Switzerland asks US court to halt the IRS tax case against UBS

May 7, 2009

has strongly requested that a court reject demands by the Internal Revenue Service for information about clients of AG, saying disclosure would violate its sovereignty and international law. The ’s petition came in a filing in , where the. Internal Revenue Service is seeking to force to reveal the identities of 52,000 Americans suspected of using accounts at the bank to hide about $14.8B of assets and evade taxes. “’s laws prohibit the release of confidential information to foreign governments when the request has not been made through authorized intergovernmental channels,” the government said in its filing. “If the court were to order to produce evidence from , and backed that order with coercive powers, the court would be substituting its own authority for that of the competent Swiss authorities, and therefore would violate and international law,” it said. Echoing a similar filing earlier in the day from , it said law also specifically prohibits release of the information demanded by the .

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US Internal Revenue wants UBS to Break Swiss Law By Naming Clients

March 2, 2009

efforts to force AG, ’s largest bank, to disclose the names of 52,000 American customers would require the bank to violate and criminal law, bank said.

A filed last week improperly seeks to enforce summonses from the Internal Revenue Service for the identities of account holders and would trample on , according to a filing in in . “Swiss law strictly prohibits and its employees from disclosing to the the account information located in that the seeks,” wrote. “The ’s petition does not acknowledge these restrictions and instead simply ignores the existence of Swiss law and sovereignty.”

By trying to force disclosure, the seeks to expose bank employees to “substantial prison terms, as well as fines, penalties and other sanctions,” bank wrote. The also wants a judge to force “to violate Swiss law in a manner that will expose it to penalties, and the possible revocation of its .”

Popularity: 5% [?]

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