Former UBS AG executive on the run
Raoul Weil, former head of the Swiss bank's wealth management business, was declared a fugitive after failing to surrender in a U.S. tax evasion case.
MIAMI (Reuters) -- The former head of UBS AG's wealth management business, Raoul Weil, was formally declared a fugitive Tuesday after failing to surrender to U.S. authorities on charges of conspiring to help wealthy Americans hide assets from U.S. tax authorities.
Prosecutors in Miami released a copy of a judge's brief order putting Weil on the court's fugitive list, but said they would have no further comment.
An indictment unsealed in November alleged that Weil and other unidentified bankers conspired to help 17,000 Americans hide $20 billion of assets in Swiss bank accounts in order to avoid paying U.S. taxes.
At the time, an attorney for Weil said he was innocent and called the indictment against him "totally unjustified."
Weil was based in Switzerland. He oversaw the Swiss bank's cross-border private banking business and was a member of UBS' executive board until stepping down when the charges were made public. UBS (UBS) has said it is cooperating with investigators.
Weil's failure to appear is bound to refocus attention on prosecutors' so far unsuccessful bid to jail alleged swindler Bernard Madoff while he awaits a possible indictment for fraud in what could the be largest Ponzi scheme in history.
In a Ponzi scheme, early investors are paid off with money from new clients.
In June, Samuel Israel III, a former hedge fund manager convicted of cheating investors out of $400 million, faked his own death to avoid a 20-year prison sentence. His high-profile run from justice ended after his mother convinced him to turn himself in. ![]()
-
Not even ultra-dapper President Obama could help Hartmarx, the Chicago-
based clothing maker. More -
The company has gone to the chickens despite producing 42 million dozen table eggs per year. More
-
This Bay-area town sought assistance after plunging property tax revenue left coffers empty. More
-
The bloom is off this celebrity florist as corporate budgets for flower arrangements disappear. More
-
Isn't it ironic that a company with a mission to help others avoid bankruptcy was unable to help itself? More









