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City traders have rate-rigging convictions quashed | City traders have rate-rigging convictions quashed |
(32 minutes later) | |
Tom Hayes says it "feels surreal" to have his conviction quashed | |
Two former City traders who were at the centre of one of the biggest scandals of the financial crisis have had their convictions quashed following a 10-year fight. | |
Tom Hayes and Carlo Palombo were jailed following trials for manipulating the interest rates used for loans between banks. | Tom Hayes and Carlo Palombo were jailed following trials for manipulating the interest rates used for loans between banks. |
They were among 19 City traders convicted in the US and UK for manipulating so-called Libor and Euribor interest rates, which are used to set borrowing costs on mortgages and commercial loans. | They were among 19 City traders convicted in the US and UK for manipulating so-called Libor and Euribor interest rates, which are used to set borrowing costs on mortgages and commercial loans. |
The Serious Fraud Office, which brought the case, said it would not seek a retrial. | |
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court ruled that the trials of Mr Hayes and Mr Palombo were unfair and overturned their convictions. | |
Speaking outside court, Mr Hayes said it felt "surreal" to be cleared after "fighting for 10 years" to clear his name. | |
"It's been a long time coming, today we are vindicated and today is a happy day," he said. | |
The ruling represents a vindication for the traders who have said for 10 years that they were victims of a series of miscarriages of justice. | The ruling represents a vindication for the traders who have said for 10 years that they were victims of a series of miscarriages of justice. |
They argued they were wrongly prosecuted for what were normal commercial practice in order to appease public anger towards the banks over the financial crisis. | They argued they were wrongly prosecuted for what were normal commercial practice in order to appease public anger towards the banks over the financial crisis. |
Mr Hayes and Mr Palombo were among a group of traders and brokers prosecuted for rigging interest rates in nine criminal trials in London and New York between 2015 and 2019. | |
Carlo Palombo, centre left, and Tom Hayes, centre right, celebrate after having their convictions overturned. | |
Mr Hayes, a former trader at Swiss bank UBS, was the first banker jailed over the scandal in 2015. | |
Originally sentenced to 15 years in prison, he successfully reduced it to 11 years on appeal and served five and a half years of his sentence. He was released in January 2021. | |
Mr Palombo was sentenced to four years in jail in 2019. He was also released in 2021. | |
In 2022, US courts said there was no evidence traders had broken any laws or rules and all the American convictions were quashed – leaving the UK the only country in the world where what they were accused of was criminalised. | |
In the UK, the traders' cases had been blocked from reaching the Supreme Court by the Court of Appeal five times between 2015 and 2019. | |
What was Libor? | |
Libor, or the London interbank lending rate, was a key interest rate used to set borrowing costs for trillions of dollars worth of financial deals | |
It became the focus of allegations of wrongdoing following the financial crisis in 2008 | |
Dozens of City traders were accused of trying to manipulate what level Libor was set at, to help the banks they worked for | |
Libor was phased out after 2021 |