A U.S. law-enforcement probe intoToronto-Dominion Bank’s internal controls is tied to the laundering of hundreds of millions of dollars in proceeds from illegal drug sales, the Wall Street Journal reported.
The U.S. Department of Justice launched an investigation after discovering evidence of a drug-money-laundering operation in New York and New Jersey, the Journal said Thursday, citing court documents and people familiar with the matter. There are allegations that the criminals bribed Toronto-Dominion employees in that case and at least one other, the newspaper said.
Toronto-Dominion disclosed last year that it was under investigation by the department. Canada’s second-largest lender also faces probes by three U.S. regulators over its handling of suspicious customer transactions. The bank has set aside an initial US$450 million with respect to just one of those regulatory probes, it said earlier this week, noting that it can’t estimate the final size of any fines or other penalties it might face tied to the anti-money-laundering investigations.
Toronto-Dominion’s shares dropped after the Journal report Thursday afternoon, and closed down 1.7 per cent.
“Criminals constantly seek to use banks to launder money. Regrettably, our U.S. AML program did not effectively thwart these activities. This is unacceptable, and we must and we will do better,” Toronto-Dominion spokeswoman Lisa Hodgins said in an emailed statement to Bloomberg News. “As previously disclosed, we have been and continue to cooperate with law enforcement and our regulators. A comprehensive effort is underway to strengthen our AML program, including investments in talent, tools and technology.”
The Journal cited a criminal case that included the laundering of
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