Pubdate: 4 Dec 1998 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Section: Sec. 1 Copyright: 1998 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Author: New York Times News Service CITIBANK ROLE CRITICIZED IN MEXICAN MONEY CASE Eager to do business with Raul Salinas de Gortari, a brother of the former President of Mexico, Citibank executives ignored some of the bank's safeguards against the laundering of illicit funds, a congressional report says. As the bankers took in millions of dollars from Salinas, they never asked for standard information on his financial background and made virtually no effort to verify the source of the money, the report said. After Salinas was arrested for murder in 1995 and lawyers for the bank had begun monitoring his accounts, his personal banker in New York quietly advised Salinas' wife to move the money elsewhere, apparently without the consent of the legal department. And even when Citibank finally warned federal officials about Salinas' suspicious transactions and after the wife also had been arrested, the bank failed to tell the government about the network of foreign shell companies and offshore accounts that the bank had set up to shield the Salinas fortune. The disclosures, in a report by the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, represent the most detailed accounting yet of how Salinas used a special Citibank unit reserved for the wealthiest customers to move up to $100 million out of Mexico secretly. Salinas and the bank have repeatedly denied wrongdoing. Whether any U.S. laws were broken remains unclear. Federal prosecutors in New York are continuing to investigate the possibility that Citibank, a unit of Citigroup Inc., illegally laundered the money. Officials at the Justice Department and the Federal Reserve Bank refused to discuss the case with congressional investigators. The investigation underscores why federal regulators are stepping up scrutiny of the high-end services called private banking and why they have begun to propose steps for banks to track customers' financial movements and backgrounds more closely. "We determined in the Salinas scenario that Citibank's voluntary controls did not work," the investigators wrote. "Citibank, while violating only one aspect of its then policies, facilitated a money-managing system that disguised the origin, destination and beneficial owner of the funds involved." The study was issued weeks after Swiss authorities had moved to confiscate $114 million from Salinas, asserting that the funds were protection money paid by drug traffickers. Mexican officials also recently announced that they had frozen an additional $119 million in a maze of other accounts that Salinas controlled. In a statement Thursday, the bank said the report "contains errors of fact and interpretation." A spokesman for the bank, Richard Howe, would neither detail the errors nor address any specific issues in the case. The report also noted that officials in the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which has not investigated the case, believed that the civil bank-secrecy statute had probably not been violated. The law says prosecutors can only prove that Salinas or the bank violated money-laundering statutes if they first show that the money was from an unlawful source. The prosecutors would then have to demonstrate that the bank knew or should have known that the money was illicit. Law-enforcement officials familiar with the case said their principal challenge had been to amass enough evidence to prove in a criminal trial that Salinas had earned his money by one of the handful of crimes, such as drug trafficking, that are covered abroad under the federal money-laundering statutes. Swiss investigators, who faced a much lower evidentiary threshold to confiscate Salinas' deposits there, based their case in part on statements by convicted drug traffickers imprisoned in the United States. Although U.S. officials have dismissed some of those potential witnesses as unreliable, they said others were considered credible. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry