Near-Final Chapter in Riggs Bank Drama As Judge Rules on Plea Deal
By MARCY GORDON
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON Mar 29, 2005 — A near-final chapter in the international drama of Riggs Bank is unfolding in a federal courtroom as a judge prepares to rule whether the Washington institution is being punished enough for failing to report its suspicious transactions involving foreigners, including former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.
The $16 million fine Riggs agreed to pay is the largest criminal penalty ever imposed on a bank of Riggs' size, according to prosecutors. In addition, the bank faces a record $25 million civil fine levied by a Treasury Department agency last May.
The plea agreement with prosecutors means the old-line Washington institution with a franchise on dealing with the capital's diplomatic community avoided prosecution and cleared the way for its parent Riggs National Corp. to be sold to Pittsburgh-based PNC Financial Services Group Inc. for $643 million.
U.S. District Judge Ricardo Urbina was to rule at a hearing Tuesday on final approval of the plea agreement.
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?id=621741MEANWHILE Gen Pin has gone back to the Chilean Appeal Courts to get himself an immunity from prosecution for crimes of mass murder, torture, embezzlement, corruption, etc etc etc...