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November 2, 2012

Greek journalist acquitted over Lagarde bank list

By PA Mediapoint

A magazine publisher has been acquitted of charges that he breached privacy laws by printing a list allegedly naming Greeks with bank accounts in Switzerland.

The list has touched off a fierce debate in the nearly bankrupt country after governments failed to use it to check for possible tax evasion by rich depositors.

The Athens misdemeanors court gave no reason for its verdict on Costas Vaxevanis today.

The ruling followed a closely-watched trial which supporters of Mr Vaxevanis had portrayed as a test of Greek press freedom.

"This decision… allows journalists to do their job," said Vaxevanis, the publisher of Hot Doc magazine.

A prosecutor had called for Vaxevanis's conviction during the trial.

The journalist and publisher was arrested after making public last week the names of more than 2,000 people who allegedly had HSBC accounts in Switzerland several years ago. He said he did so in the public interest.

The list was allegedly provided to Greek tax authorities – for use in investigating possible tax evasion – in 2010 by Christine Lagarde, then France's finance minister, who now heads the International Monetary Fund.

The published names were allegedly taken from data on 24,000 HSBC customers that the bank reported stolen that year, potentially exposing many international clients to prosecution by tax authorities if they failed to declare the assets in their home countries. The bank said a former IT employee with HSBC, identified by French authorities, had obtained the information.

Greek officials did not act on the list, citing legal issues since it had been leaked by the bank employee.

The country has for decades faced severe difficulties in addressing rampant tax evasion, and the issue of the alleged list – even though banking abroad is legal – has touched a raw nerve for Greeks hit by nearly three years of harsh income cuts and tax hikes.

Vaxevanis had warned yesterday that a guilty ruling could be used to excuse what he called the "criminal liabilities" of the officials who sat on the information and would "damage the country globally because of the issue of freedom of speech".

After lying largely forgotten for more than two years, the so-called Lagarde List resurfaced with a vengeance weeks ago, when lists of politicians purported to be under investigation for tax fraud were printed in sections of the press.

A frantic flurry to locate a copy ensued, and former finance minister Evangelos Venizelos, now head of a centre-left junior partner in Greece's shaky governing coalition, eventually located the so-called Lagarde List on a USB drive and forwarded it to Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.

The reports triggered an ongoing judicial investigation into why authorities took no action on the information.

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