Fla. judge won't delay prison for UBS informant

A federal judge refused Monday to postpone prison or consider a lighter sentence for a former Swiss banker-turned-informant who helped launch a massive U.S. tax evasion investigation into banking giant UBS AG.
JAN 06, 2010
A federal judge refused Monday to postpone prison or consider a lighter sentence for a former Swiss banker-turned-informant who helped launch a massive U.S. tax evasion investigation into banking giant UBS AG. The decision by U.S. District Judge William Zloch means Bradley Birkenfeld must report to prison Friday to begin a sentence of three years and four months, which is longer than what prosecutors had sought. Zloch also refused to schedule a hearing on whether to reconsider the sentence. Birkenfeld pleaded guilty last year to a fraud conspiracy charge. Prosecutors credit Birkenfeld, 44, with exposing wrongdoing at UBS and leading investigators to thousands of suspected American tax cheaters who hid assets in the Swiss bank's accounts. But they also said Birkenfeld failed to disclose his own crimes, including his work for a California real estate magnate who pleaded guilty in 2007 to tax charges. Prosecutors declined comment on Zloch's ruling, and Birkenfeld's attorney did not immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment. At Birkenfeld's sentencing hearing in August, prosecutors said they may seek a sentence reduction if he continues to cooperate, but to date have not done so. In court documents, Birkenfeld lawyer Robert Stickney said the ex-banker is "ready, willing and able to cooperate further with the government." However, no meetings have been held since his August sentencing. Birkenfeld, a U.S. citizen who lived in Switzerland for 15 years, has been described as the single most important informant in the U.S. probe of tax evasion and secrecy at UBS and other banks. Armed with his disclosures, U.S. officials reached a deferred prosecution agreement with UBS last February in which the bank agreed to pay a $780 million fine and reveal names of some 150 clients. Later in 2009, UBS agreed under U.S. pressure to release names of 4,450 wealthy Americans suspected of using secret accounts to evade billions of dollars in U.S. taxes. None of those names has been made public, but several other former UBS clients have been prosecuted in the U.S. based on the initial disclosures. Birkenfeld, meanwhile, has applied with the Internal Revenue Service for a whistleblower reward that, if approved, could bring him tens of millions of dollars, if not more. That request remains pending.

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