Goldman, Citi Staff to Work Remotely After Foiled Bomb Attack on Another Bank in Paris

PARIS, April 2 (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs told ⁠its ⁠Paris staff they could ⁠work remotely on Thursday following a foiled bomb ​attack on Bank of America Paris offices last Saturday, a source familiar ‌with the matter said, while ‌Citigroup staff in Paris and Frankfurt are also working ⁠remotely.

French authorities ⁠have placed four suspects in pre-trial detention over the plot, ​which potentially had links to Iran.

The Paris police authority did not immediately reply to a request seeking comment, while the Paris prosecutor’s office ​declined to comment.

Citigroup’s is a precautionary measure, the group said in an ⁠emailed ⁠statement to Reuters.

French anti-terrorism ⁠prosecutors ​said late on Wednesday the four suspects — three teenagers aged 16 and ​17 and one ⁠adult — were placed under formal investigation on suspicion of manufacturing, transporting and handling an explosive device and attempting to destroy property as part of a terrorist organisation.

The device, a five-litre petrol can ⁠taped to a large pyrotechnic charge containing a 650-gram active-material cylinder, ⁠was the most powerful of its kind ever identified in France and could have generated “a powerful fireball several meters in diameter,” the anti-terrorism prosecutor’s office said late on Wednesday.

Investigators established the adult recruited the teenagers, paying them between 500 and 1,000 euros ($580-$1,160) to plant and film the device. All four denied terrorist intent.

France suspects the attack is linked ⁠to HAYI, a pro-Iranian group that had posted a video on March 23 specifically naming Bank of America’s Paris headquarters, though prosecutors said the link has not yet been formally ​established.

(Reporting by Anousha Sakoui and Mathieu Rosemain. Editing by ​Inti Landauro and Jane Merriman)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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