German prosecutors raid Freshfields’ Frankfurt office

The raid was part of a sweeping tax-evasion investigation

German prosecutors raid Freshfields’ Frankfurt office
The Frankfurt office of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer was raided by prosecutors last week, as part of an ongoing tax-evasion investigation.

The Magic Circle firm’s office was searched as the city’s Public Prosecutors Office investigates “cum ex” transactions made by former clients of the firm. In 2012, these deals were outlawed in Germany.

German authorities are investigating a large number of banks in the country over the deals, which the country estimates have cost them billions. They are also looking into deals of this type prior to 2012 for possible tax evasion.

“Cum ex” transactions, also called dividend stripping, allowed two parties to declare ownership of the same shares, thereby allowing these parties to claim tax rebates on the same shares.

“Freshfields is confident that the prosecutor’s review will reveal that our advice has been legally sound,” a spokesperson for the firm said.

With 43 partners, the Frankfurt office is the largest Freshfields office in Germany. The firm also has offices in Berlin, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, and Munich.


Related stories:
Top firms to battle as UK gov’t sets up £650m legal services marketplace
Only 2 firms return to UK government’s new finance panel

Recent articles & video

IBA: UK's plans to become AI hub could present opportunities for law firms

Lawsuit accuses US law firm of wiring over a million dollars to scammers in email hack

Global law firms Allen & Overy and Shearman & Sterling complete merger

Homegrown IP stars fly high at Bird & Bird

Law Squared unveils energy and infrastructure practice

JWS picks up new IPT partner for Sydney office

Most Read Articles

K&L Gates assists with launch of $190 million venture capital fund

McCullough Robertson nets former HSF Queensland environmental practice head

Two ascend to Kennedys Australia partnership

NSW Health agrees to $230m settlement in junior doctor underpayment class action