One of the last Swiss banks left in a more than decade-long criminal probe of helping tax dodgers settled. It also buried another, unrelated scandal.

Bank Hapoalim and its Swiss subsidiary were fined for two separate cases by the U.S. Department of Justice: a long-running tax evasion case cost $875 million, while it also paid $30 million in a corruption probe tied to world governing soccer body FIFA.

Hapoalim was the third-last bank to settle with U.S. officials, and the move leaves just Genevan wealth manager Pictet as well as Zurich's Rahn+Bodmer Co. on the hook. Hapoalim's Swiss bank sold its assets to Brazilian-Swiss rival J. Safra Sarasin two years ago.

Hundreds Engulfed

The hunt for American millions hidden in Swiss offshore accounts began with UBS' $780 million fine in 2009. The probe eventually engulfed the hundreds of Swiss wealth managers, but Credit Suisse topped the league tables with $2.5 billion in fines six years ago.

While the tax spat is more than a decade old, the FIFA probe is newer. Swiss banks including Julius Baer were snagged in the same scandal, as finews.com reported in February.