The appellate tribunal for PML held that though banks had not reported the matter to the authorities.
The
Delhi High Court has rejected 15 appeals by the Financial
Intelligence Unit (FIU) of the finance ministry against an order
of the appellate tribunal of the Prevention of Money Laundering
(PML), which set aside the fine imposed on banks for failing to
report suspected transactions.
In
its order upholding the judgment of the appellate tribunal for PML, a
single-judge Bench of Justice Vibhu Bakhru said as the FIU had
already warned banks in writing about their failure to report
suspected transactions, the fine imposed on them was an afterthought
and, therefore, rightly set aside.
The
case dates back to 2013, when a sting operation was conducted by a
media outlet on various banks, which showed them to be favouring
money laundering operations by sidestepping the know-your-customer
(KYC) norms set by the Reserve
Bank of India (RBI). The sting operation showed 23 public sector
banks (PSBs) as well as private sector lenders' employees agreeing to
launder money for a minister without asking for details. Based on the
sting operation, the FIU had started investigation.
In
September 2014, the FIU wrote to these banks, asking them to be more
vigilant about reporting such suspicious transactions. However, later
the agency also imposed a fine on these banks, including Corporation
Bank, Federal Bank, Punjab National Bank, Axis Bank, Canara Bank,
Kotak Mahindra Bank, YES Bank, Indian Bank, Allahabad Bank, IndusInd
Bank, Bank of Maharashtra, Bank of India, State Bank of India, ICICI
Bank, and HDFC Bank.
The
FIU contended that the banks should have reported to the authorities
when they were approached during the sting operation. The banks,
meanwhile, said they had not offered any services and the employees
involved in the sting had been sacked. The banks also contended that
the transcript of the alleged sting operation that FIU put before
them did not present the full picture, as “they have been edited
and extracted in a manner so as to feed the perception that the
respondent banks are complicit in money laundering”. The banks
challenged the fine as well as the observation that they had not
reported suspicious transactions deliberately.
The
appellate tribunal for PML held that though banks had not reported
the matter to the authorities, the director, FIU, should not have
imposed the maximum penalty for the offence. While it reduced the
penalty imposed on most banks, it set aside a penalty of Rs 300,000
imposed on Kotak Mahindra Bank (then ING Vysya Bank).
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