Criminal Finances Bill Report (and remaining stages) 4.37
pm Clause 1: Unexplained wealth orders: England and Wales and
Northern Ireland Amendment 1 Moved by Lord Faulks 1:
Clause 1, page 2, line 26, at end insert “, or to answer questions
on oath” Lord Faulks (Con) My Lords, the Bill, which has been
welcomed across...Request free trial
Criminal Finances Bill
Report (and remaining stages)
4.37 pm
Clause 1: Unexplained wealth orders: England and Wales and
Northern Ireland
Amendment 1
Moved by
1: Clause 1, page 2, line 26, at end insert “, or to answer
questions on oath”
-
(Con)
My Lords, the Bill, which has been welcomed across the
House, has been the Government’s response to the undoubted
need to give law enforcement agencies the necessary
capabilities and powers to recover the proceeds of crime,
tackle money laundering and corruption and counter
terrorist financing. No one could doubt that these are very
real problems, and we must ensure that we respond
adequately to the threats posed by corruption in its many
guises. Throughout the passage of the Bill through your
Lordships’ House, the Minister and the Bill team have been
very helpful in providing information and explanations in
respect of this quite complex legislation. The Government
have also tabled some useful amendments as the Bill has
progressed.
I am particularly enthusiastic about the potential use that
could be made of unexplained wealth orders, which are
featured in Chapter 1. There has been precedent for this,
provided principally by Ireland and Australia. By and large
those orders have been useful, and they have the potential
to provide the basis for investigating criminal offences
and recovering the proceeds of criminal activity. My
concern has always been to ensure that the provisions are
as effective as they can be. The opportunities for further
legislation in the next few years are going to be very
limited, for reasons that the House is only too well aware
of. I hope UWOs will be used much more than was suggested.
The revised impact assessment indicated that only about 20
UWOs a year might be obtained. The Minister assured me that
that was only an estimate, that I hope it was a very
conservative one.
Until last Friday we had not seen the promised code of
practice relating to UWOs and other provisions in the Bill.
Somewhat at the 11th hour, after I had tabled a number of
amendments, it arrived. I am grateful to the Minister for
providing it, and I will of course factor its contents into
my remarks on the amendments in my name and that of my
noble friend Lord Hodgson.
We had a number of debates about the safeguards in the
Bill. I feel confident that the House is satisfied that
they are perfectly adequate, particularly now that there is
even a provision for compensation to a respondent whose
assets have been wrongly frozen. In addition, there are of
course restrictions on the freezing orders that would
normally accompany a UWO, and any orders can be varied and
discharged.
My concern, however, remains how easy it will be for
respondents to deal inadequately to a UWO and render
ineffective the Bill’s provisions. It has to be accepted
that UWO respondents who have invested the proceeds of tax
evasion and/or bribery in specific property will be
unlikely to want to be frank about their conduct if they
can possibly avoid doing so. Why, then, can it not be
appropriate for there to be a power to make an order to
compel a respondent to give evidence on oath? It would be
only a power, and in many circumstances I concede that a
court might be satisfied with a statement, but if the
statement is inadequate the very existence of the power,
which could be exercised only by a High Court judge, would
in my view be extremely salutary.
The Bill sets out the requirements that must be met before
an unexplained wealth order is made, and allows a
respondent a reasonable excuse for failing to comply with
any order. I invite my noble friend to explain to the House
why she still thinks it is inappropriate for this power to
exist. Nothing in the code of practice gives any answer to
that.
The remainder of the amendments with which I am concerned
in this group—apart from that which relates to property,
particularly in central London—are about provisions in
respect of non-compliance. My no doubt simplistic view is
that you either comply with an order or you do not. The
references to purported compliance seem to leave open the
possibility that a respondent could simply go through the
motions of providing information and say that they have
purported to comply with the order. I take the point that
the Bill contains the proviso that a misleading or reckless
statement can constitute an offence, but it is not so much
the deliberately misleading statement that I am worried
about; rather more I fear the short, uninformative, heavily
lawyered response which will provide no useful information
but may still technically be a purported compliance with
the order.
I looked for assistance on this point on the recently
provided code of practice. Paragraph 20 states that a
respondent will be treated as having failed to comply with
a UWO if, without reasonable excuse, he fails to comply
with all the requirements imposed by the order. The
paragraph continues by stating that it is important to note
that where a response is provided to a particular
requirement in the UWO but that response is considered
unsatisfactory, this does not mean that he has failed to
comply with the order; this would amount to purported
compliance. That was precisely the point that I was making
in the original amendment. A footnote states that an
example of this would be where an individual provides
nothing more than the bare minimum of information necessary
to address each requirement in the order and as a result
the agency is not satisfied by his explanation as to the
derivation of the property. The footnote goes on to state
that, in those circumstances, the rebuttable presumption
that the property is recoverable does not arise, but the
enforcement agency may elect to take further civil recovery
action against the property in the light of evidence or
lack of evidence provided by the individual. I should be
grateful if the Minister could set out why the Government
think it so important, in a number of areas identified in
the amendments, to have these provisions about purporting.
Amendment 2 in this group and Amendment 24, which we will
debate in the next group, concern a substantial problem: in
central London, property—often extremely valuable
property—is being bought by overseas companies and then
left either empty and dark or occupied for only short
periods. Parts of central London are entirely dark at night
and, although London is the most obvious example, there is
plenty of evidence of buying-up of property in other major
cities and in some rural areas. Apart from the fact that it
cannot be desirable that property is owned by those whose
money has often come from illegal activities, there is the
knock-on effect that it is having on the property market in
general. Noble Lords are only too well aware of the intense
difficulty faced by young people in buying property
anywhere remotely near where they work, particularly in
London, or indeed buying property at all. There are a
number of reasons for this, but the situation is hardly
helped when, according to the Land Registry figures,
100,000 properties are registered in the name of overseas
companies. Unlike some countries, there is no restriction
on foreign ownership of real property, and at the moment
there is no sign of any decrease in the enthusiasm with
which foreign investors are approaching the possibility of
buying property here. Because of our respect for the rule
of law and the independence of our judiciary, among other
reasons, we are an attractive country in which to
invest—particularly, I am afraid, to those who have
ill-gotten gains for which they want to find a safe haven.
4.45 pm
I asked my noble friend the Minister in Committee and at Second
Reading about the envelope tax which, for those who have not
taken part in the debate so far, enables those who use what is
often dirty money to buy up luxury properties to pay as much as
£218,000 a year rather than declare which of the many £20
million-plus mega-mansions they may own. Bringing in this tax was
supposed to deter corrupt investment; in fact, it appears that
many are perfectly happy to pay the tax. In the last financial
year, it brought in some £44 million, up from £25 million the
year before. The total tax receipts, according to an article from
the Observer on 5 March, on properties worth more than £1
million, came at £178 million. I look forward to the Minister
saying on the record whether the Government are happy with this
tax, which allows billionaires to buy their anonymity in this
way.
Lest I should sound too critical of the Government, I should say
how much I welcome the recent publication of the call for
evidence in relation to setting up a register of beneficial
owners of overseas companies and other legal entities, a
consultation paper issued by the Department for Business, Energy
and Industrial Strategy. I pay tribute to the Home Office for its
assistance in bringing forward the publication of this document.
The ministerial foreword shows that this is part of a desire to
create a new register, showing the beneficial owners of overseas
companies, consistent with the international anti-corruption
summit held in London in May 2016. I look forward to hearing more
from the Minister on this when she deals with the second group of
amendments, later in the debate.
I fear that I have been unable to resist the temptation to take
advantage of this ministerial largesse—hence the amendment
requiring the Government to set up this register within six
months of this Bill coming into force. Having read the call for
evidence, I see no doubt that there will and should be such a
register, although the precise nature and terms of the register
are still up for debate; hence the fact that the amendment does
not seek to define in any detail how the register will work.
Given, however, the few legislative opportunities that are likely
to exist in the next few years, it is important that we should
translate aspiration into activity and thus incorporate in this
legislation an obligation to set up the register. The published
plans have been widely welcomed, but I agree with the comments of
Robert Barrington of Transparency International that,
“ministers must not give way to vested interests that will be
lobbying to keep property ownership secret or allow Brexit to
delay measures”.
Finally, I come to Amendment 2, in relation to unexplained wealth
orders. The requirements under new Section 362B mean that the
High Court has to be satisfied that there are reasonable grounds
for suspecting that the known sources of the respondent’s
lawfully obtained income would have been insufficient for the
purposes of enabling the respondent to obtain the property. For
example, if a foreign official’s income is known to be £30,000,
how can they afford a £10 million property? Further, the High
Court must be satisfied either that the respondent is a
politically exposed person or that there are reasonable grounds
for suspecting involvement in serious crime. So far, so good—but
what I am concerned about is that a respondent who is in effect a
gangster may fall outside the definition of a PEP, although my
children do not, and that there may not be quite enough to say
that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting involvement in
serious crime so as to satisfy subsection (4)(b) of the new
section.
On the other hand, if you are someone with a beneficial interest
in an overseas company that owns UK real property then that
should, of itself, be enough to provide the basis of a
requirement to make an unexplained wealth order. In case this is
thought to be draconian, noble Lords should bear in mind that
this is a civil remedy and it is always open to a respondent to
provide an explanation of their wealth, or a reasonable excuse
for not doing so, before any steps are taken in relation to the
property. However, the purpose of adding this provision is to
deter what is, in effect, money laundering. There can be no doubt
that the involvement of agents and solicitors in these corrupt
deals has not been sufficiently marked by money laundering
prosecutions, as the House will hear later in the debate.
However, having a register, and an additional ground for an
unexplained wealth order should, first, deter wealthy foreigners
from concealing their identities when investing—often with
ill-gotten gains—in London properties. Secondly, it would allow
the agency to recover substantial assets acquired through
criminal activity.
I do not pretend that this is a perfect solution to what is a
real problem. Various attempts have been made around the world to
deal with such problems but they have only ever achieved partial
success. However, let us not miss this opportunity of doing what
we can to deal with the cancer of corruption in our society. This
House should send a clear message to the Government about the
level of its concern. I beg to move.
-
(LD)
My Lords, like the noble Lord, we want to see the Bill as
strong as possible. I have a few questions on the noble
Lord’s amendments but I am grateful to him for bringing
these matters back to the House. Amendment 1 would require
questions to be answered on oath. Like the noble Lord, I
felt that the answer from the Dispatch Box at the previous
stage did not take us a great deal further. The Minister
said:
“It would already be a criminal offence for the respondent
to knowingly or recklessly provide false or misleading
information”.—[Official Report, 28/3/17; col. 496.]
Unexplained wealth orders are court orders, so my
question—I am not sure whether it is to the noble Lord or
the Minister—is: does contempt of court arise here? That is
not to support the amendment or otherwise, but to flesh out
understanding of the procedure.
On Amendment 2, has the noble Lord been more timid than
necessary by referring to the respondent or others having
taken the step of registration as a beneficial owner,
rather than using the criterion that he is such an owner? I
agree on compliance: one either complies or one does not.
Surely purported compliance is not compliance. This is
quite a difficult area in legislation and it should be
clear, and not raise more questions about whether the
criteria are fulfilled.
My final question is on government Amendment 6. Will the
Minister explain why, unusually, “a person” does not
include a body corporate? I was interested to see that it
is apparently necessary to include a definition. The
definition itself is interesting: if it is read literally,
references include bodies corporate and so on, regardless
of whether they hold or obtain property. Does that restrict
which bodies corporate are the subject of this new
provision? I gave the Minister notice of my question so I
hope she will be in a position to assist the House. I
reiterate our strong support for getting this Bill through.
I have spoken as briefly as I can because I know the House
wants to get on with it and do just that.
-
(Con)
My Lords, I support these amendments. I first came across
unexplained wealth orders in Inland Revenue fraud
proceedings where people had been accused of not paying
their income tax. One of the methods of revealing that is
by demonstrating that they suddenly have more wealth than
their Revenue account suggests. Therefore, there is a
question about whether the assets came from taxable income.
That was the presumption at that time. That was before the
terrific expansion of other forms of unexplained wealth
that could arise. The explanation that someone had done
something unlawful would not be a particularly good answer
to a tax inquiry but perhaps that was not thought of.
Certainly, that was a very useful tool in the armoury of
the Inland Revenue in days past and is still so today. It
is a very valuable method of dealing with this trouble. I
find it very hard, however, to understand what is meant by
purported compliance. As has just been said, it seems to me
that you either comply or you do not. I must say that the
explanation given in the draft practice system does not
enlighten me any further. It suggests, indeed, that
purported compliance covers certain aspects of
non-compliance. It is a difficult definition to put in. I
would have thought the measure would be better without it.
I raise questions with regard to the register. It is
required to be done within six months of the passing of the
Act. However, the commencement provisions of the Act allow
the Act to come into force in accordance with regulations
or orders made by the Secretary of State. I assume that the
passing of the Act in this amendment is intended to refer
to its getting Royal Assent. Strictly speaking, however,
the Act comes into force only in accordance with orders
made by the Secretary of State under the commencement
provisions except in relation to certain aspects of that.
-
(CB)
I wish to add a few words of my own on purported
compliance. I am not quite sure what we are supposed to
cover. Obviously, there will be the individual who is
potentially made subject to this order who will try his or
her best to produce the necessary information. That may not
be good enough, in which case the court will allow an
adjournment so that a genuine attempt to produce the
information can be made. That will then be compliance. On
the other hand, some people will obfuscate and deliberately
make life difficult to avoid the true facts coming to
light. They will say, “That is purported compliance”, but
it will not be—it will be a failure. Therefore, the words
“purported compliance” simply do not apply and will not
help.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, the noble Lord, , has raised some
very serious issues, expressing the concerns of a number of
noble Lords, and he made some of those points at earlier
stages. The Government have clearly not satisfied him or
many others in the House, and we share their concerns. The
noble Baroness, Lady Hamwee, made similar remarks.
The point about “purports to comply” was particularly well
made by the noble Lord and others, including the noble and
learned Lords, and
. I hope that, in
responding, the noble Baroness, Lady Williams of Trafford,
will be able to satisfy the noble Lords who have spoken, as
well as the rest of the House, that we have got this issue
right. We are all very keen to get this legislation on to
the statute book as quickly as possible. We certainly
support its general aims—it is a good Bill—but the worst
thing to do would be to put something on to the statute
book that is not very well drafted and would cause more
problems or be an aid to people who do not want to comply
properly with the orders. This is a very important point
and, although we want the Bill to pass quickly, the noble
Baroness needs to satisfy the House that we have this
measure right.
5.00 pm
-
The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Williams of
Trafford) (Con)
My Lords, before I begin, I want to make a few comments.
Following the decision last week to call a general
election, this is likely to be the last opportunity for the
House to scrutinise this legislation. As noble Lords have
said, it has had cross-party support throughout its
parliamentary passage and I am very grateful to noble
Lords, through the usual channels, for enabling us to take
both Report and Third Reading today. Time is very short,
but we all agree that this Bill will deliver valuable
powers to fight money laundering, prevent the financing of
terrorism and combat corruption. I hope we can maintain
consensus on the way forward and return the Bill swiftly to
the Commons.
Perhaps I may also take a moment to thank the noble Lord,
, who might have
brought back an amendment today but, given the shortness of
time, has decided not to do so. He would like it placed on
the record that this is no way undermines his support for
the victims groups that he has supported over many years.
As well as the amendments in the names of my noble friends,
this first group is composed primarily of government
amendments that seek to fine-tune the Proceeds of Crime Act
2002. These are consequential on matters already in the
Bill and should not, I suggest, raise any particular
concerns. However, I will address each of them for the
benefit of noble Lords.
Amendments 6 and 7 make explicit that unexplained wealth
orders can be used in cases where the property of interest
is registered in the name of an overseas company. UWOs
should be a significant tool to help probe the ownership of
UK property with suspected links to illicit funds, and
these amendments seek to address the helpful intervention
in Committee of my noble friend about the London
property market. Although it is already implicit that UWOs
can apply to cases where property is held in the UK but
registered overseas, this explicit clarification is
helpful. However, it should in no way cast doubt over the
other provisions in POCA, or elsewhere in law, where such
an explicit clarification is not included. For example,
Sections 84 and 414 of POCA define property in respect of
confiscation and investigation powers respectively. These
have been applied to property registered in the names of
overseas companies where persons in the UK hold this
property in some way. Those provisions must continue to
operate in that way and I fully expect them to do so.
Our amendments clarify that the UWO provisions apply to
property held by foreign companies, and our existing
provisions already require a respondent to set out,
“the nature and extent of his interest”,
in a property. It is clear from this that a beneficial
interest in property will be captured where a UWO is served
on a serious criminal or a non-EEA PEP.
Regarding the specific points about the bodies corporate
regardless of whether they hold or obtain property, the
amendments provide clarity and certainty that the UWO
provisions apply in this circumstance. We introduced the
amendment, after discussing the point with my noble friend
, to make absolutely
clear that UWOs can apply in respect of overseas companies.
I made the important point that this clarification does not
cast doubt on the normal application of the term “person”
elsewhere in POCA or the statute book. I hope that this
will address the concerns of my noble friend in Amendment 2,
which goes to the heart of the category of individuals on
whom a UWO can be served. We have already previously
clarified the wide scope of what is meant by “holding
property”, which includes a person who has effective
control over the property.
We have carefully considered the categories of potential
respondents to a UWO and I was pleased to have the
opportunity to discuss this with my noble friend. The
Government do not consider that it is appropriate, or
indeed proportionate, to add a third category of potential
respondents to a UWO, when inclusion in that category is
dependent only on the way in which an individual holds
property. Property could, of course, be held in this way
perfectly legitimately.
I will now refer to other points that were made. My noble
friend asked about the annual tax on enveloped dwellings,
which we have homed in on before. The annual tax on
enveloped dwellings does not enable corporate or foreign
ownership of property; it is a reality of UK law. I
sympathise with the concerns raised, but I assure my noble
friend that there is no evidence that the tax encourages
money laundering. Many legitimate companies own property in
holding companies.
On the point about the London property market that we have
also touched on previously, I assure both my noble friend
and noble Lords generally that the UWO is an important
addition to the tools that can be used here. We are doing
more: BEIS has launched a consultation on a public register
of overseas ownership of UK property. Such a register would
help to highlight abuses of this sort and deter investments
of this type. We have created a public register of
beneficial ownership and the register makes publicly
available details of those who have a 25% stake or greater
in a company’s shares or voting rights. The forthcoming set
of money laundering regulations currently out for
consultation will require estate agents to conduct customer
due diligence on those purchasing property as well as those
selling property. This will likely lead to more suspicious
activity reports linked to property purchases and create
more opportunities to use UWOs.
