UBS tells unit staff to avoid US visits
UBS (NYSE:UBS) has told members of its former private banking team responsible for rich US clients not to travel to America.
The Swiss bank has also made lawyers available to the more than 50 bankers involved, many of whom have left UBS since it decided last November to wind down its cross-border private banking business for US customers.
The move follows the recent indictment of one of the unit's former senior executives, Bradley Birkenfeld, who US authorities have accused of helping a billionaire client evade taxes. Mr Birkenfeld has pleaded not guilty and his lawyers have made no public statement on the matter.
Lawyers for Mr Birkenfeld and the US government are due to appear before a judge next Monday "to resolve pre-trial motions and discovery problems", according to court documents.
Many members of UBS's former US team have left the bank amid concerns about the investigations and fears that the bank might not support them if arrested. "Many of us have the feeling we'd be expendable," said one former team member.
People familiar with the situation said these anxieties were exacerbated by UBS's decision last December to send most of its Swiss-based US team to Art Basel Miami, a Florida arts event the bank sponsors, even though US authorities were increasing their scrutiny of the bank's activities.
UBS's travel restrictions suggest it is concerned that the investigations by the US Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission may widen.
Martin Liechti, UBS's Swiss-based head of international private banking for North and , was detained by the US authorities last month and remains in the US as a "material witness." FT
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