Crime | WikiLeaks Swiss Arrest WikiLeaks Banker Whistleblower Rudolf Elmer accused of breaking secrecy laws By Rob Quinn Posted Jan 20, 2011 5:04 AM CST Copied "I think, as a banker, I do have the right to stand up if something is wrong," said Elmer, seen here leaving a Swiss court yesterday. (AP Photo/Keystone, Walter Bieri) From one legal mess to another: The Swiss last night arrested an ex-banker who appears to have broken the country's strict banking secrecy laws in spectacular fashion. Rudolf Elmer—who handed Julian Assange details on 2,000 holders of offshore accounts this week—is being detained while authorities investigate the possible security breach, CNN reports. Elmer was taken into custody just hours after he was convicted and fined by a Swiss court on an unrelated charge of breaking banking secrecy laws by sharing client data and threatening employees when he worked at Julius Baer. Elmer—who headed the office of Julius Baer in the Cayman Islands until he was fired in 2002—says the data given to WikiLeaks exposes widespread tax evasion by businesspeople and politicians. His lawyer argues that Swiss secrecy laws shouldn't apply to overseas branches of Swiss banks. He will face up to 5 years in jail if found guilty of passing information to a third party without a client’s consent. Read These Next Within half hour, Navy fighter jet and copter both go into the sea. Trump has been talking about a White House ballroom for 15 years. Study sheds light on what killed half of Napoleon's grand army. Mystery donor to US troops has been identified. Report an error