr. Madoff’s primary bank received a punishment of its own.
Federal prosecutors in Manhattan imposed a $1.7 billion penalty on JPMorgan for two felony violations of the Bank Secrecy Act, a record payout under that 1970 law, which requires banks to alert authorities to suspicious activity. The prosecutors, essentially accusing the nation’s biggest bank of turning a blind eye to Mr. Madoff’s fraud, will require JPMorgan to pay the $1.7 billion to his victims.
The bank cannot write off the sum as a tax deduction. And including the Madoff settlement, JPMorgan will have doled out some $20 billion to resolve government investigations over the last 12 months.
Later on Tuesday, federal regulators are expected to announce their own rebuke of the bank in a civil case. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, according to people briefed on the matter, struck a $350 million settlement with the bank over the Madoff case and broader breakdowns in safeguards against anti-money laundering.
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