Danske Bank CEO resigns after being named a suspect in Dutch probe

Dutch authorities named him as a suspect in a probe into violations of money-laundering regulations at Dutch lender ABN Amro

Vogelzang took the helm of Danske Bank in June 2019, with a mandate to steer Danske through one of the world’s biggest money-laundering scandals.
Vogelzang took the helm of Danske Bank in June 2019, with a mandate to steer Danske through one of the world’s biggest money-laundering scandals.

Danske Bank chief executive Chris Vogelzang resigned on Monday after the Dutch authorities named him as a suspect in a probe into violations of money-laundering regulations at Dutch lender ABN Amro, Danske Bank said in a statement.

“I am very surprised by the decision by the Dutch authorities,” Vogelzang said in a statement, adding his status as a suspect did not imply that he would be charged. “However, given the special situation Danske Bank is in and the intense scrutiny the bank is under ... I do not want speculations about my person to get in the way of the continued development of Danske Bank,” Vogelzang said.

Vogelzang took the helm of Danske Bank in June 2019, with a mandate to steer Danske through one of the world’s biggest money-laundering scandals, where €200 billion in suspicious transactions passed through its Estonian branch between 2007 and 2015.

“We are very sorry to see Chris Vogelzang leave Danske Bank. He has been instrumental in the initiation of the ongoing transformation of Danske Bank and the progress and results it has already created,” Danske chairman Karsten Dybvad said.

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Carsten Egeriis, Danske’s chief risk officer for the past four years, will take over as chief executive effective immediately, Danske said.

Danske board member Gerrit Zalm, Vogelzang’s former boss at ABN Amro, decided to resign, the bank also said on Monday. - Reuters