TD Bank execs presided over rampant money laundering, but no one is going to jail—for now

The DOJ charged TD Bank with money laundering violations. · Fortune · Bill Tompkins—Getty Images

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On Thursday, Attorney General Merrick Garland announced that TD Bank would become the largest bank to plead guilty to charges related to money laundering and that it would pay a landmark $3 billion in penalties spread across financial regulators.

The amount of the fine was extraordinary, but in another respect, the TD case was like every other bank enforcement case: None of the executives responsible are going to jail, at least for now. This trend of banking executives being allowed to skate on criminal charges goes back decades, with perhaps the most famous example being the financial crisis of 2008, when the Feds sent a single mid-level Credit Suisse executive to jail.

While more charges could be forthcoming, the outcome of the TD scandal stands in stark contrast to the Justice Department’s treatment of crypto giant Binance a year ago. In that case, the agency not only imposed a whopping $4 billion fine but brought charges against the company’s founder and CEO—leading to a four-month prison sentence. Legal experts have noticed what appears to be a special set of rules when it comes to bankers overseeing crime.

“It has been noted by commentators that bank executives have largely avoided jail time following the financial crisis, even where the bank faced significant criminal liability,” Vanderbilt law professor Yesha Yadav told Fortune over email. “As such, it should not be too surprising here that TD’s bank executives will escape personal criminal liability, notwithstanding the astonishing scale of rule-breaking seen at the bank.”

A representative from TD Bank did not respond to a request for comment from Fortune. A Justice Department spokesperson pointed to the Q&A portion of Garland’s press conference, where he noted an ongoing investigation targeting individuals at TD that the DOJ is “continuing aggressively.”

“We do expect to see more prosecutions,” Garland added, without clarifying whether they would be against executives. The plea agreement also references the ongoing investigation.

The DOJ spokesperson also shared court filings of charges filed against individuals in relation to the enforcement action, including two employees of TD Bank, although their specific identities remain unknown.

The chickensh*t club

As a stateless crypto exchange known for flouting regulators and facilitating illicit financing among users ranging from terrorists to drug traffickers, Binance earned one of the largest financial penalties in U.S. history and a stiff rebuke from Garland. “Using new technology to break the law does not make you a disrupter, it makes you a criminal,” he said last November.