EagleBank Agrees to Pay More than $9.7 Million to Resolve Bank Secrecy Act Investigation
EagleBank, a community bank operating in Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia, and its parent Eagle Bancorp Inc.
At a glance
- EagleBank and Eagle Bancorp Inc. entered a non-prosecution agreement with the DOJ, per the department's June 30, 2026 release.
- The bank agreed to pay over $9.7 million to resolve a Bank Secrecy Act investigation, per the DOJ.
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
EagleBank, a community bank operating in Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia, and its parent Eagle Bancorp Inc. entered into a non-prosecution agreement and agreed to pay more than $9.7 million to resolve the Justice Department's investigation into violations of the Bank Secrecy Act, per the DOJ's June 30 press release.
As a non-prosecution agreement, the resolution does not involve a criminal conviction, per the release. Under the standard architecture of such agreements, the department agrees to forgo charges in exchange for the payment, admissions of specified facts and, typically, commitments on compliance and cooperation for a defined term — though the specific undertakings in EagleBank's agreement were not detailed in the material available to this wire.
The department's announcement identifies the underlying matter as an investigation into violations of the Bank Secrecy Act, per the release. The conduct at issue, the period it covered and the divisions handling the case were likewise not carried in the material reviewed; those particulars sit in the full release and the agreement's statement of facts.
Background
The Bank Secrecy Act, enacted in 1970, is the foundation of US anti-money-laundering law. It requires banks to maintain programs that detect and report suspicious activity — including suspicious activity reports and currency transaction reports — and to conduct due diligence on customers. Criminal exposure typically arises when the government concludes a bank willfully failed to maintain an adequate anti-money-laundering program or to file required reports, and BSA resolutions with banks have ranged from deferred- and non-prosecution agreements to guilty pleas in the most serious cases.
EagleBank is the banking subsidiary of Eagle Bancorp Inc., a publicly traded holding company headquartered in the Washington, DC area that has positioned the bank as a commercial lender to businesses in the capital region since its founding in the late 1990s. Non-prosecution agreements are generally reserved for cases where the department weighs the misconduct against remediation, cooperation and the collateral consequences a conviction would impose on a regulated institution.
What comes next
Non-prosecution agreements run for a set period during which the department can reinstate charges if the institution breaches its terms, and banks in EagleBank's position ordinarily disclose the resolution's financial and compliance terms in securities filings. Whether parallel action follows from banking regulators or FinCEN — a common pattern alongside DOJ BSA resolutions — was not indicated in the material available, and any such measures would come through those agencies' own announcements.
Key facts on file
- EagleBank and Eagle Bancorp Inc. entered a non-prosecution agreement with the DOJ, per the department's June 30, 2026 release.
- The bank agreed to pay over $9.7 million to resolve a Bank Secrecy Act investigation, per the DOJ.