A group of Democratic senators wants top officials at the Federal Reserve to examine whether Deutsche Bank complied with anti-money-laundering and other laws after bank employees flagged transactions tied to President Trump as potentially suspicious.
The request, in a letter sent today, was in response to a New York Times article that said specialists at Deutsche Bank had recommend that transactions by legal entities controlled by Trump and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, be reported to a federal financial-crime regulator.
Managers at the bank rejected their employees’ advice and did not alert the government.
The letter to the Fed chairman, Jerome Powell, and John Williams, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, called on the Fed to look into the transactions and whether the bank’s handling of the matter adhered to anti-money-laundering laws.
The Fed is one of the main regulators of Deutsche Bank’s American operations.
“Only by conducting a thorough review of the full range of this activity can we better understand what happened in these cases; what practices, procedures, or personnel may need to be changed at the bank; and what regulators should do to ensure the Federal Reserve’s ability effectively to monitor compliance with anti-money-laundering laws,” the senators wrote.
Employees in Deutsche Bank’s Jacksonville, Fla., office flagged the transactions in 2016 and 2017 — during the presidential campaign and Trump’s first year in office.
The German lender was the only mainstream financial institution consistently willing to do business with Trump over the past two decades because of his repeated defaults.
The employees said the handling of the Trump and Kushner transactions had been part of a pattern of the bank’s executives rejecting valid reports to protect relationships with lucrative clients.
The letter, sent by Senator Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, also asks the Fed officials for information about their interactions with Deutsche Bank, including whether they have investigated the issues that several former bank employees raised in the Times article.
In addition to Van Hollen, the letter was signed by six other Senate Democrats, including Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who is running for president, and Sherrod Brown of Ohio, the top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee.
“This is a test of the Fed’s independence,” Van Hollen said. “It would be gross negligence if they weren’t investigating.”
The bank has previously said it was cooperating with various government investigators.
Deutsche Bank has a history of run-ins with the Fed.
Since the early 2000s, regulators at the central bank have repeatedly criticized Deutsche Bank for a range of problems, including inadequate risk management and sloppy financial accounting.
Most recently, in May 2017, the Fed ordered Deutsche Bank to fix anti-money-laundering systems that had failed to stop billions of dollars of illicit transactions by wealthy Russians.
Congress has turned a close eye to the bank’s longstanding relationship with Trump and his family.
Deutsche Bank has dispensed a total of about $2.5 billion in loans to Trump’s companies, and more than $300 million was outstanding when he was sworn in as president, making it by far his largest creditor.