The court’s logic is as cold as it is definitive: Credit Suisse no longer exists. Because the bank has been struck from the commercial register and has ceased to function as a legal entity, it possesses no 'legal personality' to be prosecuted. This creates a fascinating, if controversial, precedent in Swiss law. The Swiss Office of the Attorney General (OAG) had aggressively pursued UBS, arguing that criminal liability should transfer along with assets and liabilities during a merger. However, the court disagreed, ruling that UBS cannot be made to answer for actions it did not control. This 'legal ghosting' means that the corporate entity that committed the alleged crimes has effectively vanished into thin air, leaving the prosecution with no corporate defendant to dock. Critics argue this creates a loophole for 'laundering' corporate reputations through mergers, while proponents insist it is the only logical outcome when a company ceases to exist. The ruling confirms that in the eyes of the Swiss judiciary, the 2024 takeover was a clean break, not a continuation of rot.