A number of noble Lords asked about purported compliance.
They made the point that either a person complies or they
do not. The term exists to balance against the serious
consequence of not complying with a UWO. If you do not
comply with one, the property is presumed to be recoverable
in any subsequent civil recovery proceedings. This is
without the need for the enforcement authority to provide
evidence that the property is the proceeds of crime. This
is reversing the burden of proof, which is a significant
and unusual approach in our law, so purported compliance is
to recognise that if a person engages with the process by
answering all the points of a UWO, they will be protected
from the presumption that their property is automatically
recoverable, and issues as to whether they have complied or
not will fall away. The onus transfers back to the
enforcement authority to prove that the property is a
proceed of crime in the usual way, and the term provides
certainty as to the circumstances in which the presumption
of recoverability will arise—which will be important in
respect of any further proceedings against the property.
In addition, when the UWO is obtained the applicant agency
has a broad scope to tailor the requests for further
information and documents required by the order, meaning
that the likelihood of a poor-quality response is reduced.
Also, if a person provides a response, the UWO has been
successful in flushing out evidence. The enforcement
authority can decide whether to further investigate on the
basis of that evidence or to launch proceedings.
I turn now to Amendments 15, 16 and 50, which clarify our
existing provisions to ensure that in Scotland the ability
to obtain vacant possession of a property can be dealt with
at the same hearing as civil recovery relating to that
property. Related to these provisions, Amendments 25 to 31
correct an inconsistency in the Bill. They will allow
Scottish Ministers and Northern Ireland Ministers to make
consequential amendments to legislation, including UK
legislation, that is within their legislative competence.
To ensure that any changes do not create unforeseen issues,
they would be required to consult the Secretary of State
prior to doing so.
The Bill provides HMRC and the Financial Conduct Authority
with the power to pursue civil recovery proceedings and
with supporting investigation powers. On further analysis,
it was unclear whether their existing information sharing
gateway powers would allow them to receive information for
the purposes of these new functions. Amendments 45 to 48
make that certain.
The remaining government amendments in this group are a
series of minor and technical amendments to POCA,
particularly in respect of “free property”—that is,
property belonging to a defendant that can be liable for
confiscation. They insert correct references, ensure
consistency of language and remove ambiguity to ensure that
relevant powers work as they should.
Finally, I will address the other amendments tabled by my
noble friend. Amendment 1 seeks to introduce a possible
requirement for an individual served with a UWO to answer
questions “on oath”. As my noble friend will recall from
our earlier discussions on the Bill, a UWO is a civil,
investigative power, and it is already a criminal offence
for a respondent to a UWO to knowingly or recklessly
provide false or misleading information. If a person
engages with the UWO process by answering all the points of
a UWO, we believe that it is right that the presumption
should not apply, even if it is arguable that the person
has not fully complied. The onus transfers back to the
enforcement authority to prove that the property is a
proceed of crime and can be recovered.
In Committee, I committed to publishing the draft code of
practice in relation to UWOs and disclosure orders. I am
pleased to confirm, as my noble friend already has, that I
have since written to noble Lords who spoke in Committee
and enclosed the draft code for their review. When I wrote
I also committed to publishing the code on the GOV.UK
website. I regret that we have been overtaken by events and
that doing so now would not be consistent with pre-election
guidance. However, I have placed a copy in the Library of
the House to ensure that noble Lords can scrutinise it
ahead of the public consultation that will follow in due
course.
We will be considering addressing issues such as statements
of truth in giving evidence and purported compliance in the
POCA investigation code of practice. It will then be open
to noble Lords to make any representations relating to that
code once a final draft, subject to the required public
consultation, and the order bringing the code into force
are subject to the affirmative resolution procedure. It
will be debated in the House before being introduced.
5.15 pm
The noble Baroness, Lady Hamwee, made a point about UWOs. She
asked whether, as they are court orders, answering questions
incorrectly or misleadingly could be contempt of court. Contempt
of court is absolutely a possibility subject to the facts of a
particular case. There is a specific offence in new Section 396E
of POCA as inserted by Clause 1 if someone knowingly or,
“recklessly makes a statement that is false or misleading in a
material particular”.
On indictment, a person can be subject to two years’ imprisonment
and an unlimited fine.
Amendments 4 and 5 relate to the issue of purported compliance.
As I explained previously, if a person does not comply with a
UWO, their property is presumed to be recoverable under civil
recovery proceedings—I think I have slightly hopped about, so I
apologise noble Lords. For that reason it is a significant power
and it must be used proportionately. If a person engages with a
UWO process by answering all of the points of a UWO, the
presumption should not apply even if it is arguable that the
person has not fully complied. The onus transfers back to the
enforcement authority to prove that the property is a proceed of
crime and can be recovered.
I hope that my noble—and noble and learned—friends are satisfied
and will not be inclined to press their points any further. I beg
to move the government amendments.
-
My Lords, I am grateful to my noble and learned friend and
all noble Lords who spoke in this debate, and to the
Minister for her response. It is a pity that the Government
did not respond to these amendments in Committee. They have
received support today and the code of practice does not
seem to me to deal with them. On the simple question of
purporting to comply, a number of speakers have said that
one either complies or does not, and I say with respect
that I fail to understand the response to those points. I
think it was said that, even if there were purported
compliance and not much information was obtained, it would
still be technically successful as a UWO. That sounds very
much like saying that the operation was a great success but
the patient died. However, my noble friend the Minister
seems convinced that this is sufficient and I bear in mind
the fact that the agencies have no doubt had input into the
provisions contained in the Bill.
Likewise, I am disappointed that there is no provision for
a requirement to give evidence on oath. The mere existence
of that power is likely to inhibit those who might
otherwise wish to mislead the court. Of course, if they
then came to give evidence, quite apart from the question
of contempt of court, they could be prosecuted for perjury.
That might give some more teeth to these provisions. I am,
however, reassured that it will still be possible to feed
some of these ideas into an improved code of practice, and
I hope that these debates may have affected the minds of
those who seek to improve that code of practice.
On the question of the London property market, I am afraid
that I am still in the dark about the envelope tax. The
existence of that tax does not seem to be consistent with
the overall thrust behind the Bill. Its continued existence
is an embarrassment, frankly, to the Government—but there
it is. As to the amendment in relation to London property,
the noble Baroness, Lady Hamwee, suggested that I had been
a little timid in respect of that amendment. In some ways
she is right, but the attempt was to tie it specifically to
the register that we were told was to come into existence.
My noble and learned friend was quite right about the date
of commencement—but, for reasons that will be apparent, I
do not think that we need to trouble ourselves too much
with that.
As my noble friend the Minister quite rightly said, the
position is that we are against a time limit. It is
important that the Bill becomes law, and any attempt to
prevent that would not be helpful since there is all-party
support for this. It is very much a step in the right
direction and I do not wish to spoil the party. In those
circumstances, I beg leave to withdraw the amendment.
Amendment 1 withdrawn.
Amendments 2 to 5 not moved.
Amendment 6
Moved by
6: Clause 1, page 8, line 3, at end insert—
“( ) References to a person who holds or obtains property include
any body corporate, whether incorporated or formed under the law
of a part of the United Kingdom or in a country or territory
outside the United Kingdom.”
Amendment 6 agreed.
Clause 4: Unexplained wealth orders: Scotland
Amendment 7
Moved by
7: Clause 4, page 21, line 25, at end insert—
“( ) References to a person who holds or obtains property include
any body corporate, whether incorporated or formed under the law
of a part of the United Kingdom or in a country or territory
outside the United Kingdom.”
Amendment 7 agreed.
Amendment 8
Moved by
8: After Clause 8, insert the following new Clause—
“Co-operation: beneficial ownership information
In Part 11 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (co-operation),
after section 445 insert—“445A Sharing of beneficial ownership
information(1) The relevant Minister must prepare a report about
the arrangements in place between—(a) the government of the
United Kingdom, and (b) the government of each relevant
territory,for the sharing of beneficial ownership information.(2)
The report must include an assessment of the effectiveness of
those arrangements, having regard to such international standards
as appear to the relevant Minister to be relevant.(3) The
report—(a) must be prepared before 1 July 2019, and(b) must
relate to the arrangements in place during the period of 18
months from 1 July 2017 to 31 December 2018.(4) The relevant
Minister must—(a) publish the report, and(b) lay a copy of it
before Parliament.(5) The reference in subsection (1) to
arrangements in place for the sharing of beneficial ownership
information between the government of the United Kingdom and the
government of a relevant territory is to such arrangements as are
set out in an exchange of notes—(a) for the provision of
beneficial ownership information about a person incorporated in a
part of the United Kingdom to a law enforcement authority of the
relevant territory at the request of the authority, and(b) for
the provision of beneficial ownership information about a person
incorporated in a relevant territory to a law enforcement
authority of the United Kingdom at the request of the
authority.(6) In this section—“beneficial ownership information”
means information in relation to the beneficial ownership of
persons incorporated in a part of the United Kingdom or (as the
case may be) in a relevant territory;“exchange of notes” means
written documentation signed on behalf of the government of the
United Kingdom and the government of a relevant territory setting
out details of the agreement reached in respect of the
arrangements for the matters mentioned in subsection (5)(a) and
(b);“relevant Minister” means the Secretary of State or the
Minister for the Cabinet Office;“relevant territory” means any of
the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man or any British overseas
territory.””
-
My Lords, I am again grateful to the noble Baroness, Lady
Stern, and others for their amendment, which allows us to
return to the important issue of company ownership
transparency in the British Overseas Territories. As noble
Lords will be aware, the Government have tabled their own
amendment and I am pleased to have been able to discuss
this with colleagues prior to today’s debate. The group
also contains an amendment in the names of my noble friends
and ,
no doubt prompted by concerns about the abuse of the London
property market. I intend to address this in my closing
remarks.
Before I turn to the government amendments, I hope I might
be allowed to detain noble Lords for a few moments while I
reiterate certain important points on company ownership
transparency in the British Overseas Territories and Crown
dependencies. As part of our international efforts to
increase corporate transparency, the Government continue to
work closely with our overseas territories with financial
centres to tackle money laundering, terrorist financing,
corruption and fraud. In Committee, I described the
exchanges of notes the UK signed last year with overseas
territories with financial centres and with the Crown
dependencies, setting out new arrangements on law
enforcement access to beneficial ownership data.
These arrangements are due to be implemented by June this
year. They will put the UK and the wider “British family”
of the OTs and CDs well ahead of most jurisdictions in
terms of transparency, including many of our G20 partners
and other major corporate and financial centres, including
some states in the US, and demonstrate our continued
leadership. I reiterate that we should be proud of this
fact and of the progress achieved. These arrangements will
bring significant benefits in the capacity and information
that UK law enforcement authorities will have at their
disposal to tackle criminal activity and to investigate
bribery and corruption, money laundering and tax evasion.
They will prevent criminals hiding behind anonymous shell
companies incorporated in the overseas territories and
Crown dependencies, ensuring that these jurisdictions are
not open to exploitation by those seeking to hide the
proceeds of their crimes.
The UK has continued to work closely with the overseas
territories on implementing the arrangements. Indeed, we
arranged for the London representatives to attend a meeting
in the House this morning so that noble Lords could hear
about their progress at first hand. I am very pleased to
report there have been some further positive developments
since I provided an update in Committee which I will
briefly share with noble Lords.
The British Virgin Islands will shortly introduce the
beneficial ownership secure search Bill, which will be
known as the BOSS Act 2017, to its House of Assembly. This
will reinforce the existing process for sharing information
with UK law enforcement authorities.
The newly elected Premier of the Turks and Caicos Islands
has confirmed that legislation will be introduced on an
urgent basis to establish a central registry of beneficial
ownership information in its existing companies registry,
and to determine access to such information. She expects
that the register can be established by the June 2017
deadline, albeit that it will take longer to populate the
register fully with data on corporate and legal entities
incorporated in their jurisdiction.
Montserrat had in fact committed in November 2015 to
establish a public register of beneficial ownership.
Although Montserrat is therefore not covered by the
exchange of notes, we receive regular updates on its
progress. Officials advise that a draft companies Bill will
shortly be put to its Cabinet for approval.
The NCA has confirmed that it is already seeing enhanced
co-operation from some overseas territories, with
turnaround times for processing requests for information
much shorter than previously. We expect to see this further
improved to meet the agreed standards by June this year.
This demonstrates what can be achieved by working
consensually with the overseas territories and the Crown
dependencies. It is reaping benefits and I believe that it
will continue to do so.
Rather than imposing new requirements on the overseas
territories, the Government believe that we should continue
to work with them and to focus our efforts on the
implementation of the existing arrangements, including the
passage of new primary legislation in the territories and
complex technological improvements. I know that noble Lords
would like a timetable to be set for public registers.
However, the Government respect the constitutional
relationship with the overseas territories and the Crown
dependencies. As previously noted, legislating for the
overseas territories is something that we have done only
very rarely, on issues such as abolition of the death
penalty which raised issues of compliance with human rights
obligations and thus areas for which the UK retains direct
responsibility.
While tackling this kind of complex criminality and its
consequences is extremely serious, there is a clear
constitutional difference in that financial services is an
area devolved to territory Governments. In the case of the
Crown dependencies, the UK has never legislated for them
without their consent. Doing so would be likely to lead to
the territories withdrawing their current level of
co-operation, jeopardising the progress made and the spirit
of working in partnership that we have fostered with them.
I hope that noble Lords will see that this is not a course
of action we should take.
It is quite right that we should ensure that the
territories’ existing commitments are effectively
implemented and deliver real benefits for UK law
enforcement—this point was emphasised by the noble Lord,
, in Committee.
Following careful consideration, I have brought forward
Amendments 8 and 32 to address the concerns raised by him
and others. The amendments provide for a report to
Parliament on the effectiveness of the bilateral
arrangements in place between the UK and the Governments of
the overseas territories with financial centres and the
Crown dependencies on the exchange of beneficial ownership
information.
As I noted in Committee, the Government are committed to
following up on these arrangements to ensure that they
deliver in practice. There is already provision in the
exchange of notes agreements with the overseas territories
and the Crown dependencies for reviews of the arrangements
six months after they come into force—that is, on 31
December this year—and for further reviews annually
thereafter. The arrangements also provide for continuous
monitoring by both parties. However, placing a review of
the first 18 months of operation of the arrangements on a
statutory basis will provide further assurance that careful
parliamentary scrutiny will be given to their effectiveness
and demonstrate that they are being implemented properly,
working effectively and meeting our law enforcement
objectives.
As I have said previously, the UK is the only G20 country
to have established a public register, and it is this
Government’s long-term ambition that publicly accessible
registers of beneficial ownership will in time become a
global standard. At that point, we would expect the
overseas territories and Crown dependencies to implement
this standard. The government amendment includes provision
that, in the review of the effectiveness of the
arrangements, we can consider relevant international
standards. This further demonstrates our intention to
ensure that we and our overseas territories and Crown
dependencies remain ahead of the curve on international
standards and will continue to consider the bespoke
arrangements set out in the exchange of notes in relation
to those standards as they evolve.
Given that so many jurisdictions fail even to reach the
standards set by the Financial Action Task Force for
beneficial ownership transparency, it is right to focus our
efforts on persuading others to up their game while
ensuring that the overseas territories and the Crown
dependencies deliver on what they have promised. We will of
course continue to engage with partners through the key
international groups such as the FATF and the OECD to
increase levels of transparency worldwide.
I pay tribute to all noble Lords who campaigned on this
issue. The fight against global corruption is a priority
for the Government and we listened carefully to all those
who made representations, not least the noble Lord,
, and the noble
Baronesses, Lady Stern and Lady Butler-Sloss. I hope that
the House will recognise the strong rationale for the
Government’s proposed approach and that noble Lords will be
minded to accept the concessionary amendment we have
proposed in light of our debates. I look forward to
responding to noble Lords at the conclusion of the debate,
when I will also seek to address the amendment in the name
of my noble friends and Lord Hodgson. I
beg to move.
5.30 pm
-
(CB)
My Lords, I will speak to Amendment 14 in my name and those
of the noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, and the noble Lords,
and Lord Kirkhope.
This amendment has already been discussed in Committee and
is unchanged. Since the debate in Committee, I have been
fortunate to have had lengthy and very enlightening
discussions with the representatives in the United Kingdom
of the British Virgin Islands and Bermuda. I also thank the
Chief Minister of the Isle of Man and his colleagues for
meeting me. I am grateful to the House of Lords Library for
its excellent briefings and to Christian Aid and
Transparency International for the additional briefings
they provided and the work they do in this area.
The background to this amendment is the growing public
understanding of how the lack of transparency in offshore
financial centres helps the corrupt to find a haven for
their ill-gotten wealth and tax evaders to sleep easily in
their beds. Those in poor countries feel the effects of
this most because they do not have the resources to pursue
the money that has been taken from them. The understanding
of this need for transparency was considerably enhanced by
the publication of the Panama papers in April 2016.
On 8 November, the Chancellor of the Exchequer made a
Written Ministerial Statement to Parliament on the work to
date of the cross-agency Panama Papers Taskforce, a group
of law enforcers set up to pursue the information that
related to the United Kingdom about the illegality
revealed. He said in his Statement that since the
publication of the papers the task force had: opened civil
and criminal investigations into 22 individuals for
suspected tax evasion; identified a number of leads
relevant to a major insider-trading operation; identified
nine potential professional enablers of economic crime, all
with links to known criminals; placed 43 high net worth
individuals under special review while their links to
Panama were further investigated; identified two new UK
properties and a number of companies relevant to a National
Crime Agency financial sanctions inquiry; established links
to eight active Serious Fraud Office investigations; and
identified 26 offshore companies whose beneficial ownership
of UK property was previously concealed and whose financial
activity had been identified to the National Crime Agency
as potentially suspicious. In addition to pursuing those 74
individuals, 26 companies, links to eight Serious Fraud
Office investigations and other leads on insider trading
and sanctions, a number of individuals had come forward to
settle their affairs before the task force partners took
action against them.
All the law enforcement activity I list is the result in
just six months of bringing transparency to the files of
just one legal firm in just one country. It gives an
indication of the huge extent of illicit activity and
illuminates the rationale behind the measures in this very
welcome Bill. In passing, with great respect, I ask those
noble Lords who oppose public registers whether they feel
it is not worth bringing that number of people to justice,
or whether they have a proposal other than transparency for
achieving that end.
