Compliance
Standard Chartered Agrees $639 Million US Sanctions Settlement

The settlement is part of a wider $1.1 billion settlement with federal, state, local, and UK government partners.
Standard
Chartered has agreed to pay $639 million in a settlement with
the US government over breaching sanctions against a number of
countries including Iran, Sudan and Cuba. The breaches took place
from June 2009 to June 2014, affecting a total of 9,355
transactions to or via the US. The department said that the
settlement is part of a wider $1.1 billion settlement with
federal, state, local, and UK government partners.
The settlement was reached with the US Department of the
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. The sanctions
violations involved Cuba, Iran, Sudan and Syria, a statement from
the US Treasury Department said yesterday.
The UK-listed bank, which earns the bulk of its earnings in
regions such as Asia and Africa, also agreed to settle its
potential civil liability for apparent violations of the Zimbabwe
Sanctions Regulations. The bank has agreed to remit more than $18
million.
A number of banks, such as France-based BNP Paribas, have fallen
foul of US sanctions against regimes such as those of Iran and
Sudan. That bank paid a settlement of $8.9 billion to the US in
2014, the largest of its kind, causing strained relations between
the US and France.
Most of the breaches involved Iran-related accounts maintained by
Standard Chartered’s Dubai, UAE branches, including accounts at
SCB Dubai held for a number of general trading companies, and a
petrochemical company. SCB Dubai processed dollar transactions to
or through SCB’s branch office in New York or other US financial
institutions, the US Treasury’s statement added.