Ex-UBS banker tells judge, ‘I don't want to remember’

A former UBS Group AG executive who is trying to reverse a conviction at a landmark tax trial couldn’t remember the assets managed by his team focusing on French clients out of Switzerland.

Philippe Wick, who ran the France International desk before leaving UBS more than a decade ago, said that “he doesn’t quite know what he’s being accused of” and wants to move on. He said his memory isn’t precise when asked by Judge Hervé Robert how much wealth his team managed.

Wick is one of several bankers tied to UBS appealing their convictions linked to charges that the lender helped clients launder funds through numbered accounts and trusts that should have been declared to French tax officials. The bank is also challenging a 4.5 billion-euro ($5.4 billion) penalty as part of the guilty verdict two years ago.

Swiss bank UBS logo and figures
UBS headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland
Stefan Wermuth/Bloomberg

“It’s something that goes way back that I don’t remember and don’t want to remember,” Wick told the Paris appeals court Tuesday. “I don’t cultivate memories at UBS.”

Wick and UBS were also found guilty of covertly dispatching Swiss bankers across the border to seek out new French clients even though they lacked the paperwork to offer such services in France. The bank and the Swiss national deny the accusations.

While UBS’s French unit — set up in 1999 — was focused on gaining new clients, Wick said the France International desk’s goal was to maintain longstanding relationships. It’s that aspect of his job he remembers much better.

“I’m very attached to meetings, people,” he added. “Emotion, empathy were important values for us.”

Judge Robert replied, “That’s not how I imagined the banking world.”

The appeal is set to last until March 24.

Bloomberg News
Tax evasion International taxes UBS Tax fraud
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