Undoubtedly, government Amendment 8, to which the Minister
just spoke so eloquently, is a step forward in trying to
curb the criminal activity, tax evasion and laundering of
corruptly gained wealth that is illustrated by the work of
the Panama Papers Taskforce. It is very welcome and makes
clear that the Government look to the overseas territories
and Crown dependencies to keep good and accurate
information. Let us remember that half the companies
disclosed by the Panama papers—some 140,000 of them—were
incorporated in the British Virgin Islands.
However, Amendment 14 goes further than the government
amendment. In relation to the overseas territories, it aims
to bring transparency to their financial operations by
allowing public access to registers of beneficial
ownership. I note that Montserrat has already agreed to
establish such a public register. This amendment would put
a timetable in place for the British Overseas Territories
to have public registers. It would require the Government
to give all reasonable assistance possible to the overseas
territories to help with this. If registers have not been
made public by the end of 2019, the amendment requires that
public registers should be brought in by an Order in
Council.
In Committee, the Minister made it clear that she could not
accept the amendment. However, in doing so she did not use
the argument raised so frequently in discussions on this
matter, that requiring the overseas territories to have
public registers while other offshore financial centres
maintain their secrecy puts them at a competitive
disadvantage so that, in the evocative words of the noble
Lord, Lord Hodgson,
“the malfeasant … will drift away to still murkier
regimes”.—[Official Report, 3/4/17; cols. 898-9.]
I welcome very much the noble Baroness’s rejection of that
line of argument. She said:
“The overseas territories may face competitive disadvantage
in the short term, but in the long term, the transparent
and open way in which the territories intend to work, and
we with them, will be to their advantage”.—[Official
Report, 3/4/17; col. 911.]
In Committee, her main reason for rejecting the amendment
was that there would be a constitutional problem in
accepting it. She repeated that today. Yet since Committee,
I have been sent many documents on this subject, which I
studied carefully. They make it clear that ultimately the
UK Parliament could legislate for the overseas territories
if it so wished but I understand completely why the
Government would prefer to proceed with consent. So would I
and I am sure there is wide agreement on that.
I remind the Minister what she said in Committee: for the
purposes of international law, the overseas territories are
British. That Britishness is significant. In my various
discussions, it has become clear to me that the attraction
of the financial services in the overseas territories is
primarily related to British identity and language, access
to a common-law legal system, final recourse to the Privy
Council and the appeal, as it is seen, of the Union Jack.
It is worth repeating the words of the noble Lord, Lord
Kirkhope, in Committee. He said:
“It is fair to ask those jurisdictions that while their
economy and defence depend on the stability and integrity
of the UK, they should also be expected to follow the same
rules of business and investment that we follow
here”.—[Official Report, 3/4/17; col. 888.]
We in the United Kingdom have a public register. It might
not be perfect—I am sure that the noble Lord, , would agree with
me on that—but it is our policy. We have one because we
believe it is right and that it helps to prevent serious
crime. I hope that by tabling this amendment we have made
it clear that we in the United Kingdom understand the huge
impact that secret offshore financial services can have on
the poor countries of the world, good governance, democracy
and security. We understand that the overseas territories
are a United Kingdom responsibility and we hope very much
that transparency of their financial operations will come
sooner rather than later.
Finally, I thank the Minister for the way she has carried
this hugely important Bill through the House, and for her
support and helpfulness at all times.
-
Lord Kirkhope of Harrogate (Con)
My Lords, as one of the signatories to Amendment 14—and its
predecessor, which we looked at in Committee—I thank the
noble Baroness, Lady Stern, and congratulate her on her
amazing vigour and courage and, indeed, her intuition in
pursuing this matter, which is so important.
When I spoke in Committee, I made it very clear from the
beginning that, first of all—and this is important
still—the Government deserve enormous praise for the work
they have done both here in the UK and internationally to
tackle corruption and tax evasion and avoidance. I credit
that also to the previous Government because one of the
reasons I have been interested in this matter is that I
followed the right honourable ’s lead when he put this
issue very much at the top of the agenda at the 2013 G8
summit and subsequently, as was referred to in an earlier
discussion, at the anti-corruption summit in May last year.
Of course, Mr Cameron and others did not refer just to
global standards. Indeed, one of my noble friend the
Minister’s responses in Committee was to talk about
awaiting global standards before any further pressure was
placed on overseas territories to comply with the public
register or the enhanced register. But the truth is, of
course, that the former Prime Minister referred to the gold
standard, which the United Kingdom itself was very much in
the vanguard of. This was accepted and understood, and it
left this country, as it is now, in an enormously
advantageous position in dealing with other countries as we
go forward.
For my sins, I was one of those involved in the drafting of
the fourth anti-money laundering directive. My friends
always introduce me as an expert on money laundering. I do
not like that description but undoubtedly we are looking in
this enormously important piece of legislation at how we
respond to the requirements under that fourth money
laundering directive as well.
I maintain that the amendment I have co-signed is the best
way forward but I also pay tribute to the Minister for the
way she has listened to the concerns of those who hold our
views. She listened very carefully in Committee—and not
just listened. Often I think our Ministers listen but that
is about it. She has in fact acted. Therefore, I will refer
quickly to government Amendment 8, which is an enormous
stride forward. It also gives us the ability, which is so
important, to review the situation actively in two years’
time, when we can have reports to see how the overseas
territories are getting on with the introduction of public
registers. She has also given us good news this evening
about developments even since Committee. We should welcome
that and thank the Government for their interest in
proceeding in that manner.
I am still of the belief that we need a level playing field
and we need an agreement with our overseas territories that
is at least compatible with and equivalent to the
requirements that we place in the domestic setting. It
makes no sense not to have that. I recognise the
Government’s position on this and I realise they wish to
proceed by consent. Of course, we all agree that consent is
always better than enforcement. I wish the Government great
success with this. As we proceed, I hope we will be getting
regular updates and then, in due course, when the reports
come in, we will have the opportunity, if necessary, to
return to this matter. But this is a very important Bill in
so many other regards as well. I certainly wish us to pass
the Bill and allow it to proceed from here.
5.45 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I declare an interest: I was Minister for
Overseas Development, before moving on to the Foreign
Office. I have served both professionally and voluntarily
in the development sphere in various non-governmental
organisations, including as director of VSO and
subsequently Oxfam. To all of us involved in that work, the
importance of the Bill, which I very much endorse, and of
the amendment that has just been spoken to, cannot be
overemphasised. Indeed, I noticed the other day that the
Prime Minister, in saying in the Conservatives’ election
campaign that they will stand by their commitment on
overseas aid, emphasised that what was important was to
make sure that the aid was being spent in the most
effective way and not wasted.
It is terribly important to recognise that the people of
too many developing countries are being robbed by their
leaders, and that existing arrangements enable those
leaders to get away with it. If we are going to talk about
the effective use of aid, it seems to me that where we have
the authority to take highly relevant and effective steps,
we should do so. Yes, of course, we must put on record that
Britain has taken great steps to provide world leadership
in this sphere. It is leading the world already. That is
why the remaining gaps are very ugly anomalies. I do not
like to put it in these crude terms but it always seems to
me that people either have some reason for not implementing
immediately what is proposed or they do not, and if they do
not, let us do it. If they are going to find ways of
delaying—having still to work out arrangements and so
on—this must raise suspicions that arrangements are going
to be made in other respects as well.
From that standpoint, I say simply that, with all my
experience in this sphere, this is a crucial matter. I
congratulate the noble Baroness and her co-signatories on
having stood by their guns. I hope the amendment will be
taken seriously because I believe there could be a very
important consensus in this House if we are prepared to put
ourselves on record.
-
(Con)
My Lords, I wanted to intervene earlier in this debate
following the speech of my noble friend Lord Kirkhope
because I, too, wish to refer to Mr Cameron and the G8
summit.
First, I shall say that Amendment 8 is unnecessary but
harmless, so I shall support it—but Amendment 14 is wrong
and misguided for a number of reasons. First, we have no
right, neither legal nor moral, to seek to impose our rules
on law-abiding, self-governing British Overseas
Territories. When I hear some of the NGOs outside this
House talking about our overseas territories, I am appalled
at their old-style colonial arrogance. One notorious
campaigner against so-called tax havens has even suggested
in his book that they should be closed down and the natives
made to depend on overseas aid once again—and he calls
himself moral. He is also one of the architects behind
these proposals. I believe that we have no moral right
because the United Kingdom creates more dodgy shell
companies than some of the tightly regulated overseas
territories and Crown dependencies. We need to come up to
their standard, not the other way round.
Secondly, we should not impose these public register rules
because the rules themselves are rubbish, as I shall
attempt to explain. Not a single other country in the OECD
is implementing this—and they have made clear that they
never will. This public register wheeze was invented by my
right honourable friend Mr Cameron in 2013. No other
country will touch it with a barge-pole and the only reason
that he was so keen then to foist this system on the
overseas territories was so that he could point to others
being in the same boat as himself and would not look
isolated.
I was involved in the background at that time and had a
meeting with prominent NGOs prior to the G8 in 2013. I
asked them why they were not campaigning against the real
tax havens of this world—Luxembourg, Delaware, Mauritius et
cetera—but targeting the good guys such as our overseas
territories. They responded that they had no chance of
influencing policy in those tax havens, but that Mr Cameron
was so desperate for a win at the G8 that he and the
overseas territories were an easy, soft target.
I should make it clear for the record that at that point I
was the director of the Cayman Islands office in London but
that I have no connection whatever, either financial or
otherwise, with the Cayman Islands Government now. However,
I still deeply admire the way the territory is run and the
exceptional level of integrity that it brings to financial
services, which is greater than in the United Kingdom. I
shall attempt to justify that.
Why do I say that our UK policy is farcical? Because it
says that the way to get at dodgy persons setting up dodgy
shell companies is to have a public register so that nosey
parker NGOs can trawl through them and out those people.
No—what you must do is stop them setting up dodgy shell
companies in the first place. Jersey and Cayman are the top
jurisdictions in the world, with by far the tightest
regulations and checks on people setting up dodgy shell
companies.
A few years ago an Australian professor at Griffith
University, Professor Jason Sharman, did a huge experiment
with his team on setting up shell companies. They created
dozens of email and other addresses at different places
around the world, from Islamabad, Nigeria and Moscow to
London, New York and elsewhere. Many of the locations were
highly reputable; others were places where you should hang
on to your wallet if you get an e-mail saying you have £10
million to invest within them. The researchers sent
messages to hundreds of corporate service providers around
the world, which varied in credibility from, “We wish to
establish an export base in your country for our
long-established company” to messages from addresses in
Pakistan saying, “We have a few million dollars and want to
set up some companies in complete secrecy and want some
fake bank accounts”. What was astonishing, according to
Professor Jason Sharman’s research, is that while the
majority of CSPs did not respond to the latter, highly
suspicious messages—or told them to get lost—a very large
number responded and were willing to help.
Professor Sharman’s team invented a rating system for the
responses—and guess who came out top as the most difficult,
indeed impossible, places in which to set up fake shell
companies without supplying beneficial ownership
information? Yes, it was little old Cayman and Jersey. I
have Professor Sharman’s chart here, with them achieving
100%. Who was at the bottom of the heap, where you could
almost walk in with a suitcase full of terrorist cash and
set up a company with no questions asked? It was not Panama
but individual states in the United States such as
Delaware, Montana and Wyoming. They are way down at the
bottom of the chart.
There are 2 million new companies created in the United
States every single year. If you want to set up a dodgy
shell company, you go to the United States—or rather, you
go on to email and do it in under half an hour for less
than $300. These states have said quite bluntly that they
do not care what the President signs up to at federal level
or at the OECD; they are in charge of company registrations
in their state and will never in a million years go for
public or central registers. They will not go for any more
scrutiny before setting up companies.
Where does the United Kingdom come into this?
Unfortunately, your Lordships can guess who was 13th from
the bottom of the heap—below Vietnam, Panama and Ukraine.
Yes, the United Kingdom was 13th from the bottom on
creating dodgy shell companies, because we do it with
insufficient verification of the beneficial owners. So
clobbering Cayman, Bermuda and the BVI with rules which
only they, not the other 19 countries of the OECD, would
follow is misguided and foolish. I agree with my noble
friend Lord Hodgson that we do not make the world a better
or a more transparent place by hitting the good guys,
encouraging the bad and letting all the Mugabes of this
world go to the real tax havens to set up accounts.
Neither does the OECD ask for these public registers. The
OECD merely wants all legitimate authorities to get speedy
access to the relevant information so that the police,
security services and financial regulators can check the
legality of owners and their transactions. That is the
point of access to beneficial information. I know that the
Cayman Islands has been providing that information without
any objection whatever for the last 10 years and has now
implemented a system to give that information to legitimate
authorities within 24 hours, seven days a week. That is a
far better system than publishing registers.
It is perfectly legitimate for many individuals to create
companies and seek to keep the ownership information
private. There is no right for the public, nor for
anti-capitalist NGOs, to know who owns private companies.
But there is a need for legitimate law enforcement
authorities to get speedy access to that information—and
the overseas territories are in the forefront of providing
it. What is more, I know that the information provided by
the Cayman Islands, for example, will be verified by the
authorities—as opposed to what will be supplied by
Companies House, which does not verify the accuracy of
anything. It is left to individuals to say to Companies
House, “I promise that I’m telling the truth and I am who I
say I am”. The overseas territories do not accept that.
So I ask this: will my noble friend the Minister give me an
assurance that, in due course, the UK Government will make
an attempt to get our beneficial ownership information in
Companies House as up to scratch and as good as that in the
best of the OTs? Our overseas territories should be lauded,
not criticised, for their work on financial services. For
these reasons, I oppose Amendment 14 and believe it should
be rejected.
-
(LD)
My Lords, I declare a simple interest as a former chairman
of the Justice Committee in the House of Commons, where we
sought to clarify and underline the constitutional
relationship. That probably explains why, while I generally
support government Amendment 8, I have some doubts as to
whether it is desirable to have included the Crown
dependencies and overseas territories in the same amendment
when their constitutional relationship has a very different
history.
Of course, the amendment as framed does not claim to place
any requirements on the jurisdictions to which it refers;
it simply requires UK Ministers to report to the UK
Parliament on how it is all going, which is obviously a
good thing and something that we can very much welcome.
Parliament needs to know about the effectiveness of
information sharing, not only in respect of the overseas
territories and the Crown dependencies but in respect of
all the jurisdictions in which business is already carried
out or to which it might transfer as a result of the
steadily improving regulation in some of the territories
that have been referred to in this debate.
A lot of the public concern arises from two things. One of
them, which was mentioned by the noble Lord, , is the appalling
record of corruption in many developing countries. The
other is the revelation of much of that in the Panama
papers. The noble Baroness, Lady Stern, deserves credit and
tribute for her campaigning on this issue. She referred to
the number of proceedings being considered or started. Many
of them have arisen not from inadequate public registers
but from the useful publication of a great deal of
information from one law firm. As it happens, it was the
biggest law firm in Panama, Mossack Fonseca, both of whose
named partners are currently in detention in relation to
matters in Brazil.
6.00 pm
That notorious partnership created many thousands of shell
companies. It did not know, and did not seek to know, the
beneficial ownership of the clients for whom it was doing this.
The incorporation of these companies took place not primarily in
Panama but in many other jurisdictions, particularly in Caribbean
jurisdictions—not just British overseas territories but, for
example, in at least one territory associated with the
Netherlands. It was a massive operation stretching over to
Singapore and many other places.
In Panama, there has been significant improvement in the criminal
law and the requirements of due diligence, with which all firms
now to have comply. I had the opportunity to discuss this with
lawyers in Panama recently, and I think that the situation will
change quite strikingly in that particular country and
jurisdiction. But much of this business may have transferred to
Nevada, Delaware or Singapore, and Ministers will need to report
to Parliament on the effectiveness of the access of law
enforcement agencies and tax agencies to ownership information in
those jurisdictions.
To serve its purpose, the information shared has to be reliable,
up-to-date and verified—and that is the more urgent priority. As
several noble Lords pointed out, the UK has work to do at home if
it is to match what is already done in, for example, Jersey.
There are real benefits to be had from publicly accountable
registers, such as are proposed in the amendment tabled by the
noble Baroness, Lady Stern, particularly in tackling corruption
by national leaders, which would not otherwise come to light. But
my worry is that, unless this becomes a much more widespread
practice, there will be many jurisdictions in which such persons
can engage in those activities.
I think that the phrase “gold standard” is unfortunate because it
is something we went off when we realised that we had to do so—so
let us find a different analogy for trying to get sufficiently
wide respect among jurisdictions for the idea that public access
confers real benefits to the populations whose money is involved.
Let us recognise that the priority is to get for our law
enforcement and tax authorities, and those of other countries,
access to information that is reliable, up-to-date and verified.
-
(CB)
My Lords, I declare my interests as set out in the register
of the House and, in particular, that I was chief executive
of a class 1 major reinsurer in Bermuda for a number of
years and have very wide experience of financial services
in that country and generally.
I pay tribute to the Minister and also to the noble
Baroness, Lady Stern, in their respective ways. I am afraid
that I can pay tribute to the noble Baroness, Lady Stern,
but I disagree with her fundamentally. While I feel that
the appalling catalogue of problems that she read out is
terrible, worrying, vile and awful, Amendment 14 is not a
good way of addressing the issue. She challenged me to try
to provide a better way, and I will in the course of my
remarks.
People often do not understand how big a jurisdiction
Bermuda is. Bermuda overtook London as a centre of
reinsurance in 2004. London remains number two in the
world. No major insurer in this country would be able to
trade without the reinsurance that it purchases from
Bermuda. The amount of money, capital and sophistication in
Bermuda is enormous. The BMA—the chief regulator there, of
which more in a second—is an extremely professional and
very tough regulator. Bermuda was not responsible for even
one of the revelations in the Panama papers and is a very
clean jurisdiction, and it is particularly unfair that it
is named in this amendment.
I have four particular points, on two of which I can be
very quick. The first is a general point about interference
by Westminster in the affairs of these self-governing
regimes. I agree with the Minister, and I will say no more.
The second is a general point about shifting the problem to
another jurisdiction. I agree that shifting a bad thing is
a good thing in many ways, but shifting a good company is a
bad thing because you are simply damaging the jurisdiction.
There are many good companies, and I will explain in a
second why this amendment would have the effect of shifting
good companies. It would be very wrong for us to impose
damage on our loyal overseas territories and possessions.
My third point is about the three things that control and
look at naughtiness in financial services, which are the
tax authorities, the police authorities and the regulators.
As a chief executive of a big company, of course one is
worried by tax authorities and policemen, but the person
who can walk into your office and stop you trading
immediately is the regulator. He has the most power, and he
is the toughest. I regret that in the many debates we have
had the power of regulators has not really been discussed
nor has how sophisticated they are and how close they are
to what is going on. It is not possible for one of these
shell companies to be set up without a regulator being
involved because that company will require a bank account.
