Authorities raid Deutsche Bank offices in money laundering probe.
Deutsche Bank’s headquarters in Frankfurt and its office in Berlin were searched by German prosecutors and police on Wednesday in an investigation over suspected money laundering offenses, officials said.
According to the Sueddeutsche Zeitung daily, the probe is connected to suspected offences in the bank’s dealings with companies linked to Russian billionaire businessman Roman Abramovich.
Prosecutors confirmed the raids at the premises of Germany’s biggest bank, but did not say who was being targeted.
The Frankfurt prosecutors’ office said it was carrying out an “investigation into unknown responsible parties and employees of Deutsche Bank on suspicion of money laundering… and related additional allegations under the Anti-Money Laundering Act.”
“In the past, Deutsche Bank maintained business relationships with foreign companies that… are themselves suspected of having been used for the purpose of money laundering,” a spokesperson for the office said in a statement to the Agence France-Presse (AFP).
It said the investigation was being carried out by a specialist economic crime unit along with the federal police.
A spokesperson for Deutsche Bank confirmed the searches, and the bank said it was “cooperating fully with prosecutors” but refused to comment further.
According to financial sources, the probe relates to alleged offences committed between 2013 and 2018.
The raids came a day before the publication of the bank’s results for the fourth quarter of 2025.



