geil, jetzt nah en internationale haftbefehl für uftraggeber vo dene datechlauer und abgah tuets. mal luege ob die innepolitische Diskussione den immer nah wiiter gönd in dütschland.
http://www.sueddeutsche.de/politik/steu ... -1.1323991" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_secrecy" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
roooofl, der deutsche mann. geil, de neu löli i de bundesawaltschaft gfallt mir scho mal.Bank secrecy was codified by the 1934 Swiss Banking Act following a public scandal in France, when MP Fabien Alberty denounced tax evasion by eminent French personalities, including politicians, judges, industrialists, church dignitaries and directors of newspapers, who were hiding their money in Switzerland. He called these men of "a particularly ticklish patriotism", who "probably are unaware that the money they deposit abroad is lent by Switzerland to Germany". The Peugeot brothers and François Coty, of the famous perfume family, were on his list. Since then, Swiss banks have acquired worldwide celebrity due to their numbered bank accounts, which critics such as ATTAC NGO alleged only help legalized tax evasion, money laundering and more generally the underground economy.[5] Alternatively, secrecy laws allowed at the same period Jews and others to escape from Nazi Germany without losing everything. Having moved assets to Switzerland, Swiss authorities were not allowed to answer German questions about who had what where. Even employees of German banks in Switzerland were not allowed to answer questions from their employer in Germany. The value of this discretion became even greater as the whole of continental Europe was occupied. Bank secrecy therefore was, and remains a protection of the individual against the power of the state.