Banks are heavily regulated. If the shell company does not
require a bank account, it will require a fund manager to
look after its money. They are very heavily regulated. A
person running the support business in a high-integrity
environment such as Bermuda would not allow someone —one
bad client—to come in and kill off their whole business.
They would be very careful to make sure that that does not
happen. You are scared of regulators. You are of course
scared of tax and police authorities, and you are more than
willing to give up any information that will protect your
business because no one client is worth it. Your business
is your business; your staff are your staff. That is how
everyone feels—I hope noble Lords can hear a level of
emotion in my voice.
A sub point is that in our society we rely on the forces of
law enforcement to deal with naughtiness on our behalf. We
do not have vigilante posses running around trying to do
things. I worry that if everything were publicly available
people would suddenly see themselves as being promoted into
some sort of enforcement environment. That is wrong. We
should leave these things to the professionals—the tax
authorities, the police authorities and the regulators—and
trust. If they do not do a good enough job, we should bash
them. We should not allow vigilante posses.
I move to my fourth point, which is the most worrying point
for me. I have mentioned it to the noble Baroness, Lady
Stern. For many years, Hiscox, the group I worked for for
so long, looked after the possessions of well-off people
all over the world. It is also the leading kidnap and
ransom insurer throughout the world. During my time at
Hiscox, we logged 40,000 man days of kidnap problems around
the world. Hiscox’s market share was more than 50%, so it
understood the issues. In this country, we are very lucky
to live in an environment where we are safe and secure. I
will walk home tonight and think nothing of it. I can get
into a smart car and think nothing of it. That is not the
case in countries such as Mexico. In Mexico, you cannot
keep your company with a local bank or keep your money
there. In quite a lot of countries, you need to go to
offshore environments, and you are a good client because
you have earned your money. Hiscox’s perfect client was
someone who owned a beer factory in Mexico or something
because it knew they were straight and honest and could see
how they had made their money. People were very scared.
Part of kidnap and ransom is advising clients. Hiscox
advised them to keep quiet about it and to be discreet.
That is the chief weapon that will stop nastiness going on.
When the nastiness happens, it happens not to the guy
running the beer factory but to his daughter. It happens in
a nasty way. I worry that the effect of this sort of
thinking, without a proper impact assessment being sorted
out and thought about very carefully, could be that we
would be sentencing some people who have made their money
honestly to physical harm and the invasion of their homes.
I finish by saying that of course I do not want any of this
naughtiness to go on, but I feel strongly that Amendment 14
is not the way to go about it. We should rely on the
police, the tax authorities and the regulators to do it for
us. We should look very carefully at their performance in
all of these countries and carry on, as the Government have
been doing so successfully, getting incremental
improvement. This House should make sure we carry on
pushing the Government to push the authorities to get that
incremental improvement. But I plead with the House not to
support Amendment 14.
-
(Non-Afl)
My Lords, first, I declare an interest as chairman of the
Jersey Financial Services Commission and therefore the
person responsible for the beneficial ownership register in
Jersey. The question addressed in Amendment 14, of public
access to registers of beneficial ownership, is not one for
me, and I will not address the value or otherwise of making
a register public—that is a political issue. The regulator
in Jersey is independent, and I therefore have no role in
those political decisions, but I am concerned about whether
a register of beneficial ownership is accurate and
therefore useful.
A number of speakers have referred to the public
availability of the register of beneficial ownership here
in the UK—essentially the Companies House register. As I
pointed out in Committee, that register is not a useful
one, since it is not verified and, because of that, the
information in it can be seriously misleading. Indeed,
because it is not verified, the people in developing
countries and indeed civil society as a whole are on their
own with respect to attempting to identify wrongdoing
through the structure of the register. The register does
not do the job. Regrettably, the UK is not a leader in
providing verified, accurate information about beneficial
ownership.
I want to address two issues with respect to the
amendments. First, what I have just said will make clear
why I regard Amendment 14 as seriously defective in not
including the word “verified”. The characterisation of the
information in proposed new subsection (4) is of a,
“publicly accessible register of beneficial ownership”,
with information “equivalent” to that under the Companies
Act. The word “verified” does not appear. Therefore, the
information can be inaccurate and misleading, with nobody
required here to check it.
For the second point, I go back to the Minister’s
amendment. Amendment 8, which has not been discussed very
much up until now, says not only that “relevant”
territories will provide information to the UK and we will
have a report on how that information is provided but that
the UK will provide “beneficial ownership information” to
the relevant territories. I presume that includes my
registry in Jersey. But I would like to know what
information is going to be provided. If it is the Companies
House information, we should really not bother; if it is
some verified information, I will be very pleased to
receive it. I would be grateful if the Minister, when she
sums up, could tell us exactly what information is going to
be provided by the UK, whether it is going to be verified
and, if so, by what authority. Only if we have accurate
information will the objective of those supporting
Amendment 14—the revelation of wrongdoing —be achieved. If
information is not verified, that goal is not achieved.
Amendment 14 is defective in that respect, and I would be
grateful if the Minister, when summing up, would tell me
exactly what sort of information will be provided by the UK
to my registry in Jersey and by whom it will be verified.
6.15 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, the Minister rightly wishes the United Kingdom to
be ahead of the curve. In relation to Amendment 8, which is
the principal amendment that we are considering, she is
absolutely right. If she is saying that the objective is
co-operation on beneficial ownership information in order
to deal with tax evasion and stamp out corruption, money
laundering and terrorist finance, that is greatly to be
welcomed and is welcomed, as far as I can see, by those in
the overseas territories. I will come back to this in a
minute, but the amendment will mean that the overseas
territories have, as I understand it, committed themselves
to provide real-time, 24-hour information in response to
requests from the legal authorities in the United Kingdom.
That is a massive step forward in this area of great
difficulty and challenges and is to be welcomed.
However, I too am concerned about some of the detail of
this new clause. It is unfortunate that a clause of this
importance has appeared in the Marshalled List so late in
the process. Of course, I recognise that my noble friend on
the Front Bench is in some difficulty in that this is a
major Bill and here we are at the 11th hour having to look
at an absolutely vital amendment, and one has to make some
allowance for that. But I share the view of the noble Lord,
, about exactly what
information is going to come from the UK and who on earth
will verify that information. The overseas territories have
every right to be told exactly what the information is and
how it has been verified. In addition, there seems to be a
great rush to have this work done in the next period so
that it will all be based on one year’s experience. This is
a major step forward and I wonder whether 12 months is
enough. We have heard this evening from my noble friend
that the Turks and Caicos Islands are hoping to get started
soon, but one year is really asking an awful lot, and not
many statisticians would work on the basis of one year’s
information. Nevertheless, we are where we are.
I have one other concern. Proposed new subsection (2)
states:
“The report must include an assessment of the effectiveness
of those arrangements, having regard to such international
standards as appear to the relevant Minister to be
relevant”.
We do not know who the Minister may be in the next
Government or what international standards are to be used.
I do not blame my noble friend for this, but I suggest to
her that when the report comes forward, we shall want to
have great clarity about what international standards are
being used and whether they are being consistently used in
the analysis of implementation that flows from the new
clause in Amendment 8. However, the basic point is that
there must be great joy both in the overseas territories
and in the law enforcement agencies of the United Kingdom
that they are now going to get a first-class service which
ought to have a major impact on the areas that I have
described.
I have had the privilege of working overseas in Pakistan,
India and Sri Lanka, and I spent part of my national
service in Canada. Certainly when I was in commerce, with
the Reckitt & Colman Overseas group, one of the
bugbears about international trade—I am talking about
several decades ago, but I am afraid it has not changed—is
that it is not a level playing field. Here we are,
approaching Brexit and hoping to trade internationally, but
the tragedy of the situation is that somehow neither we in
the United Kingdom nor other countries have ever managed to
persuade the United States, Hong Kong and Singapore to have
a central, non-public register. We have not even got that
far. Even on the basis of what we are doing now, we have
rivals. Make no mistake about it: most of our overseas
territories are in the Caribbean, their main competitor is
the United States and they do not even have a central
beneficial ownership register. Not only will they lose
business if we go too far but if the other parties,
particularly the US, Singapore and Hong Kong, take business
from our overseas territories, the net result will be that
where we are getting information out of our overseas
territories, if the business goes elsewhere then the
co-operation that the UK gets from those territories—which
is good and is going to be even better—will be totally
undermined. Frankly, we will not get any information from
the US, Hong Kong or Singapore.
On Amendment 14, which keeps reappearing, I certainly do
not think that Her Majesty’s Government are committed to
producing anything on a public register at the end of the
review on beneficial ownership. The review should be solely
on that subject, and there may well need to be further
amendments or extensions to that situation. I remind noble
Lords that neither the law enforcement agencies nor the tax
authorities support public registers. UK intelligent law
enforcement is a key part of our foreign policy, and we
look for co-operation from friendly countries across the
world. That will be jeopardised still further if there are
these public registers.
So I say to my noble friend on the Front Bench that I
support very much what she has done on the Bill and the way
that she has pushed forward progress with the overseas
territories. However, let us be quite clear: beneficial
ownership is one thing, and it is very important, but in my
view public registers are totally à décours.
-
(CB)
My Lords, I support government Amendment 8. I apologise to
the House for the fact that I have not been here for the
earlier proceedings because, among other things, I have
been visiting one of the overseas territories, Gibraltar,
as I am chancellor of the new university there. As a former
Governor of Gibraltar I am probably the only person in the
Chamber who has been a governor of an overseas territory,
so I thought I ought to say something in this very
important debate.
The noble Baroness, Lady Stern, and all those who have
added their names to the amendment have done a service to
the House in ensuring that we debate the vital issue of
standards of regulation in overseas territories. After all,
at the end of the day it is our Government who are
ultimately accountable to Parliament for the performance in
our overseas territories. Therefore the Government must
satisfy themselves that the standards both in this country
and in the overseas territories meet those required by the
OECD and elsewhere, so I congratulate my noble friend on
the leadership that she has shown in ensuring that we
debate this issue.
However, there is a delicate balance to be struck—from
listening to the debate, I think the House understands
that—because we are now in a non-colonial era. I remember
that after I became Governor of Gibraltar, the late Robin
Cook became Foreign Secretary two or three months later and
one of the first things he did, very sensibly, was to drop
the term “colonial” from our overseas territories so that
we have the title we use at present, “British Overseas
Territories”. We have to approach these issues in a very
non-paternalistic and non-colonial fashion. To my mind,
that is essential. The danger with the devolved powers that
we have in these overseas territories—quite rightly, in my
view—is that if we try to impose in a paternalistic fashion
our views and policies upon them, we will be doing them a
great disservice. Above all, we want to avoid having to
impose direct rule, which could be the implication of
taking some of these measures. At the same time, we have to
ensure that there is a level playing field, which includes
us as well, and that in making progress on this we do not
do so at the expense of the overseas territories.
The Government have shown tremendous initiative in
responding to the amendment from the noble Baroness, Lady
Stern, with their Amendment 8 because it provides a
framework with which we can move forward in negotiation and
dialogue with the overseas territories over the next two or
three years to try to move the whole issue forward. Many of
the overseas territories, as we have already heard today,
have made good progress. I congratulate the Government on
this and strongly support their amendment.
-
(CB)
My Lords, I support very much what the noble Lord,
, has just said and
respectfully associate myself with it. I strongly support
Amendment 8. If I may put it this way, I think the
Government, and particularly the Minister, have been
extremely shrewd in taking the sting out of the points made
by the noble Baroness, Lady Stern, who has very wisely
brought these issues to this House. The Government have
picked them up and produced what seems to me to be the
right approach to dealing with the overseas territories.
The amendment provides a useful nudge to the overseas
territories that the Government are looking at what they
are doing, without imposing what is unacceptable upon these
independent countries with their own constitutions and
parliaments.
I do not agree with Amendment 14. I was at the meeting this
morning where representatives from a number of overseas
territories explained to us what they were doing. We have
already heard about Bermuda and the Cayman Islands, the
British Virgin Islands, which are doing very good work, and
from Anguilla and Montserrat about the efforts they are
making. We have heard from the Minister about the Turks and
Caicos Islands, which with their new Government are now
working to get this through. So the areas contained within
Amendment 14 are already on the way, if not ahead of us in
some cases, and it is not necessary that they should be
referred to specifically in it. I do not want to hold
everyone up. I support Amendment 8 and I do not think
Amendment 14 is really necessary now.
-
My Lords, I shall speak to Amendment 24 in my name and that
of my noble friend
in this group. It concerns the setting up of a public
register of beneficial ownership of UK property by
companies and other legal entities registered outside the
UK. Those are more or less the words that are the subject
of a call for evidence issued by the Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy in April this
year. I do not know but I assume that the Home Office did a
great deal to bring forward the publication of that report
in the light of the debates which took place in Committee
about the concern that was generally expressed about
corruption and the acquisition of property in central
London by overseas companies hiding behind anonymity.
The establishment of a public register was indeed a
commitment made by the Government. Why do we need a
register of this sort? I can do no better than quote
briefly from the call for evidence, which says,
“the government is concerned about the potential for
illegal activity to take place through overseas companies
investing in the property sector. Some properties are owned
through off-shore companies in order to obscure their true
owners. This can make it difficult for regulators,
legitimate businesses and the general public to know who
the true owners are and can make it very difficult for law
enforcement agencies to carry out effective investigations
… Greater transparency of property ownership will make the
job … easier and will discourage criminals and the corrupt
from choosing the UK to hide or launder their money”.
It is made quite clear that the Government intend to
introduce a register of beneficial owners of overseas
companies but, as it is a call for evidence, it does not
seek to prescribe the nature of that register but calls for
advice and information to assist it in formulating the
register. It may well be influenced by what the noble Lord,
, said about
verification to make any such register particularly useful.
The amendment in my name and that of my noble friend Lord
Hodgson simply asks the Government to do that and make it a
part of the Bill. If we do not, there is real feeling that
there will not be legislative time even in the Parliament
that may start in June. I ask the Minister to reassure us
that the register will be set up in short order.
6.30 pm
-
The (CB)
My Lords, I was not here for Committee and I apologise for
rising at this late hour. I thank the Minister for her
attendance at our meeting this morning, which was very
productive. I admitted then that I had not seen government
Amendment 8. Now that I have read it—in fairness to the
noble Baroness, Lady Stern, I know that people have said
that it is very welcome—it is actually quite disappointing
for the aid organisations that have been campaigning. That
should be on the record. It is really a restatement of
existing government policy, and is not a compromise in that
sense. I prefer to support my noble friend and others on
Amendment 14 because it is only common sense. If we look
back to discussion in Committee, we see that all they are
asking is for the Government to complete their own
programme of persuading the OTs to adopt public registers.
This was a worldwide campaign, which we admire the
Government for leading. It is now intended to include the
overseas territories, although I fully recognise that there
has been a slow take-up and that Orders in Council may be
required.
I have worked with Christian Aid and many other
organisations, as has the noble Lord, , which support the
proposed new clause in Amendment 14. They are, to my mind
rightly, concerned that the need for transparency should
apply to overseas territories and developing countries just
as much as to us. I hope the Minister now recognises that
and will see her way to further compromise in future. The
aid agencies feel strongly about this—after all, they are
thinking of the majority of people living in those
countries, not those sitting on the money.
Finally, I quote one informed reaction from Christian Aid
to the new amendment. They state:
“The Exchanges of Notes signed between the UK Government
and Overseas Territories in April 2016 on sharing
beneficial ownership information already provide for a
joint review of the operation of the arrangements six
months after their coming into force, and thereafter on an
annual basis. The report envisaged by amendment 8 is
therefore already committed to. All this amendment does is
put an existing commitment into law”.
The amendment does not mention transparency; nor does it
mention developing countries. I therefore see no reason why
we cannot support Amendment 14 and Amendment 8.
-
(Con)
My Lords, I have added my name to Amendment 24, which is
about the UK register of overseas property. Before I speak
to it, as the noble Baroness was kind enough to refer to my
remarks in Committee about drifting away to murkier
regimes, I took it from the way that she quoted it that she
did not approve of that. I was relieved that my noble
friend quoted it with
approval, which shows that you cannot please all the people
all the time. However, I do not want my noble friend, or
indeed the noble Baroness or the House, to think that that
remark was made in isolation.
I said that the status quo was unsustainable and that at
least three issues should be tackled as part of the new
regime: first, there should be a register; secondly, our
law enforcement agencies should have full-hearted access to
it in a way that is prompt, helpful and consistent with a
working relationship; and, thirdly, the Government should
be satisfied with the probity and effectiveness of the
register regime in the overseas territories and Crown
dependencies. It seems to me that government Amendment 8
meets those tests, which is why I support it. Rather than
talking about drifting away to murkier regimes, I should be
saying that we must not let the best become the enemy of
the good.
With that, I turn to Amendment 24. It is important not to
see the issues raised by my noble friend as a problem for
only central London and the inner suburbs. There is a
knock-on effect from what is going on in central London
with continuing overseas investment in London properties.
That makes the urgency to which my noble friend referred a
moment ago all the more pressing. First, there is a ripple
effect on properties in the south-east of the United
Kingdom: as the settled population sell their properties
closer to the middle of London, they have further money to
buy properties elsewhere in the region. A very interesting
article in the Financial Times on Monday 3 April pointed
out that house prices have increased by 102% since 2002,
compared to a 38% increase in earnings; that Londoners now
need to pay 12.9 times their earnings, up from 6.9 times in
2002, to buy a London house; and that if you wish to buy a
house in Kensington and Chelsea, the heartland of the area
that my noble friend has in his gunsights, you now need 31
times the median salary to afford it. There is a real sense
that we need to get a grip and some clarity on what is
going on.
There is a second impact because, as London has become more
expensive, foreign investors have begun to look at other
cities. The Times of Friday 7 April pointed out that Number
One Cambridge Street in Manchester, a development of 282
flats over 29 storeys, has investment purchasers from
Azerbaijan, China, Japan and Zimbabwe—18 nationalities.
Only two of the 282 flats are owned by Britons. The
developer wrote:
“The generously proportioned apartments … appeal to
owner-occupiers, investors and renters. In other words, the
scheme is appealing to several sectors of the market,
including those looking to make the step towards to getting
on to the housing ladder and more established
owner-occupiers”.
I must say that I think first-time buyers in Manchester
might wonder whether 99.2% overseas investors and 0.8%
local ownership is a fair reflection. Here I offer my noble
friend Lady Stern some comfort: one investor based in the
British Virgin Islands has purchased 125 flats. A company
called OFY paid £25.7 million for those properties.
