UBS Loses Bid to Limit Liability for Nazi-Linked Crimes, US Judge’s Ruling Shows

NEW YORK, April ⁠7 (Reuters) – ⁠A U.S. judge ⁠on Tuesday rejected UBS’ bid to modify ​a $1.25 billion settlement from 1999 of Holocaust-related litigation against ‌Swiss banks by shielding ‌it from claims based on new revelations ⁠about ⁠Nazi-linked accounts.

U.S. District Judge Edward Korman in Brooklyn, New ​York, said UBS was seeking an advisory opinion protecting it from “hypothetical” lawsuits that haven’t been filed.

“Until a ​genuine case or controversy arises that requires judicial interpretation ⁠of its ⁠terms, the agreement ⁠will ​continue to speak for itself,” Korman wrote.

UBS did not immediately ​respond to ⁠requests for comment.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Jewish human rights group, had argued that UBS’s proposal would improperly expand the 1999 settlement to encompass ⁠newly uncovered facts about banks’ dealings with the Third Reich. ⁠Its lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

UBS sought Korman’s intervention after an investigation commissioned in 2020 by the former Credit Suisse uncovered additional ties between that bank, its predecessors and Nazis, including 890 accounts with potential Nazi links.

The $1.25 billion was paid by UBS ⁠and Credit Suisse, and distributed to more than 458,000 Nazi victims and their families.

UBS bought Credit Suisse in a Swiss government-arranged emergency takeover ​in 2023.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New ​YorkEditing by Bill Berkrot)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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