- US shareholders can now sue Deutsche Bank over alleged compliance failures, a judge ruled Monday.
- Investors allege the bank ignored "obvious red flags" while vetting ultra-wealthy clients.
Deutsche Bank shareholders in the US can now sue the firm over alleged compliance failures related to high-risk clients such as
The investors allege that Deutsche Bank ignored "obvious red flags" when vetting ultra-rich individuals for its wealth management business. After these client relationships became public, it damaged the bank's reputation and share price, the group claims.
The class-action lawsuit covers shareholders who invested in Deutsche Bank securities between March 14, 2017 and May 12, 2020. A spokesperson for Deutsche Bank declined to comment.
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Deutsche Bank's clients also included "founders of terrorist organizations, people associated with Mexican drug cartels, and people suspected of financing terrorist organizations," investors allege.
In 2020, New York state regulators fined Deutsche Bank $150 million over what it called "significant compliance failures" in regard to the financial activity of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, as CNBC reported.
The complaint cites eleven confidential witnesses who worked in Deutsche Bank's compliance group and claim the firm's anti-money laundering and "know your customer" policies did not work as they were outwardly advertised to investors.