Although the amendment is no silver bullet, it sets out an
important direction of travel, which is why I support it.
-
My Lords, there have been many speeches and I, too, was
unable to speak at an earlier stage, so I shall be brief.
Amendment 8 is good, but Amendment 14 is better. The reason
it is better it simply this: it adds greater certainty to
the idea that we and the British Overseas Territories are
doing our level best to destroy this scourge of corruption
which infests so many countries and does so much damage
throughout the whole world. It may be that we are at the
start of this process—I think the Bill is the very
beginning of a process—but we have to start somewhere, and
this is where we should start.
-
(LD)
My Lords, I have the privilege of being a name added to the
amendment moved by the noble Baroness, Lady Stern. I will
use this opportunity to congratulate her not only on
raising the issue but on pursuing it with so much energy.
We can see from some of the results that the argument has
moved; the profile of this issue has been very
significantly raised and I think that government will
struggle to ignore it going forward. We have had a small
concession from the Government. I agree very much with the
noble Earl, Lord Sandwich, that it would have been
encouraging to have a stronger response, because this is
indeed the encapsulation of existing government policy and
existing notes of exchange into statute. It is better to
have it in statute than not to have it in statute. There is
a little bit of movement forward, but it is extremely
small.
What has disappointed me in a lot of the debate today is
the range of views expressed opposing transparency. I am
very appreciative of those who have spoken out who
recognise the importance of transparency. The Panama papers
have been an extraordinary illustration of what
transparency can do, and does, to engage regulators and
enforcement agencies to pursue what is not just
naughtiness—it runs far deeper than that. It is real
misbehaviour that distorts economies, including our own.
Amendment 24, from the noble Lords, and Lord Hodgson, in
many ways illustrates the distortions that have happened in
property markets in the UK, with huge consequences for many
of our young people and many of those on lower incomes.
There is a very big knock-on beyond just the initial misuse
of bank accounts and investments.
I made a much longer speech on the issue in Committee,
which I shall not repeat, but we have to face the reality
that many of the problems that we face across the globe,
including civil war in Syria, hunger in Africa, the absence
of democracy in countries such as Russia and the impact of
withdrawn democracy in places such as Turkey, depend on the
capacity of those who are politicians or Governments who
abuse their people and who are corrupt—vast criminal
networks that exploit in every way—to take advantage by
moving illicitly obtained money into the legal financial
sector. When we look at anywhere around the world that
functions in any way as a haven or portal for that
transition from the illicit world to the legal world, we
are facing a situation where we have to try to close down
the ability of those funds to move. The impact of that
would be huge in so many ways across the globe, including
for us.
I very much support—and I am sad that not everyone did—the
work that the previous Prime Minister, , did in this area, and
the stand that he took, saying that, first, we have to make
the kinds of changes that give us central registers. I am
very glad that this Government continue to move to make
sure that that extends right across all our overseas
territories and Crown dependencies. Many of them are ahead
of us, as has been said—but this will now be a universal
description of the UK, with its overseas territories and
Crown dependencies. But I am sad that the principle of
public registers is now being so thoroughly challenged. We
all know that if we wait for a global standard we will wait
generations. Secrecy provides the kind of cover used
extensively by all those whom we would wish to stop. They
are the people who will be very pleased today that
Amendment 14 is not going to be put to a vote and
potentially carried. They will be absolutely delighted,
because that is the cover that enables them to continue to
make the transfer between the illicit world and the legal
world.
This is a path down which I am sure that the noble
Baroness, Lady Stern, who has been so vigorous on this
issue, is going to continue. There will be many others
around this House—we have heard from the noble and learned
Lord, , and the noble Earl,
Lord Sandwich—who will continue, and I hope that the noble
Lord, , will be in that
group as well. We must achieve that transparency. If we do
not take leadership, there is no way that we can turn
around to the United States or any other location and
insist that they carry out those same measures, when we say
that we are not willing to do it ourselves or to use our
relationship with the overseas territories and Crown
dependencies to achieve that goal.
I wish that the Minister could tell us more about a
timetable to achieve greater transparency. That would give
us a great deal of comfort, but there does not seem to be
one with much force or energy behind it, which I find
exceedingly sad. But this is a day when we recognise the
pressures and needs delivered by wash-up, so I very much
accept the need to support government Amendment 8, and
recognise with regret that we are very unlikely to have an
opportunity to push on Amendment 14.
6.45 pm
-
(Lab)
First, I start by making a reference to the amendment in
the name of the noble Lords, and .
We certainly support the objectives of the amendment; it is
a matter that we have raised in Committee, as well as the
two noble Lords. Unless I have misunderstood its intention,
the amendment says that action should be taken within a
certain period of time, which I think is described as
within six months of the day on which the Bill is passed.
When the matter was discussed in Committee, the Minister
referred to the fact that the Government had announced at
the London anti-corruption summit last year that the
Government’s intention was to create a register of overseas
company beneficial ownership information where the company
owned UK property. On behalf of the Government, the
Minister also said that the Government intended to publish
a call for evidence that would set out the policy proposals
in full in the coming weeks, and would also introduce
legislation to implement the register as soon as
parliamentary time allowed.
As the noble Lord, , said, the call for
evidence on a register showing who owns and controls
overseas legal entities that own UK property or participate
in UK Government procurement has now been issued; it has
come from the Department for Business, Energy and
Industrial Strategy. But I imagine that the key concern,
from what the noble Lord said, is about how long it may
take for anything to happen with regard to setting up the
register. I assume that the Minister will probably not be
in a position to say very much about that. She could, of
course, tell us what the intentions would have been of this
Government—but they will not be around for very much
longer. There will be a new Government after the election,
and it will be an issue for that Government to decide what
priority they are going to give to it.
Certainly, the omens do not necessarily seem very good,
since there seems to be a general view that much of the
legislative time that any Government have after the next
election will be taken up with the issue of the
implications of our withdrawal from Europe. I hope that the
Minister will at least be able to say what the intentions
would have been of this Government when she comes to
respond to the specific point raised in the amendment moved
by the noble Lord, , about putting a
time limit on when something is actually going to happen
and not leaving it as something that may well drift well
into the future.
I thank the Minister for moving government Amendment 8,
which is clearly—at least in part—a response to Amendment
14, spoken to by the noble Baroness, Lady Stern, and to
which my name is attached. I do not intend to reiterate the
arguments and points made by the noble Baroness, with which
I fully concur. I will concentrate my comments on
government Amendment 8. As the noble Baroness, Lady Stern,
has already said, this does not go as far as Amendment 14,
since it contains no reference to the Government having to
bring forward an Order in Council by the end of 2019—or,
indeed, by any other time—and then taking all reasonable
steps to ensure its implementation, requiring any overseas
territories listed in Amendment 14 that have not introduced
a publicly accessible register by the end of 2019 to do so.
The government amendment provides for a report to be
prepared before 1 July 2019 with an assessment of the
effectiveness of the arrangements in place between the UK
Government and the Government of any of the Channel
Islands, the Isle of Man or any relevant overseas territory
for the sharing of beneficial ownership information, having
regard to such international standards as appear to the
relevant Minister to be relevant.
Will the Minister give more information on the criteria
against which the Government will assess the effectiveness
of the current arrangements? I ask that in the context of
what the view would have been of this Government on that
issue. We are presumably all seeking to reduce the
incidence of money laundering and corruption in particular,
as well as the avoidance of paying tax, either by illegal
means or through elaborate schemes that have not been
cleared by the tax authorities. Will the level of such
reduction achieved, or not achieved, in these areas be a
key part of the assessment of the effectiveness of the
arrangements in place, and will that be reported on in
specific terms in the report to be placed before
Parliament, to which reference is made in the government
amendment?
Further, is it this Government’s intention that there
should be a debate on the report in both Houses of
Parliament in government time? What does the reference to,
“having regard to such international standards as appear to
the relevant Minister to be relevant”,
actually mean? What do the Government consider the relevant
international standards are at present, and how would those
standards at the end of 2018 be determined? Are
international standards internationally binding agreements,
and is an international standard what is being achieved by
the country with the best record of effectiveness and
transparency in this area or by the one with the worst? I
believe that the Minister said that the regard to
international standards would be to the highest standards,
but I would be grateful if she would confirm that when she
responds.
A concern that has been expressed during the course of our
discussions on this issue has been the potential or actual
use of overseas territories and Crown dependencies by
corrupt individuals, organisations or people in positions
of real power in other countries to cream off money for
themselves that was intended to be used for the benefit of
a nation as a whole, or a significant part of a nation. An
advantage of a publicly accessible register of beneficial
ownership is that people and organisations in such
countries would have access to such a register, which would
help them identify where, and by whom, corruption and money
laundering may be taking place and thus be better able to
expose what is going on—the prospect of which would, in
itself, also act as a potentially significant deterrent.
The Government’s amendment refers to an exchange of
information between the Government of the UK and the
Government of each relevant territory. How will this
government amendment address the issue of the use of
overseas territories and Crown dependencies for corruption
and money laundering purposes by individuals, organisations
or people in positions of real power in countries outside
the United Kingdom? Does the amendment mean that the UK
Government would seek information on beneficial ownership
from a relevant Crown dependency or overseas territory in
respect of individuals, organisations or people in
positions of power in countries other than the United
Kingdom? Where a credible request for such information
comes from individuals, organisations or Governments within
those other countries, is it the intention of this
Government that the information on beneficial ownership
obtained would be passed on unless there were overriding
reasons why to do so would jeopardise life or security?
There is a basic difference between ourselves and the
Government. The Government believe that a process of
persuasion will lead to publicly accessible registers of
beneficial ownership in line with what is to be UK
practice—albeit I note the trenchant comments of the noble
Lord, , about the lack of
verification of the register in the UK. However, the
Government do not want to set any time limit for when the
voluntary approach has to have delivered, following which
legislative action would be taken. We are not convinced
that this approach will deliver the required outcome,
particularly in light of the Government’s change of stance
from the days of the previous Prime Minister, so the
commitment now appears to be to expect overseas territories
and Crown dependencies to follow suit only if publicly
accessible registers of beneficial ownership become the
international standard.
In other words, it appears as though the United Kingdom
will not be taking the lead as far as the overseas
territories and Crown dependencies are concerned. This
Government only expects them to “follow suit”. Can the
Minister at least indicate that, while there are no time
limits in the government amendment within which the
voluntary approach to the introduction of publicly
accessible registers of beneficial ownership should be
implemented, the Government will nevertheless not resile
from taking legislative action to achieve that objective at
some undefined point in the future if that were shown to be
necessary?
We are now in a situation where this Parliament is about to
end, pending the general election in June. As has been
said, the Bill has received widespread support, in both
this House and the Commons, where the areas of difference
of view have been over what the Bill does not include
rather than over what it does. In this situation, a
judgment has to be made. The Government have been persuaded
to move further with Amendment 8, providing for a report to
Parliament to be prepared by the middle of 2019. This will
enable the issue to be kept alive, and for the case for,
and objective of, publicly accessible registers of
beneficial ownership in both overseas territories and Crown
dependencies to continue to be pursued. This is assuming
that the Government of the day do not come to the
conclusion themselves that firm action needs to be taken to
deliver that objective in the light of the progress—or lack
of it—being made by the voluntary approach and the
effectiveness—or lack of it—of the arrangements in place
for the sharing of beneficial ownership information. The
amendment does represent progress, albeit not as much as we
would have liked.
Nobody wants to see this Bill, or even significant parts of
it, actually bite the dust. We do not believe that, an
election having now been called, government MPs are going
to do anything other than support their own Government’s
Amendment 8 at the expense of Amendment 14—assuming that
that amendment could still have been carried in this House
in the light of the Government’s amendment. For the reasons
I have given, we will support Amendment 8. It does not go
as far as we would wish—that position is reflected in
Amendment 14—but it does represent progress and we thank
the Minister for her work in that regard.
7.00 pm
-
My Lords, I thank all noble Lords who have spoken so
passionately on Amendments 8 and 14. I particularly thank
the noble Baroness, Lady Stern, for all the work that she
has done in promoting her Amendment 14. I also thank all
noble Lords who attended the meeting with the overseas
territory this morning. I hope they found it was useful and
that they can see that progress is already being made.
I begin with Amendment 24 in the name of my noble friends
and ,
which would provide for the creation of a public register
of beneficial ownership of foreign companies that own
property in the UK. I am pleased to have the opportunity to
return to this issue. The clear abuse of the London
property market and high-value properties across the
country—I was particularly interested to hear about the
properties in Manchester—to launder money, including the
proceeds of corruption, has to be stopped. We must not
allow this city to be a haven for kleptocrats hiding their
ill-gotten gains. That is why the Government share the
ambition of creating such a register. As my noble friend
told us, on 5 April,
the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy
published a call for evidence on our proposed register and
how it will work. In the call for evidence, the Government
sought views on the design of the register and how it will
interact with the UK property market to ensure that it is
effective.
This policy enshrines the UK’s position as world leader in
corporate transparency policy. However, as this register is
novel and ambitious, its development should not be rushed.
The UK will be considered world leading in this agenda only
if the register works. The Government have therefore taken
time to develop effective proposals and ensure that they
deliver full transparency without creating undue burdens on
business or adversely impact commercial property
transactions. Publishing the call for evidence earlier this
month demonstrated the Government’s ongoing commitment to
this agenda. Subject to the outcome of the general
election, it remains our intention to introduce legislation
to create the register as soon as parliamentary time
allows. I hope this provides my noble friends with the
reassurances that they seek.
Moving back to the overseas territories and Crown
dependencies, I welcome noble Lords’ recognition of the
value of the Government’s amendments. They will help us to
ensure that the jurisdictions successfully implement their
commitments and that the UK law enforcement agencies can
pursue investigations into money laundering and corruption
as a result. As I have previously noted, a key feature of
the Government’s approach is that it creates a level
playing field between all the overseas territories with
financial centres and the Crown dependencies. By taking a
different approach to the Crown dependencies and overseas
territories, the noble Baroness’s Amendment 14 would risk
disrupting this level playing field, creating weaknesses in
certain jurisdictions that could be exploited and damaging
the spirit of co-operation we have been able to create
between them. The Government’s amendment has the merit of
treating all relevant overseas territories and the Crown
dependencies on an equal basis, ensuring that they are held
to the same standard and are subject to a level playing
field.
The noble Lord, , asked whether the
information provided to UK law enforcement agencies can
then be shared with operational partners in other
countries, including those where grand corruption is rife.
The Exchange of Notes are bilateral agreements with the
overseas territories and Crown dependencies to enable the
exchange of accurate and timely beneficial ownership
information. On an operational case-by-case basis, and
subject to each agency’s legal position, the UK agencies
may share this information with operational partners in
other countries. If a subsequent UK law enforcement
investigation recovers property that relates to criminal
activity or corruption in another country, we may also seek
to return it to such a country under the terms of existing
agreements or memoranda of understanding.
Noble Lords should also note that, if we were to impose
legislation in a field of activity that is devolved to the
overseas territories, we would need to ask ourselves to
what degree we could ensure that such legislation would be
implemented successfully in practice. Although Westminster
has the legal power to legislate, enforcing practical
implementation of legislation in this case would be fraught
with difficulty. We could, in fact, significantly undermine
the progress that we are making in return for little or no
real benefit.
The noble Lord, , asked what the
review will cover. It will take into account the impact on
law enforcement outcomes such as the number of cases
concluded, the quality of evidence received and the overall
impact on combating economic crime. He also asked whether
there would be a debate in both Houses. He will understand
that I cannot commit the next Government to scheduling a
debate on the report but this will, of course, be a matter
for business managers in due course. However, I am sure
that interest in this issue will remain in both Houses and
there would be considerable support for such a debate at
the relevant time. Of course, there is no bar to such a
debate being held in your Lordships’ House.
The noble Lord, , asked about data
being provided to overseas territories being verified, and
another noble Lord talked about verification. The UK’s
persons with significant control register is publicly
accessible and is accessed more than 1.2 billion times a
year. This enables information to be cross-checked with
other data sources to improve accuracy and the quality of
information on an ongoing basis. This is the information
which will be shared with overseas territories and Crown
dependencies under the Exchange of Notes. The legislation
that underpins the UK register includes its own statutory
review clause, which will require its effectiveness to be
reviewed and a report to be provided to Parliament by 2019.
My noble friend asked which
international standards would be considered for the
statutory review. As he stated, the statutory review
provided for in Amendment 8 will take into account evolving
international standards such as new FATF standards. The UK
will be assessed against the new FATF standards over the
next 12 months. Other jurisdictions such as the overseas
territories will be assessed at a later stage. While the
Exchange of Notes is focused on improving law enforcement
outcomes rather than emerging assessments against
international standards, our review will, of course, take
into account the wider context.
The Government have listened and brought forward a
concessionary amendment. I hope noble Lords will be
satisfied that the issue of company ownership transparency
will remain a high priority in the next Parliament, and
that the statutory review, which will be laid in
Parliament, will ensure that this is the case. On that
basis, I hope that the noble Baroness and my noble friends
will feel inclined not to press their amendments.
Amendment 8 agreed.
Clause 9: Power to extend moratorium period
Amendment 9
Moved by
9: Clause 9, page 34, line 47, leave out from beginning to end of
line 9 on page 35
-
(Con)
My Lords, we now come to a group of government amendments
relating to improvements to the operation of Chapter 2 of
Part 1 of the Bill. I hope the House will agree that these
are technical and uncontroversial.
Clause 9 permits extensions to the moratorium period for
suspicious activity reports, and Clause 11 allows the
National Crime Agency to apply for a further information
order. These powers will be available in all the UK
jurisdictions. However, we have consulted the Scottish
Government, who have confirmed that the wording in the Bill
does not accurately reflect the common-law position in
Scotland, which recognises the role of the Procurator
Fiscal in directing criminal investigations. Amendments 9,
11 and 12 reflect that principle in Scotland so that the
moratorium extension and further information orders should
be applied for only by the Procurator Fiscal.
Clause 10 permits, on a voluntary basis, the sharing of
information between regulated-sector entities for the
purpose of tackling money laundering. This currently allows
those entities up to 28 days to share information following
an initial notification and to provide a report to the NCA.
Following further discussions with the regulated sector, we
have concluded that more time is needed to ensure more
effective sharing in complex cases, where numerous banks,
for example, may hold relevant information. Amendment 10
increases this time limit to 84 days, which will still
maintain a proportionate limit on how long these companies
have to share information.
Finally, Amendment 49 amends POCA to ensure that extensions
to the moratorium period and further information orders
that are issued in one jurisdiction in the UK, such as
Scotland or Northern Ireland, will be recognised in the
others. I beg to move.
