The U.S. Department of Justice formally asked a federal judge Wednesday to dismiss its criminal case against Halkbank, telling the court it has no intention of prosecuting the Turkish state-run lender, Reuters reported.

Prosecutors with the Manhattan U.S. Attorney’s office said in a court filing Wednesday that an outside review did not identify any areas of noncompliance by the bank, and asked U.S. District Judge Richard Berman to sign off on the motion to dismiss, according to the report.

The filing followed the end of a 90-day pause Berman imposed in March to give Halkbank time to demonstrate compliance with the terms of an agreement the bank and the U.S. government reached that month to end the long-running case. Halkbank hired Ernst & Young to review its sanctions and anti-money-laundering (AML) compliance policies, Reuters said

Under the agreement, no money changes hands and Halkbank did not admit criminal wrongdoing. The deal bars the bank from entering transactions that benefit Iran and requires a monitor to review its sanctions and AML compliance. The Justice Department has said dropping the prosecution would further the U.S. interest in curbing support for Iran, according to the report.

Halkbank was charged during President Donald Trump’s first term with helping Iran evade U.S. economic sanctions. Prosecutors accused the bank of secretly transferring $20 billion in restricted funds, converting Iranian oil revenue into gold and cash to benefit Iranian interests, and documenting fake food shipments to justify transfers of oil proceeds, the news agency said. The bank pleaded not guilty.

The case took a winding path through the U.S. courts. In October, the U.S. Supreme Court let stand a lower court decision allowing the prosecution to proceed, rejecting Halkbank’s argument that, as a Turkish state-owned entity, it should be immune from legal action in foreign courts, according to the report.