KEY POINTS
  • Australia's Westpac Banking was accused on Wednesday of 23 million breaches of anti-money laundering rules, with a regulator saying the financial giant enabled payments from "high risk" countries and convicted child sex offenders.
  • The oversight failure at Australia's second-largest bank led to "serious and systemic non-compliance" with anti-money laundering laws, financial crime watchdog AUSTRAC said in a court filing.
  • The regulator is pursuing fines of up to A$21 million ($14 million) for every transaction Westpac failed to monitor adequately or report on time.
People walk past an ATM machine of Australian banking giant Westpac in the central business district of Sydney.

Australia's Westpac Banking was accused on Wednesday of 23 million breaches of anti-money laundering rules, with a regulator saying the financial giant enabled payments from "high risk" countries and convicted child sex offenders.

The oversight failure at Australia's second-largest bank led to "serious and systemic non-compliance" with anti-money laundering laws, financial crime watchdog AUSTRAC said in a court filing. The regulator is pursuing fines of up to A$21 million ($14 million) for every transaction Westpac failed to monitor adequately or report on time.