-
My Lords, I am glad that the Government have taken account
of the special situation in Scotland.
Amendment 9 agreed.
Clause 10: Sharing of information within the regulated sector
Amendment 10
Moved by
10: Clause 10, page 37, line 34, leave out “28 days” and insert
“84 days”
Amendment 10 agreed.
Clause 11: Further information orders
Amendments 11 and 12
Moved by
11: Clause 11, page 42, line 6, leave out “a senior National
Crime Agency officer,” and insert “the Director General of the
National Crime Agency or any other National Crime Agency officer
authorised by the Director General (whether generally or
specifically) for this purpose,”
12: Clause 11, page 42, leave out lines 10 to 15
Amendments 11 and 12 agreed.
Clause 19: Financial Conduct Authority
Amendment 13
Moved by
13: Clause 19, page 79, line 6, at end insert—
“( ) After section 316 insert—“316A Duty of the Financial Conduct
AuthorityWhere a financial penalty is awarded against a firm by
the Financial Conduct Authority arising out of a Financial
Conduct Authority investigation, the Financial Conduct Authority
must withhold a proportion, to be determined at its sole
discretion, of any discount to the penalty until it is satisfied
that the firm which is a party to the settlement has completed
any internal disciplinary actions agreed in the settlement.””
-
(LD)
My Lords, I should start by thanking the Minister and her
officials for being so generous with their time over the
last couple of days. I am extremely grateful for her
courtesy and patience. I also want to acknowledge that this
is not the ideal timing for debating an issue that has so
many complex aspects. We had all expected to have more time
to do this.
Amendment 13, which stands in my name and that of the noble
Lord, , sets out to
help the FCA. A key part of the FCA’s job is the detection
and punishment of misconduct. Another key part of its job
is instilling and incentivising a culture of fair treatment
of clients and a respect for the regulations in both spirit
and letter—in other words, trying to prevent cultures in
which financial misconduct is winked at or incentivised.
The amendment aims to help with both those tasks.
The FCA has certainly been very busy with the business of
the detection and punishment of misconduct since it took on
its current form and mandate in 2012. In the four years
from 2013 to 2017, it has imposed penalties on 82
occasions. The fines on firms in this short period amounted
to over £3 billion. The latest fine was £163 million,
imposed in January on Deutsche Bank. In fact, the headline
fine was £230 million, but the FCA awarded a discount of
30% for prompt settlement of its action against the bank,
and that is an entirely typical arrangement. Sixty-six out
of the 82 enforcement actions brought by the FCA were
settled at the first stage of the enforcement process and
received a 30% discount. Eight were settled at the second
stage and received a 20% discount. Eight were contested and
received no discount at all. In all, the FCA in four years
has given firms early settlement discounts of almost £1
billion and the amendment simply proposes to put this
gigantic sum of money to better, or at least additional,
use.
When the FCA reaches a settlement, it will impose
conditions, some of which may call for internal
disciplinary proceedings to be taken against those
responsible for the misconduct. The amendment would ensure
that those disciplinary proceedings took place. It mandates
the withholding of a proportion of the discount until the
offending firm has demonstrated conclusively, and to the
satisfaction of the FCA, that proper and proportionate
disciplinary action has in fact taken place. The
substantive burden here lies with the firms and not with
the FCA. This mechanism will free the FCA from the cost and
use of resource that any follow-up investigation of
non-compliance would require. In any case, it is not clear
whether substantive follow-up investigations are routinely
undertaken.
The FCA mission statement, published last week, talks about
revisiting cases. On page 15, under the heading
“Evaluation”, it says that,
“post-implementation analysis is not cost free.
Additionally, the dynamism and complexity of the market
means it is often difficult to isolate the impact of our
actions against other factors”.
It goes on to say:
“Where it is less cost-effective to conduct detailed
analysis, we will monitor and publish key indicators that
help to demonstrate the impact of our interventions”.
I entirely sympathise with that sensible and realistic
approach. I have spoken in this Chamber before about my
concerns that the FCA is underresourced, underpaid,
undervalued and overburdened, and the amendment helps in
that kind of situation. It effectively automates, or nearly
automates, the process of compliance with settlement
conditions. It removes the need for substantive
reinvestigation by the FCA and, instead, places a burden on
the offending firm to demonstrate compliance. It offers a
powerful financial incentive for doing so at no additional
cost to the FCA or to the taxpayer.
7.15 pm
Our amendment has a further advantage. It creates a powerful
incentive for real cultural change in offending firms. If you
know that your firm has a powerful financial incentive to
identify and punish wrongdoers at any level, that is a powerful
incentive to proper behaviour by individuals at all levels. If
you know that your firm will have to demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the FCA that it has in fact identified and
punished those responsible for the misconduct, then misconduct
and tolerance of misconduct will be less likely. The recent
Banking Standards Board report shows why this kind of action is
still necessary. Thirteen per cent of sector employees saw it as
difficult to get ahead in their careers without flexing ethical
standards, and an alarming 18% had seen people in their
organisations turning a blind eye to inappropriate behaviour.
Financial punishment is frequently used against firms by the FCA,
and ultimately shareholders bear most of the cost of this.
Disciplinary action and financial punishment against individual
wrongdoers are much more likely to change culture than fines
effectively on shareholders.
When these issues were discussed in Committee, the Minister set
out the argument that the amendment was unnecessary, and I
know—because we spoke this morning—that the FCA takes the same
view, but I think it is also fair to say that our conversations
on the issue are by no means finished and have not reached a
resolution that is satisfactory to either side.
The fact is that the FCA has never done what the amendment
proposes. The amendment simply requires it to withhold a
proportion of the settlement discount for the reasons and with
the effects that I have already outlined. I beg to move.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I rise briefly to speak in support of Amendment
13, proposed by the noble Lord, , and to which I
have added my name. He has raised a very important point in
relation to how the discount is applied and we are all very
grateful to him. He has made a compelling case, and I
should like to make a couple of comments in this context.
Since the financial crisis, $321 billion has been paid out
globally in fines, compensation and legal costs, and the UK
has contributed some $60 billion of that. KPMG reported in
2015 that, between 2011 and 2015, 60% of bank profits had
been paid in fines, compensation and legal costs. Since the
financial crisis in general, payouts in legal fees, fines,
compensation and bonuses are basically equivalent to the
entire profits generated, with all the consequences for
shareholders, corporate governance, the reputation of the
financial sector and losses to the taxpayer. At its very
core, the attempt to deal with culture, conduct and, in
some, apparent contempt for customers has lacked one key
element: accountability. Using the discount to emphasise
this element of accountability is one of the compelling
parts of this proposal.
We on this side do not agree with the argument that the FCA
is not up to the job; nor do I believe that it has not used
its powers or that its procedures are flawed. The noble
Lord, , has found a very
important gap, which needs to be plugged: there is an
incentive that does not work because there has been no
downside. Even the FCA has moved towards the senior
management regime to support the noble Lord’s central
argument.
I, too, am grateful to the Minister for her openness and
engagement and for the provision of officials—a quite
copious amount of officials—to try to help address these
sorts of matters. We have enjoyed those discussions and are
looking forward to them continuing. Further openness on the
cases where the discount has been applied would be
extremely beneficial. As the FCA moves towards pursuing
less significant fines, and has limited resources to both
police and investigate, the approach of the noble Lord,
, is helpful in
ensuring compliance, and places a sensible responsibility
on the financial sector. It can mean that we can feel
confident—and I hope that I am not tempting fate—that when
the most egregious fines and compensation sums are probably
now behind us, the lower aggregate level of cost does not
allow us to believe that the industry is properly policed.
Only the accountability and responsibility in this
amendment will do so.
-
My Lords, I start by thanking the noble Lords, and , for the time that
they have taken in entering into discussions with me and
officials and representatives of the FCA, both today and
yesterday. The discussions were very helpful but, as the
noble Lord said, we have more to go.
Amendment 13 basically requires the FCA, as the noble Lord
has said, to withhold a proportion of the discount to a
penalty applied to a financial firm until that firm has
completed any internal disciplinary actions agreed in the
settlement. I really welcome the noble Lord’s objective of
improving compliance and the culture across the financial
services sector. The Government share this objective and we
have made significant progress in the area in recent years.
We have, for example, introduced the senior managers and
certification regime, to which the noble referred. This
will, where appropriate, ensure that the FCA can take
action against individuals where they are at fault. I know
that the culture at firms is also a priority for the FCA,
which has observed that it is both a key driver and a
potential way of mitigating risk, and therefore plays a
role in the achievement of its statutory objectives. The
senior managers and certification regime is a key
workstream in the FCA’s work programme on culture, as is
the FCA’s focus on those aspects of remuneration policy
that drive individual behaviour and culture.
Noble Lords spoke about disciplinary action to be taken
against individuals working for firms. At the outset, I
want to emphasise that if the FCA thinks that a
disciplinary action should be taken against individuals, it
can and does take action itself, as opposed to leaving it
to the companies to do so. The FCA and other enforcement
agencies have powers to fine individuals, or to take other
action such as prohibiting them from continuing to operate
in the financial services industry. This approach can be
seen in a number of high-profile cases, including those
involving LIBOR manipulation. The FCA settled eight cases
with firms totalling £758 million. It is also conducting a
number of separate enforcement actions against individuals.
There have been seven completed actions against individuals
in cases that involved settlements with firms in relation
to LIBOR or Euribor, but others are still ongoing. More
generally, the FCA issued fines against 64 individuals
between 1 April 2013 and 24 March 2017 totalling £15.5
million. They might be the cases that the noble Lord was
referring to. Many of these were connected to previously
settled cases against firms, although I am afraid that I am
unable to provide noble Lords with an exact number.
That said, the FCA also expects firms to consider what
action they themselves should take. If a firm has not taken
appropriate action by the time the FCA imposes a penalty on
it, the FCA can increase the penalty as a result. We went
through a lot of that today. I am not saying that for the
benefit of the noble Lord, but mainly for the benefit of
the House, because we have been through this. Of course, in
appropriate circumstances, the FCA can impose a requirement
that a firm consider further whether it needs to take any
additional action to remedy the breaches identified.
The noble Lord asked me today whether it would be a better
arrangement to have an automatic system of withholding a
proportion of the discount, so as to make it directly in
the interests of the firms to take the action that they are
supposed to take, rather than the FCA having to make an
assessment later of whether it ought to impose an
additional penalty. I commend him on his ingenuity, but
having consulted with operational partners and Treasury
officials, the Government’s view is that the existing
regime gives the FCA the flexibility to apply penalties and
impose requirements on a case-by-case basis. It allows it
to leverage those requirements wherever needed in order to
ensure that the firm acts appropriately. While there might
be options to enhance this approach and better achieve the
outcomes that we all seek, we should be clear about the
potential benefits before pursuing any such options. That
is kind of where we left it today.
I trust that noble Lords will agree that we should not seek
to reform or amend without exploring the implications, both
the advantages and any unintended or undesirable
consequences. For instance, we are concerned that this
amendment would weaken the incentives for firms to settle
early with the FCA, given that the settlement would not be
final, subject to the full discount being granted. As a
result, they might instead choose to engage the FCA in
costly and protracted action rather than all being involved
in focusing on remedying the underlying issues.
Moreover, further detailed consideration would need to be
given as to how this amendment would interact with
established principles of employment law. In particular,
when a firm disciplines an individual, it needs to follow
due process rather than agreeing in advance a
pre-determined course of action. For the amendment to work
effectively, consideration would need to be given as to
whether the FCA would need to be given a power to require
firms to take such action against their employees;
otherwise the amendment would put the FCA at risk of
liability when undertaking the duty the amendment creates.
Moreover, appropriate amendments would also need to be made
to the Employment Rights Act 1996 to ensure that such
action does not give rise to unfair dismissal claims by
relevant employees against their firms. It is also not
clear whether the proposed approach would be the best way
of achieving the aim of improving the culture of firms.
In summary, we can all agree that this an extremely complex
issue, which only seemed to be made even more complex as
discussions went on today. We share the same objectives of
improving compliance and the culture in the banking sector.
Ultimately, the FCA already has significant powers to
address the issues underlying the noble Lords’ amendment,
not least the power to sanction relevant employees in
appropriate circumstances. I trust that the House will see
that it is far from clear that the amendment would deliver
the positive outcomes that have been described. That being
said, I found the discussions today to be very interesting,
as did the relevant officials, and hope this has been an
equally insightful discussion to the two noble Lords. There
might be ways of enhancing the existing regulatory system;
the FCA is, in fact, conducting a review of its penalties
policy at present, and I know that it would welcome the
opportunity to continue this discussion with both noble
Lords.
I can confirm that, subject to the outcome of the election,
I expect that the Government will consider how best to
facilitate further discussions on this issue, and, as I
outlined to the noble Lord, , this would be my
intention. I am very grateful to the noble Lords for their
amendment. However, I ask them to withdraw it so that
action not be taken in haste. I hope they feel comfortable
to do so following some of the undertakings I have given.
7.30 pm
-
I am very grateful for the Minister’s response. She will
not be surprised or, I hope, offended when I say that I am
still not entirely convinced by some aspects of the
situation. However, I acknowledge that the issues raised
are very complex and that there is certainly a need for
further in-depth discussions. I very much welcome the
Minister’s proposal to facilitate a meeting for further
discussions with her, myself, the noble Lord, , and her team.
As was mentioned, the FCA and the Treasury have very
generously expressed an interest in joining those
discussions, and we would welcome the Treasury’s presence.
Under those circumstances, I beg leave to withdraw the
amendment.
Amendment 13 withdrawn.
Amendment 14 not moved.
Clause 28: Recovery orders relating to heritable property
Amendments 15 and 16
Moved by
15: Clause 28, page 87, line 29, at end insert—
“( ) After section 245 insert—“245ZA Notice to local authority:
Scotland(1) This section applies if, in proceedings under this
Chapter for a recovery order, the enforcement authority applies
under section 266(8ZA) for decree of removing and warrant for
ejection in relation to heritable property which consists of or
includes a dwellinghouse.(2) The enforcement authority must give
notice of the application to the local authority in whose area
the dwellinghouse is situated.(3) Notice under subsection (2)
must be given in the form and manner prescribed under section
11(3) of the Homelessness etc.(Scotland) Act 2003.(4) In this
section—“dwellinghouse” has the meaning given by section 11(8) of
the Homelessness etc.(Scotland) Act 2003;“local authority” means
a council constituted under section 2 of the Local Government
etc.(Scotland) Act 1994; and “area”, in relation to a local
authority, means the local government area for which the
authority is constituted.””
16: Clause 28, page 87, line 41, at end insert—
“( ) After section 269 insert— “269A Leases and occupancy rights:
Scotland(1) This section applies where, in making a recovery
order, the Court of Session also grants decree of removing and
warrant for ejection under section 266(8ZA) in relation to any
persons occupying the heritable property.(2) Any lease under
which a person has the right to occupy the heritable property (or
part of it) for residential or commercial purposes is terminated
on the granting of decree of removing and warrant for
ejection.(3) Any other right to occupy the heritable property (or
part of it) which subsists immediately before the granting of
decree of removing and warrant for ejection is extinguished on
the granting of the decree and warrant.(4) Subsection (3) does
not apply in relation to a right under a lease to occupy or use
the property other than those mentioned in subsection (2). (5)
Where the heritable property is vested in the trustee for civil
recovery under the recovery order, the following enactments do
not apply in relation to the heritable property—(a) sections 34
to 38A of the Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 1907 (removings,
notice of termination of tenancy and notice of removal);(b) the
Tenancy of Shops (Scotland) Act 1949;(c) the Matrimonial Homes
(Family Protection) (Scotland) Act 1981;(d) Parts 2 and 3 of the
Rent (Scotland) Act 1984 (security of tenure and protection
against harassment and unlawful eviction);(e) sections 4 to 7 of
the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions)(Scotland) Act 1985
(termination of certain leases);(f) Part 2 of the Housing
(Scotland) Act 1988 (rented accommodation: security of tenure
etc.);(g) Chapter 3 of Part 3 of the Civil Partnership Act 2004
(occupancy rights and tenancies);(h) Part 5 of the Private
Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 (security of tenure,
termination of tenancy and eviction).””
Amendments 15 and 16 agreed.
Clause 33: Confiscation orders and civil recovery: minor
amendments
Amendments 17 to 19
Moved by
17: Clause 33, page 90, line 39, at end insert—
“(f) it is the forfeitable property in relation to an order under
paragraph 10I(1) of that Schedule.””
18: Clause 33, page 91, line 13, at end insert—
“(f) it is the forfeitable property in relation to an order under
paragraph 10I(1) of that Schedule.””
19: Clause 33, page 91, line 27, at end insert—
“(f) it is the forfeitable property in relation to an order under
paragraph 10I(1) of that Schedule.””
Amendments 17 to 19 agreed.
Amendment 20
Moved by
20: After Clause 33, insert the following new Clause—
“Office for Professional Body Anti-Money Laundering Supervision
(1) Within six months beginning with the day on which this Act is
passed, the Secretary of State must by regulations made by
statutory instrument create a body to be known as the Office for
Professional Body Anti-Money Laundering Supervision, with
responsibility for improving standards of supervision and law
enforcement in respect of money laundering.(2) A statutory
instrument containing regulations under this section may not be
made unless a draft of the instrument has been laid before, and
approved by a resolution of, each House of Parliament.”
-
My Lords, in moving Amendment 20, I will speak also to
Amendments 21 and 22. With these amendments we return to an
issue we discussed in Committee in a somewhat different
format, but the underlying purpose this evening is the
same: to increase the effectiveness and value for money of
the current money laundering regime. Let me make it clear
again, as I did in Committee, that this is not an attack on
the utility of money laundering regulation in the fight
against financial crime. However, I argue strongly that the
present regime encourages mindless compliance, whereas it
should be encouraging principled behaviour. As a
consequence of this, the money laundering regime enjoys a
very low level of public support and is too often regarded
as a form-filling joke. That is a bad place for a
regulatory regime to find itself. Its efficacy would be
greatly improved if it were able to win over the hearts and
minds of people, as opposed to earning their solemn
acceptance.
Why do I think the present regime is ineffective? It is
based very largely on the SAR regime—the suspicious
activity report regime. Last year, just under 400,000 SARs
were delivered. In the years since the present regulations
were introduced in 2007, probably over 2 million SARs have
been recorded. Consider the cost of their preparation and
analysis. According to a freedom of information request,
the outcome was that there were no convictions at all under
the regulations in the first five years, from 2007 to 2012,
and only four convictions and five more proceedings in the
five years since. The National Crime Agency managed to
recover assets totalling only £25 million last year, but
claims that there are billions passing through London
illegally all the time. If that represents success, I find
it hard to think what failure would look like.
