Sigue Corporation and Sigue LLC
Enter into Deferred Prosecution Agreement
and Forfeit
$15 Million to Resolve Bank Secrecy Act Violations
Assistant Attorney
General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division, joined
by U.S. Attorney Catherine Hanaway, Eastern District
of Missouri; Michele Leonhart, Acting Administrator,
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA); and Eileen
C. Mayer, Chief, Internal Revenue Service (IRS) - Criminal
Investigation, announced today that Sigue Corporation
and Sigue, LLC (“Sigue”), San Fernando,
California-based money service businesses, entered
into a deferred prosecution agreement on charges of
failing to maintain an effective anti-money laundering
program and will forfeit $15 million to the U.S. government.
A criminal information filed today at the U.S. District
Court for the Eastern District of Missouri charges
Sigue with one count of failing to maintain an effective
anti-money laundering program. Sigue waived indictment,
agreed to the filing of the information, and accepted
responsibility for its conduct as described in a factual
statement accompanying the information. The company
will pay $15 million to the United States, representing
funds that are subject to forfeiture as a result of
the criminal charge, and has agreed to commit an additional
$9.7 million to improving its anti-money laundering
program. In light of Sigue’s remedial actions
to date and its willingness to accept responsibility
for its anti-money laundering failures, the government
will recommend the dismissal of the charge in 12 months,
provided the company fully implements the significant
anti-money laundering and Bank Secrecy Act measures
required by the agreement and complies in all other
respects with the terms of the agreement.
“When companies like Sigue comply with anti-money
laundering laws and employ strong oversight, they can
play a pivotal role in stemming illicit money laundering
activity,” said Assistant Attorney General Alice
S. Fisher, Criminal Division. “Unfortunately,
when they are not compliant, the opposite is true and
criminals benefit. While we are pleased that Sigue
has accepted responsibility in this case, their conduct
was serious and the penalty is both appropriate and
necessary.”
“This agreement is the result of years of tremendous
work by Assistant U.S. Attorneys and agents in the
Eastern District of Missouri and attorneys from the
Criminal Division,” said U.S. Attorney Catherine
Hanaway.
Press Releases | St. Louis
Home