MIAMI (AP) -- The key whistleblower in the tax
evasion investigation of Swiss bank UBS AG claimed in a complaint
Tuesday that prosecutors made false statements to a judge who sentenced
him to prison.
Attorneys for informant
Bradley Birkenfeld asked for an in internal Justice Department
investigation and said the "inaccurate, misleading and incomplete"
allegations should be corrected. The complaint was filed with the
department's Office of Professional Responsibility, which investigates
ethical matters involving prosecutors and other employees.
"These
statements had a material impact on Mr. Birkenfeld, and caused the
Department of Justice to improperly seek jail time for one of the most
important tax whistleblowers in American history," wrote Birkenfeld
attorneys Stephen Kohn and Dean Zerbe in the complaint.
Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller declined comment.
Birkenfeld,
44, is scheduled to begin serving a prison term Friday of more than
three years. He and his attorneys - affiliated with the National
Whistleblowers Center - have embarked on a campaign to reduce or
eliminate the sentence based on his disclosures, which led UBS last
year to pay a $780 million fine and agree to reveal names of thousands
of suspected American tax cheaters.
The
complaint revolves around Birkenfeld client Igor Olenicoff, a wealthy
California real estate magnate who pleaded guilty to federal tax
charges in 2007.
Prosecutors said Birkenfeld
was indicted because he did not tell them about Olenicoff in their
meetings about UBS wrongdoing in 2007. Birkenfeld ultimately pleaded
guilty to a fraud conspiracy charge and prosecutors recommended prison
time, though less than the three years and four months Birkenfeld got.
U.S. District Judge William Zloch refused Monday to reconsider the sentence or delay Birkenfeld's surrender date.
The
Justice Department complaint said Birkenfeld refused to initially
disclose Olenicoff's identity because Birkenfeld was still living in
Switzerland and feared violating that nation's fabled bank secrecy laws.
Birkenfeld
wanted a subpoena to justify disclosing his client's identify, but his
attorneys said that request was rebuffed by the Justice Department. So
at Birkenfeld's request, the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations did provide a subpoena Oct. 9, 2007.
"Two
days later, on Oct. 11, 2007, he gave extensive testimony on Mr.
Olenicoff and several other clients," Birkenfeld's attorneys wrote,
adding that the disclosures occurred well before Olenicoff was charged
and were given to other U.S. agencies.
"In the interests of justice, this matter must be fully and independently investigated," they wrote.
January 5, 2010
By CURT ANDERSON
AP Legal Affairs Write
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