There is a Faustian pact between, first, the regulators,
who are pressed to gather even little scraps of
information, no matter how irrelevant; secondly, the
compliance departments of the regulated firms, which are
enjoying the opportunity for untrammelled growth in their
activities and personnel; and thirdly, the professional
firms that enjoy the fees earned from checking these
ever-increasing compliance activities. No one ever steps
back to get perspective and to see how this undoubtedly
important activity could be done more effectively.
In Committee, I argued that to break into the cycle the
National Crime Agency should be required to follow the
principles of best regulatory practice, as laid out in
Amendment 21, which we are discussing tonight. My noble
friend would not, I am afraid, accept this line of
argument, saying that:
“The NCA can and will act where there is criminal activity
relating to money laundering. However, it does not have a
regulatory remit, and to require it to have one would
deflect it from its purpose of tackling serious and
organised crime”.—[Official Report, 28/3/17; col. 532.]
I am not sure that I follow exactly that line of argument,
but never mind—we have moved on from there. Now, we have
the new body: the office for professional body anti-money
laundering supervision, or OPBAS. It clearly should follow
the principles of best regulatory practice. Amendment 20
requires the Government to set this body up within six
months. This is an important body with an important role
and therefore we need to get on with it, and to give
Parliament sight of its structure and remit by means of
requiring its establishment through an affirmative
statutory instrument.
Amendment 22 lays down the principles that the body must
follow. It must be proportionate, accountable, consistent,
transparent and, most importantly, targeted at cases in
which action is needed. Amendment 22 also lays down a
series of processes by which the new body will ensure that
the bodies it is responsible for regulating follow these
principles. There is a series of ways of doing that,
including publishing advice and guidance, and carrying out
investigations to ensure that the operation is working
effectively.
Before I conclude, to underline the seriousness of the
situation we now find ourselves in, let me give the House a
couple of examples of the mindlessness and the consequent
drawbacks of the present regime. My most recent money
laundering inquiry included a couple of dozen questions.
Among them was the following: “We see you have links with a
company called NS&I. Please explain these”. Since the
inquirer had access to my bank account, they could see that
it was an entry of £25 alongside NS&I. NS&I is, of
course, National Savings & Investments. It was a
premium bond winning; sadly, not £1 million, but never
mind—every little helps. Does the NCA really think that the
Government’s own saving authority is involved in money
laundering?
A second question was: “We see that you worked in North
America in the 1960s. What were your earnings?”. That was
half a century ago. It is hard to think that I started
money laundering the year after I left university and have
so far carried on for more than 50 years, undetected. I was
sufficiently irritated to answer this second question with
the words, “I haven’t a clue”. Patently, that was an
inadequate response, but comeback there was none. Perhaps
the form was not read and just filed and the box ticked, or
it was read and it was concluded that this was not an
important or relevant question. Either way, it was an awful
waste of the bank’s and my time. This is going on thousands
and thousands of times around the country.
One can laugh about my case, but for many people triggering
a money laundering inquiry catapults them into a Kafkaesque
world where no one can discover who is accusing them or
what they are being accused of. Since we last met in
Committee, I have been sent various examples but will give
only one this evening. A 43 year-old ex-soldier with a
16-year good-service record built up a capital sum of about
£69,000 from his Army redundancy and other sources. On 14
February it was paid into his account at the bank where he
had banked for 20 years. On 27 March, when he tried to
withdraw part of the money to make his annual ISA
subscription and to buy a car, he was told that the account
had been frozen. Now, a month later, it still is. He has
missed the opportunity to make his ISA investment because
the tax year has ended. The bank will not—perhaps cannot
because of the regulations—tell him what the problem is,
and the Financial Ombudsman appears unable to intervene. He
is also concerned that this incident will damage his future
credit rating and he will have no way of obtaining redress.
So there are very serious cases where this money laundering
regime is not working effectively to catch the individuals
it should really be aiming at.
In Committee, I referred to the increasing prevalence of
de-risking by regulated entities. Under pressure from the
money laundering authorities, they close down whole
categories of accounts irrespective of their behaviour and
performance because they might be risky from a money
laundering point of view. I referred to a long-standing
friend of mine who lives in Pakistan—a British citizen—who
has had his account unilaterally closed. Since Committee, I
have heard more examples of smaller charities about how
they are finding it difficult to operate overseas because
of money laundering regulations. Most recently, the Gurkha
Welfare Trust is having difficulty obtaining banking
facilities to transmit money to ex-Gurkha soldiers living
in Nepal who have fallen on hard times. They live in Nepal
and that is a red flag.
In the event that my noble friend cannot accept my
amendments, although I am sure she is going to—
-
I am extremely interested to hear—I fear that I did not
hear it in Committee—about the proposal in Amendments 21
and 22. But how does the noble Lord see this office of
professional body anti-money laundering supervision
working, for instance in the case of the man whose money
has been frozen? It is an interesting idea but I just
wonder, as a former lawyer, how it would work in practice.
-
I am grateful to the noble and learned Baroness for that
intervention, but I can glide this down to third man, if I
may use a cricketing analogy, because this is a government
proposal. The Government are proposing to set up this new
body, so I am sure my noble friend, when she comes to wind
up, will have all the detail of how this body will work. I
merely wish to ensure that it is sent down the right
channels. I know that my noble friend, with her usual
aplomb and ability, will deal with that by stroking it
effortlessly to the boundary, if I may continue the
cricketing analogy.
It is important to do some serious re-engineering of the
general approach to money laundering to increase its
effectiveness and public confidence in it. That the
National Crime Agency can, in its annual report, trumpet
the fact that SARs went up by 7.82% over the last year as a
badge of success without any reference to the impact it is
having, shows that there is much to do. I beg to move.
-
My Lords, when the noble Lord responds to the debate, will
he tell the House whether he thinks “I haven’t a clue” is
purported compliance.
-
In light of the last comment from the noble Lord, ,
one can only hope that the points he made will not leave
the Minister stumped. I hope it gets better.
I thank the noble Lord and the noble Lord, , for tabling these
amendments, since they enable me to raise a concern that I
expressed in Committee about the Government’s intention to
create a new Office for Professional Body Anti-Money
Laundering Supervision through a statutory instrument,
without any apparent reference to such a body in the Bill
that we are currently discussing—which is why the noble and
learned Baroness, Lady Butler-Sloss, had to raise her
question. Nobody has a clue what the Government intend
because they have not chosen to put anything in the Bill to
enable us to have a discussion about it. It was only in a
government document issued around the time of the Bill that
the Government declared their intention to set up this
body.
A briefing that no doubt we have all received from the
Solicitors Regulation Authority refers to the amendment
from the noble Lord, ,
as “proposing” the creation of an Office for Professional
Body Anti-Money Laundering Supervision—which could, perhaps
wrongly, be interpreted as meaning that the Solicitors
Regulation Authority was unaware that that is what the
Government were already proposing, albeit keeping rather
quiet about it as far as proper parliamentary scrutiny is
concerned.
7.45 pm
As the Minister will know, following Committee I wrote to her
asking if the Government could indicate other cases where a new
body with powers had been set up purely through a statutory
instrument and without any reference to the new body in primary
legislation. That was quite genuine, because I did not know the
answer to the question that I had asked. I was half expecting to
receive a reply setting out examples of where my party in
government had done precisely that. I have now received a reply
from the Government. It is a gem—without, I stress, misleading
anybody—in how to try to say that you are not doing something
that you clearly are.
It starts off by thanking me for my letter regarding legislation,
“for the new Office for Professional Body Anti Money-Laundering
Supervision (OPBAS)”.
It goes on to say that the Government are committed,
“to helping and ensuring professional body Anti-Money Laundering
(AML) supervisors comply with their obligations under the Money
Laundering Regulations”.
The letter goes on to say:
“As part of this, the Financial Conduct Authority … will create a
new team, OPBAS, who will support this objective by overseeing
professional body AML supervisors”.
So in the course of the same one-page letter, the Government’s
proposal has changed from being a new Office for Professional
Body Anti-Money Laundering Supervision, in respect of which the
Government have previously told us they are in consultation over
the detail of its new powers and role, to being nothing more than
the creation of a new team within the FCA. In so doing, they seek
to give the impression that this is little more than an internal
office reorganisation, when it is clearly far more than that.
In Committee, the Government referred to,
“their proposals for the new office for professional body
anti-money-laundering supervision”,
and said that,
“it would not be right for the Government simply to legislate
without proper public consultation on the detail of this
proposal”.
The Government also referred in Committee to the intended
regulations as being ones,
“that will underpin the office”.
The Government referred to the new office working,
“with professional bodies to help, and ensure, compliance with
the regulations”.—[Official Report, 28/3/17; cols. 532-533.]
This is not, in reality, little more than an internal
reorganisation setting up a new team within the FCA.
On the issue of previous examples of setting up a new body with
powers by statutory instrument without any reference to it in
primary legislation, the Government’s reply states that,
“in line with the precedent set by previous regulations to grant
similar powers to the FCA, such as the Money Laundering
Regulations and the Payment Services Regulations, it will be
subject to the negative procedure”.
Apart from the fact that the claimed precedent for what the
Government are now doing does not stand up, since the regulations
referred to were not setting up a new body or office with powers,
we now find that the intention is that the statutory instrument
setting up the new body and defining its powers and role will be
through the negative procedure and not even require the
affirmative procedure. That really is seeking to diminish the
role of Parliament and parliamentary scrutiny and challenge. If a
future Government think that they can take this as a precedent
for minimising the role of Parliament, if changes including
deletions or additions are made to legislation in the light of
negotiations on leaving the EU, I am sure that there will be the
strongest of challenges to such action.
I have reiterated the concerns that we expressed in Committee
about the Government’s whole approach to the specific issue, with
the lack of proper parliamentary scrutiny, but I accept that it
is now too late in reality to do anything about it.
Another key point made in Committee was on the need for the
independence of anti-money laundering supervisors and on
addressing the issue of the same body having both a
representative and regulatory function, with the potential, if
not the reality, for conflicts of interest. I simply ask: is that
an issue that the Government are seeking to address by removing
any perception there could be of such conflicts of interest? I
will listen with interest to the Government’s response to the
amendments we are discussing—albeit I accept that I have come
from a very different direction from that of the noble Lord,
.
-
My Lords, I congratulate my noble friend
on neatly batting off the question asked by the noble and
learned Baroness, Lady Butler-Sloss—I could not resist; we
have all made cricket jokes. I thank noble Lords for their
interest in the outcomes of the Government’s recent review
of the anti-money laundering supervisory regime. As a
result of this review, the FCA has agreed to create a new
team—the office for professional body anti-money laundering
supervision, otherwise known as OPBAS—to strengthen the
regime and help to ensure that professional body AML
supervisors, such as the Law Society and the Institute for
Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, comply with
their obligations in the money laundering regulations. It
is important to note that OPBAS will be a new team hosted
in the FCA and is not in itself a new regulatory body.
Amendment 22 would require that the FCA would have powers
to directly monitor and advise all practitioners subject to
criminal finances legislation. This would be a significant
extension of the FCA’s responsibilities. Rather, our
intention is that the FCA’s new objective will be carefully
targeted to address weaknesses identified through last
year’s call for information, while preserving the existing
strengths of the regime by focusing on helping to ensure
that professional body AML supervisors comply with their
obligations in the money laundering regulations. The noble
Lords’ proposals would duplicate the role that existing AML
supervisors play in safeguarding the UK’s financial system
and would increase unnecessary burdens on businesses.
Amendment 21 would also require the FCA to have regard to
regulatory best practice principles in delivering its new
objective. However, I assure the House that the FCA will
comply with its existing governance and safeguards as it
goes about delivering its objective. As such, this
amendment would be redundant and duplicate existing
requirements on the FCA.
Lastly, Amendment 20 would require the powers the
Government will pass to the FCA to fulfil this objective to
be subject to an affirmative statutory instrument. It is
our intention that this will instead be achieved in line
with existing precedent; previous regulations to grant
similar powers to the FCA have been subject to the negative
procedure. I hope colleagues agree that we should follow
that precedent on this occasion. Subject to the outcome of
the general election, the Government intend to publish
draft regulations for consultation over the summer before
laying the relevant secondary legislation to underpin OPBAS
later in the year.
To pick up on some specific points noble Lords have raised,
my noble friend Lord Hodgson talked about de-risking being
excessive and impacting disproportionately on normal
people, as he has previously. He gave some compelling
examples. The Government encourage the financial sector to
take a proportionate approach based on the risks faced.
Guidance for the financial sector, which is written by
industry, is being updated for the latest money laundering
regulations and is open for consultation until the end of
this week. It is of course open to my noble friend to make
his views known through this process.
The noble Lord, , asked why the
Government are not splitting the supervisory and advocacy
functions of professional body supervisors. I can advise
him that the 2017 money laundering regulations, which
transpose the fourth money laundering directive, will
require all professional body anti-money laundering
supervisors to ensure that their supervisory functions are
exercised independently of the advocacy functions,
including, for example, the Law Society and the Solicitors
Regulation Authority.
The noble Lord also made the point that the Government are
subverting scrutiny by using the negative procedure. As I
have mentioned, providing the FCA with new powers via the
negative procedure is not new. It is in line with the wider
transposition of the fourth anti-money laundering
directive. There are a number of other powers that have
been conferred to the FCA by the negative procedure. For
example, the Money Laundering Regulations 2007 and the
Money Laundering (Amendment) Regulations 2012 provide the
FCA with powers to oversee financial institutions’
compliance with the money laundering regulations. The
current set of MLRs provide the FCA with supervisory powers
to oversee financial institutions’ compliance with the
money laundering regulations. These include enforcement
powers and supervision powers.
I am very grateful to the noble Lords for allowing me to
address their points, which I hope I have. I hope, on that
note, they will feel happy not to press their amendments.
-
My Lords, I thank the noble and learned Baroness, Lady
Butler-Sloss, for her helpful intervention and my noble
friend for her very full response. There is a really
serious issue here that needs to be tackled. It is not just
about bureaucracy and cost, but about unnecessary
interference with people’s lives. Increasingly, it is also
about damage to this country’s reputation as a place where
you can get clarity. The question will be whether the new
body can bring focus. The proof of that pudding will be in
the eating. We shall have to wait to see whether it
happens. My noble friend encouraged me to make my views
known to the review. She need not worry; I have not missed
that opportunity. I have written a letter already, so it
has my views. We will have to see how it develops, but it
will require vigilance, focus and care by the FCA to
improve the regime, which is currently not working as well
as it should. With that, to continue the cricket analogy, I
will return to the pavilion and withdraw the amendment.
Amendment 20 withdrawn.
Amendments 21 and 22 not moved.
Amendment 23
Moved by
23: After Clause 33, insert the following new Clause—
“Whistleblowing
(1) The Secretary of State must by regulations made by statutory
instrument provide for the Financial Conduct Authority to
undertake the administration of arrangements to facilitate
whistleblowing in respect of corrupt or suspected corrupt
practices in systematically important financial institutions
including in particular with regard to fraud, tax evasion, money
laundering or mis-selling.(2) The Authority shall have powers—(a)
to give directions as to the records kept by each institution and
to check compliance with its directions including by audit;(b) to
award financial compensation to any person voluntarily providing
information to—(i) the Authority;(ii) the Prudential Regulation
Committee of the Bank of England;(iii) the Serious Fraud Office;
or(iv) any other organisation designated by the Secretary of
State;leading to enforcement action against the institution
sanctioned by way of penalty of not less than £500,000; and(c) to
set the level of compensation awarded in each case between 10%
and 30% of the total collected.(3) The Secretary of State must by
regulations made by statutory instrument make provision with
regard to retaliatory action against whistleblowers.(4) A
statutory instrument containing regulations under this section
may not be made unless a draft of the instrument has been laid
before, and approved by a resolution of, each House of
Parliament. (5) For the purposes of this section, a
“systematically important financial institution” is an
institution designated by the Bank of England in consultation
with the Financial Stability Board and the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision.”
-
My Lords, I recognise that the hour is very late. I will
try to be brief. Noble Lords will also be delighted that my
knowledge of cricket is so limited that I shall have to
abandon that theme.
This amendment is on whistleblowing. I tabled it in
Committee. Essentially, this is a very similar amendment
that does two things. It would provide for the regulator to
give additional protection to whistleblowers in the
financial services industry and require the regulator, as
part of those powers, to provide mandatory compensation to
whistleblowers who provide original information that leads
to prosecution or sanction with financial consequences for
the institution. This is very much modelled on Dodd–Frank
and a much longer tradition of mandatory compensation for
whistleblowers in the United States, which underpins its
very successful culture of whistleblowing and tackling
financial crime by financial institutions.
When I brought this amendment forward in Committee, the
objection was to creating an office of the whistleblower,
so under this revised version the powers would go to the
FCA, which may decide how it would like to set up that
arrangement. I recognise that this has no future in this
Bill because we are in wash-up, but this is another of
those issues that will carry over to future pieces of
legislation, essentially for three reasons that I will
touch on quickly.
First, the way we have dealt with whistleblowers in the
financial industry is, frankly, an utter disgrace. Since I
moved the amendment in Committee, I have been put in
contact with more people in the industry who have been
whistleblowers whose lives have been completely destroyed.
People have lost all employment and had to rely on spending
their savings and assets. They have faced serious attack
from the highly skilled, very capable and aggressive
lawyers of the financial institutions and have, frankly,
been let down by the regulator. In many cases, I think no
one would question that kind of description of the
experience that whistleblowers have had to deal with in the
industry.
8.00 pm
There have been changes. The FCA has strengthened protection for
whistleblowers in the industry, but only at the margins. I want
to make two points about why it is so important that we go
further. First, it is extremely rare in the UK for there to be a
whistleblower. When you look for an example of another situation
where no whistleblower has come forward, I am afraid that the
financial industry constantly provides a new example—so the one
that I am about to cite is a new one since we last had this
discussion in this House. The House will be aware that, last
February, a number of employees of HBOS were convicted of what
the judge described not just as fraud but as a “grotesque” crime
that had “ripped apart” some 200 small companies, many of which
then went into bankruptcy, with some £1 billion involved in the
scam. The interesting aspect was disclosure of an internal report
by Lloyds, obtained by the media, that demonstrated not only that
the fraud had begun in 2003 but that it was known to senior
executives, including the chief executive of HBOS, as early as
2008, that that information was available to Lloyds when it took
over HBOS and that it was not until 2014 that Lloyds brought it
to the attention of the regulators and the police. There was no
whistleblowing to expose this kind of issue, or at least not
successfully to do so. We have case after case in the UK where we
do not see that insider information coming forward and being made
available to the regulator and the authorities. That culture must
be changed. We have a culture that regards whistleblowers either
as people who are required to be extraordinary saints and martyrs
or as people who have gone and let the side down, and they do not
carry the kind of respect that they would in the United States.
