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17 December 2007
Norwich Union Life fined £1.26m
The UK’s Financial Services Authority has fined life assurance
company Norwich Union Life £1.26 million ($2.54m, €1.77m)
for “not having effective systems and controls in place to
protect customers' confidential information and manage its financial
crime risks” (statement).
The FSA said that fraudsters exploited the weaknesses the life
assurance firm’s systems to gain personal information, allowing
them to ask for the surrender of the policies of 74 customers, worth
£3.3 million, last year.
“Norwich Union Life let down its customers by not taking
reasonable steps to keep their personal and financial information
safe and secure,” said Margaret Cole, director of enforcement
for the FSA, in the statement. “This fine is a clear message
that the FSA takes information security seriously and requires that
firms do so too.”
The fine exceeds that made against Nationwide building society,
of £980 000, earlier this year. The FSA said that Norwich
Union Life, a division of Aviva, would have been fined £1.8m
but, as with Nationwide, it co-operated fully and settled at an
early stage of the investigation, gaining it a 30% discount under
the authority’s rules.
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