My second example is slightly different. Members of this House
will be aware that the chief executive of Barclays in April
apologised for attempting to use Barclays’ internal security team
to track down the authors of anonymous letters that were sent to
the board and a senior executive making allegations about a
colleague whom the chief executive, Jes Staley, had recruited.
The search entailed two major investigations which involved not
only investigators from within the institution but bringing in
security services from the United States to hunt down and expose
the whistleblower. The good part of the story is that the
institution eventually recognised the offence and Jes Staley will
apparently pay a significant financial penalty as a consequence
of his behaviour. What struck me most was his letter of what is
typically called “apology”, in which he defended the culture that
sat behind his behaviour. It stated:
“One of our colleagues was the subject of an unfair personal
attack sent via anonymous letters addressed to members of the
board and a senior executive”.
He felt that the allegations were designed,
“to maliciously smear this person … In my desire to protect our
colleague, however, I got too personally involved in this
matter”.
It is the idea that protecting your colleague, protecting your
friends, protecting other senior managers and protecting your
institution is the approach that you take when allegations are
made, instead of treating those allegations as serious and a
crucial part of keeping a clean institution.
That is the culture that we have to tackle. It is one the few
times when I say that we need to move from the
British-gentleman’s-club attitude that we have so often had in
this industry towards the much more aggressive questioning and
cynical attitude that is present in the United States. With that
goes mandatory compensation, because it is crucial to recognise
that when people whistleblow, particularly when it impacts on
senior management in an organisation, the chances that they will
have the life and career that they would otherwise have had are
minimal. Our experience in the UK is that they find that they
lose all opportunity to work. They are required to work their way
through their assets, they depend on the charity of friends and
there is huge damage to their families. It is time that we
confronted this, recognised best practice and adopted best
practice. I know that it cannot happen today, but I am concerned,
as I think are others in this House, that we do not let this
issue rest.
-
I support what the noble Baroness, Lady Kramer, has said in
setting out the case for her amendment. She has already
made reference to recent further examples of serious
concern over the approach to whistleblowing and
whistleblowers—she referred specifically to the situation
at Barclays Bank in the light of apparent actions by its
chief executive in seeking to unmask a whistleblower. There
are meant to be strict regulations in the financial
services industry for encouraging and protecting
whistleblowers, but it does not look as though they are
very effective.
It is difficult to believe that the apparent attitude at
the top of Barclays Bank is an exceptional one-off, as
opposed to being indicative of a rather more widespread
culture, to which the noble Baroness referred, in the
financial services sector. The reality is that
whistleblowers will not come forward if they think that the
reaction of the people at the top will be to try to find
out who they are rather than investigate the issue to which
they have drawn attention. Neither will people come forward
if they think that being identified as a whistleblower will
jeopardise their future employment prospects in the
financial services sector, which is alleged to be the
reality in that sector in particular. I hope that the
Government in response will be able to offer something more
than claims that existing arrangements and procedures
address the concerns raised by this amendment, when it is
clear that it is not the case.
-
My Lords, I thank the noble Baroness for bringing forward
this amendment, which would introduce new regulations so
that the FCA could undertake the administration of
arrangements to facilitate whistleblowing in the financial
sector.
The FCA is already a prescribed person in relation to the
financial sector. It actively promotes the whistleblowing
framework to employees and employers in the sector so that
prospective whistleblowers know where to turn and firms
have appropriate internal whistleblowing policies in place.
Other prescribed persons related to financial services
include the Bank of England, the Serious Fraud Office, the
Financial Reporting Council and the Prudential Regulation
Authority. To each of them, whistleblowers will be one of
several sources of information and intelligence about
potential malpractice in support of their regulatory
activities.
The Government believe that the right body to investigate
the concerns of a whistleblower is the body that regulates
the issue about which concerns are raised—I know I have
said that before. That body is in the best position to see
the disclosure in context; for example, to judge the
seriousness of the allegations, to make connections with
any related investigations under way and to consider
whether some regulatory action is appropriate to prevent
occurrence.
The amendment that the noble Baroness proposes would
introduce a power to award compensation to any worker
voluntarily providing information on wrongdoing to
organisations in the financial sector. As I set out in
Committee, we do not think that money is the main motivator
for genuine whistleblowers. I do not think the noble
Baroness thinks so either, but she expressed views on how a
financial incentive system to encourage whistleblowing
works well in the US. I can advise noble Lords that the FCA
and Prudential Regulation Authority whistleblowing
management teams visited the US in late 2013. At the time,
there was limited empirical evidence of incentives leading
to an increase in the number or quality of disclosures
received by regulators. Introducing incentives would
require a complex and costly governance structure.
Incentives could also undermine effective internal
whistleblowing mechanisms, a requirement the FCA introduced
in September 2016 for banks, insurers and deposit takers.
If the FCA were to incentivise whistleblowers to report to
the regulator, it could discourage them from reporting
internally within their firms. It would risk delivering
mixed messages by encouraging firms to set up costly
systems which it then undermines by incentivising
whistleblowers to disclose directly to the FCA. However,
the FCA is considering reviewing the case for
incentivisation again in financial year 2017-18. I would be
happy to provide an update following that review.
The amendment also contains a provision with regard to
retaliatory action against whistleblowers. I reiterate and
reassure noble Lords that such a provision is unnecessary.
Workers who have evidence that their employer has provided
a negative reference, have been unfairly dismissed or have
otherwise suffered detriment for making a public interest
disclosure already have a route to seek compensation
against their employer through an employment tribunal.
Some concerns were raised that we have seen a decline in
the number of whistleblowing cases for the second year in a
row, from 1,340 in 2014-15, to 1,014 in 2015-16 and 900 in
2016-17. The FCA does not have a target for the numbers of
whistleblowing reports. Its aim is simply to ensure that
those who prefer to report to an independent body know
about its role and that, if they need to take the often
difficult step of reporting on an employer, they and their
information will be treated sensitively and professionally.
New rules came into force in September 2016 that require
banks, building societies and insurers to have internal
whistleblowing arrangements in place and to appoint an
internal champion. We understand many firms began to
implement these measures earlier than the commencement
date, so we believe that this has affected the numbers
going directly to the FCA. This is a positive message as
many complaints are resolved earlier and without regulatory
intervention, or lead to self-reports by firms themselves.
I want to address one point made by the noble Baroness: how
we became aware of the issue regarding the investigation of
the whistleblower’s identity by the CEO of Barclays and
what action the FCA is taking. I recognise the concern that
the noble Baroness raised about the Barclays example and I
agree that behaviour of the kind she described does not
serve the reputation of the industry nor the interests of
the country. We must do all we can to prevent this type of
behaviour. As the noble Baroness said, I realise that time
is short but this issue is not going away. I ask whether
she would be amenable to withdrawing her amendment, fully
aware that I will hear more about the subject after the
general election, should the outcome return a Conservative
Government.
-
I am delighted that the noble Baroness seems to take a
personal interest in this issue. While 1,000 sounds a big
number, the substantive cases have dropped to below 100.
Given the size of the industry in the UK, that is a
worryingly low number; I suspect that even the FCA is
significantly worried about it. I am very glad that the
noble Baroness said that the Government would look at this
issue again. I hope to pursue that but it is good news that
we did not have before, frankly. On that basis, and with
thanks to the noble Lord, , for his comments on
this issue, I will obviously withdraw.
Amendment 23 withdrawn.
Amendment 24 not moved.
Clause 53: Power to make consequential provision
Amendments 25 to 27
Moved by
25: Clause 53, page 119, line 1, at end insert “section 28 or”
26: Clause 53, page 119, line 8, leave out “subsection (1)” and
insert “subsections (1) to (3)”
27: Clause 53, page 119, line 11, leave out subsections (6) and
(7) and insert—
“( ) Regulations under subsection (2) or (3) may not include
provision of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) unless the
provision is within legislative competence.( ) For this purpose,
a provision of regulations is within legislative competence
if—(a) in the case of regulations made by the Scottish Ministers,
it would fall within the legislative competence of the Scottish
Parliament if included in an Act of that Parliament;(b) in the
case of regulations made by the Department of Justice in Northern
Ireland, it deals with a transferred matter.”
Amendments 25 to 27 agreed.
Clause 54: Section 53: procedural requirements
Amendments 28 to 31
Moved by
28: Clause 54, page 119, line 43, leave out from “that” to
“consult” in line 45 and insert “deals with a transferred matter”
29: Clause 54, page 120, line 16, after “repeal” insert “,
revoke”
30: Clause 54, page 120, line 17, leave out “an Act of the
Scottish Parliament” and insert “primary legislation”
31: Clause 54, page 120, line 23, leave out “Northern Ireland
legislation” and insert “primary legislation”
Amendments 28 to 31 agreed.
Clause 57: Commencement
Amendment 32
Moved by
32: Clause 57, page 122, line 11, at end insert—
“( ) section (Sharing of beneficial ownership information);”
Amendment 32 agreed.
Schedule 5: Minor and consequential amendments
Amendments 33 to 50
Moved by
33: Schedule 5, page 165, line 18, after “303O(3)” insert “,
303R(3)”
34: Schedule 5, page 165, leave out lines 20 and 21 and insert—
“(d) any property which is the forfeitable property in relation
to an order under section 303Q(1).””
35: Schedule 5, page 165, line 28, at end insert “303R(3),”
36: Schedule 5, page 165, leave out lines 36 and 37 and insert—
“(c) it is the forfeitable property in relation to an order under
section 303Q(1).””
37: Schedule 5, page 165, line 43, after “303O(3)” insert “,
303R(3)”
38: Schedule 5, page 166, leave out lines 2 and 3 and insert—
“(d) any property which is the forfeitable property in relation
to an order under section 303Q(1).””
39: Schedule 5, page 166, line 6, at end insert “303R(3),”
40: Schedule 5, page 166, leave out lines 14 and 15 and insert—
“(c) it is the forfeitable property in relation to an order under
section 303Q(1).””
41: Schedule 5, page 166, line 21, after “303O(3)” insert “,
303R(3)”
42: Schedule 5, page 166, leave out lines 23 and 24 and insert—
“(d) any property which is the forfeitable property in relation
to an order under section 303Q(1).””
43: Schedule 5, page 166, line 31, at end insert “303R(3),”
44: Schedule 5, page 166, leave out lines 39 and 40 and insert—
“(c) it is the forfeitable property in relation to an order under
section 303Q(1).””
45: Schedule 5, page 179, line 10, at end insert—
“76A(1) Section 435 (use of information by certain Directors) is
amended as follows.(2) In the heading for “Directors” substitute
“authorities”.(3) In subsection (1)—(a) for “the Director”
substitute “a relevant authority”;(b) for “his”, in each place,
substitute “the authority’s”;(c) for “him” substitute “the
authority”.(4) In subsection (2)—(a) for “the Director”
substitute “a relevant authority”;(b) for “his”, in each place,
substitute “the authority’s”;(c) for “him” substitute “the
authority”.(5) In subsection (4)—(a) in the words before
paragraph (a), for ““the Director”” substitute ““relevant
authority””;(b) omit “or” at the end of paragraph (b);(c) after
paragraph (c) insert—“(d) Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs;
or(e) the Financial Conduct Authority.”(6) The amendments made by
this paragraph apply to information obtained before, as well as
to information obtained after, the coming into force of this
paragraph.76B(1) Section 436 (disclosure of information to
certain Directors) is amended as follows.(2) In the heading for
“Directors” substitute “authorities”.(3) In subsection (1)—(a)
for “the Director”, in the first place it occurs, substitute “a
relevant authority”; (b) for “the Director”, in the second place
it occurs, substitute “the authority”;(c) for “his” substitute
“the authority’s”.(4) In subsection (5), after paragraph (h)
insert—“(i) the Financial Conduct Authority.”(5) In subsection
(10) for ““the Director”” substitute ““relevant authority””.(6)
The amendments made by this paragraph apply to information
obtained before, as well as to information obtained after, the
coming into force of this paragraph.76C(1) Section 437 (further
disclosure) is amended as follows.(2) In subsection (2), in
paragraph (a) for “the Director’s” substitute “a relevant
authority’s”.(3) In subsection (6)—(a) for “the Director”, in the
first place it occurs, substitute “a relevant authority”;(b) for
“the Director”, in the second place it occurs, substitute “the
authority”.(4) In subsection (7) for ““the Director”” substitute
““relevant authority””.76D(1) Section 438 (disclosure of
information by certain Directors) is amended as follows.(2) In
the heading for “Directors” substitute “authorities”.(3) In
subsection (1)—(a) in the words before paragraph (a)—(i) for “the
Director” substitute “a relevant authority”;(ii) for “his”
substitute “the authority’s”;(iii) for “him” substitute “the
authority”;(b) in paragraph (c) for “Director’s” substitute
“authority’s”;(c) in paragraph (e) after “Part 5” insert “or
8”;(d) in paragraph (f)—(i) for “or a constable” substitute “, a
constable or an SFO officer”;(ii) after “Chapter 3” insert “, 3A
or 3B”;(e) in paragraph (fa) for “Director” substitute “relevant
authority”.(4) In subsection (5)—(a) for “the Director”
substitute “a relevant authority”;(b) for “he”, in each place,
substitute “the authority”.(5) In subsection (10) for ““the
Director”” substitute ““relevant authority””.(6) The amendments
made by this paragraph apply to information obtained before, as
well as to information obtained after, the coming into force of
this paragraph.76E(1) Section 439 (disclosure of information to
Lord Advocate and to Scottish Ministers) is amended as
follows.(2) In subsection (1), after “Part 5” insert “or 8”.(3)
In subsection (5), after paragraph (h) insert—“(i) the Financial
Conduct Authority.”(4) The amendments made by this paragraph
apply to information obtained before, as well as to information
obtained after, the coming into force of this paragraph.
46: Schedule 5, page 179, line 11, leave out paragraphs 77 and 78
47: Schedule 5, page 179, line 15, leave out from beginning to
“subsection” in line 16 and insert—
“77(1) Section 441 (disclosure of information by Lord Advocate
and by Scottish Ministers) is amended as follows.(2) In
subsection (1), after “Chapter 3” insert “or 3A”. (3) In”
48: Schedule 5, page 179, line 18, at end insert—
“( ) in paragraph (fa), for the words from “functions” to
“Ireland” substitute “functions of a relevant authority, as
defined by section 435(4),”;( ) in paragraph (g)—(i) omit “a
customs officer or”;(ii) after “Chapter 3” insert “, 3A or 3B”.”
49: Schedule 5, page 179, line 18, at end insert—
“79A_ In section 443 (enforcement in different parts of the
United Kingdom), in subsection (1) after paragraph (c)
insert—“(ca) for an order made by a court under Part 7 in one
part of the United Kingdom to be enforced in another part;”.”
50: Schedule 5, page 180, line 20, at end insert—
“Homelessness etc.(Scotland) Act 2003 (asp 10)
In section 11 of the Homelessness etc.(Scotland) Act 2003 (notice
to local authority of proceedings for possession etc.), in
subsection (5), after paragraph (f) insert—“(fa) section 245ZA(2)
of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (notice to local authority of
application for decree of removing and warrant for
ejection),”.Bankruptcy and Diligence etc.(Scotland) Act 2007 (asp
3)
The Bankruptcy and Diligence etc.(Scotland) Act 2007 is amended
as follows._(1) Section 214 (expressions used in Part 15) is
amended as follows.(2) In subsection (1)—(a) omit “and” after the
definition of “a decree for removing from heritable property”,
and(b) after the definition of “an action for removing from
heritable property” insert—““defender”, in relation to a decree
for removing from heritable property of the type mentioned in
subsection (2)(l), means any person against whom the decree is
enforceable.”(3) In subsection (2)—(a) omit “and” at the end of
paragraph (j), and(b) after paragraph (k) insert “; and(l) a
decree of removing and warrant for ejection granted under section
266(8ZA) of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.”In section 216
(service of charge before removing)—(a) in subsection (1), in
paragraph (a), for “14 days” substitute “the appropriate period”,
and(b) after that subsection insert—“(1A) In subsection (1)(a),
“the appropriate period” means—(a) in the case of a decree for
removing from heritable property of the type mentioned in
paragraph (l) of section 214(2), 28 days,(b) in the case of a
decree for removing from heritable property of the type mentioned
in any other paragraph of that section, 14 days.”In section 218
(preservation of property left in premises), after subsection (2)
insert—“(3) In the application of this section to the granting of
a decree for removing from heritable property of the type
mentioned in section 214(2)(l), “pursuer” means the trustee for
civil recovery who is responsible by virtue of section 267(3)(ba)
of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 for enforcing the decree.””
Amendments 33 to 50 agreed.
Motion
Moved by
-
That the Bill be now read a third time.
-
I am not sure whether I should come in now but I just take
this opportunity to thank the Minister and her ministerial
colleagues in the Bill team for their willingness to meet
and engage in what have been constructive and helpful
discussions on not only provisions that are in the Bill but
also provisions that are not, since it is with the latter
that most differences of view or approach have centred. I
also thank my Front-Bench colleagues for their hard work,
not least—although he is not in his place—my noble friend
, who has
not been exactly short of commitments in respect of other
Bills as well. Finally, I thank the staff in our own
office, not least Grace Wright, for their help and advice
in navigating our way through this Bill.
-
My Lords, I echo those thanks to the Minister and the Bill
team. As several people have said—most frequently the noble
Lord, —it is what is not
in the Bill that has exercised us most. I can see an
enormous amount of material for Private Members’ Bill in
the next Session if we do not have government Bills that we
can tack our—“demands” would be the wrong word—concerns on
to. But the Minister has done an absolutely sterling job
and I hope she gets five minutes to have a bit of a rest
before she sets out campaigning. We have the luxury of
knowing that we will be back to pursue these interests.
-
As always with Bills such as this, it is what is not in the
Bill. Also, sometimes we should have gone further. But we
have had a challenge in this Bill and in the main the
challenge has been lack of time, not of consensus. I place
on record my thanks to the Front Benches—the noble Lords,
and Lord Kennedy,
and the noble Baronesses, Lady Kramer and Lady Hamwee—and
my noble friends behind me, who have kept me on my toes. I
thank noble Lords for being so accommodating about having
so little time to get through the business of the past 24
hours.
Motion agreed.
Bill passed and returned to the Commons with amendments.
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