94-31977. Amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations Relating to Recordkeeping for Funds Transfers and Transmittals of Funds by Financial Institutions  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 1 (Tuesday, January 3, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 220-231]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-31977]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 219]]
    
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    Part III
    
    Federal Reserve System
    
    
    
    12 CFR Part 103
    
    
    
    Department of the Treasury
    
    
    
    31 CFR Part 103
    
    
    
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    Recordkeeping for Funds Transfers and Transmittals of Funds by 
    Financial Institutions; Final Rules
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 1 / Tuesday, January 3, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations 
    [[Page 220]]
    
    FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
    
    [Docket No. R-0807]
    
    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    31 CFR Part 103
    
    RIN 1505-AA37
    
    
    Amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations Relating to 
    Recordkeeping for Funds Transfers and Transmittals of Funds by 
    Financial Institutions
    
    AGENCY: Department of the Treasury; Board of Governors of the Federal 
    Reserve System.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) of the 
    Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and the Board of Governors of the 
    Federal Reserve System (Board) jointly have adopted a final rule that 
    requires enhanced recordkeeping related to certain wire transfers 
    (which include funds transfers and transmittals of funds) by financial 
    institutions. The final rule takes into consideration the public 
    comments received on the notice of proposed rulemaking. Each domestic 
    financial institution involved in a wire transfer must collect and 
    retain certain information, depending upon the type of financial 
    institution, its role in the particular wire transfer, the amount of 
    the wire transfer, and the relationship of the parties to the 
    transaction with the financial institution.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: January 1, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Treasury: A. Carlos Correa, Assistant 
    Director, Rules and Regulations Section, (202) 622-0400; or Roger 
    Weiner, Deputy Director, (202) 622-0400; or Peter Djinis, Director, 
    (202) 622-0400, Office of Financial Enforcement; Stephen R. Kroll, 
    Legal Counsel, (703) 905-3534; or Nina A. Nichols, Attorney-Advisor, 
    (703) 905-3598, FinCEN.
        Board: Louise L. Roseman, Associate Director, (202) 452-2789; Gayle 
    Brett, Manager, Fedwire, (202) 452-2934; or Darrell Mak, Financial 
    Services Analyst, (202) 452-3223, Division of Reserve Bank Operations 
    and Payment Systems; Oliver Ireland, Associate General Counsel, (202) 
    452-3625; or Elaine Boutilier, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-2418, Legal 
    Division, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. For the 
    hearing impaired only, Telecommunication Device for the Deaf (TDD), 
    Dorothea Thompson (202) 452-3544.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The statute generally referred to as the 
    Bank Secrecy Act (Pub. L. 91-508, codified at 12 U.S.C. 1829b and 1951-
    1959, and 31 U.S.C. 5311-5329) authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury 
    to require financial institutions to keep records and file reports that 
    the Secretary determines have a high degree of usefulness in criminal, 
    tax, or regulatory investigations or proceedings. The authority of the 
    Secretary to administer the Bank Secrecy Act has been delegated to the 
    Director of FinCEN. The Bank Secrecy Act was amended by the Annunzio-
    Wylie Anti-Money Laundering Act of 1992 (Pub. L. 102-550), which 
    authorizes the Treasury and the Board to prescribe regulations to 
    require maintenance of records regarding domestic and international 
    funds transfers. The Treasury and the Board are required to promulgate 
    jointly, after consultation with state banking supervisors, 
    recordkeeping and reporting requirements for international wire 
    transfers by depository institutions and certain nonbank financial 
    institutions. In issuing this final rule, the Treasury and the Board 
    have considered its usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory 
    investigations or proceedings and its effect on the cost and efficiency 
    of the payments system. The Treasury and the Board are authorized to 
    promulgate regulations for domestic transfers by depository 
    institutions. The Treasury, but not the Board, is authorized to 
    promulgate recordkeeping and reporting requirements for domestic wire 
    transfers by nonbank financial institutions.
        In August 1993, the Treasury and the Board jointly issued for 
    public comment a proposal to enhance the recordkeeping requirements 
    relating to certain wire transfers by financial institutions (58 FR 
    46014, August 31, 1993). The proposal was distributed to state banking 
    supervisors. Comments were requested on all aspects of the proposal, 
    including the usefulness of the records covered by the proposed rule 
    for law enforcement purposes and the effects the proposal might have on 
    the cost and efficiency of the payments system.
        At the same time, the Treasury issued a companion Notice of 
    Proposed Rulemaking, which would require financial institutions to 
    include in transmittal orders certain information that must be retained 
    under this rule (58 FR 46021, August 31, 1993). While many commenters 
    responded to both proposals via the same correspondence, comments 
    related to the companion proposal are not included in this summary.
        The following table identifies the number of commenters by type of 
    organization:
    
    Commercial banking organizations...............................       48
    Trade associations.............................................       20
    Credit unions..................................................       12
    Broker/dealers.................................................        4
    Federal Reserve Banks..........................................        4
    Regulatory agencies............................................        5
    Money transmitting providers...................................        4
    Savings institutions...........................................        2
    Clearing house associations....................................        2
    Others.........................................................        7
                                                                    --------
        Total public comments......................................      108
                                                                            
    
    A. Overview
    
        The proposed rule would require each domestic financial institution 
    (as defined in the Bank Secrecy Act regulations) involved in a wire 
    transfer to collect and retain certain information for five years. The 
    amount and type of information would depend upon the type of financial 
    institution, its role in the particular wire transfer, and the 
    relationship of the parties to the transaction with the financial 
    institution.
        Many commenters expressed general support for the rule and its 
    objective to combat money laundering. A few commenters, primarily 
    smaller financial institutions with low wire transfer volume, indicated 
    that they were already complying with the requirements. The Department 
    of the Justice, the Internal Revenue Service, and the Office of the 
    Chief Postal Inspector supported the proposal, commenting that the 
    availability of greater user information will be a tremendous asset to 
    law enforcement's ability to counteract money laundering activities. 
    These law enforcement agencies suggested that the regulation be 
    strengthened further to assist them in identifying illegal activity. 
    Broker/dealer commenters also expressed general support for the 
    proposed rule. One broker/dealer commented that the proposed regulation 
    was a reasonable and highly effective response to law enforcement 
    needs. Another broker/dealer commented that the rule generally would 
    not be burdensome to its operations.
        Some commenters, however, expressed doubts that the proposed rule 
    would deter money laundering. A small number of commenters objected to 
    the proposal altogether, indicating that the rule was overly 
    burdensome, while additional commenters doubted that the benefits of 
    the rule would outweigh the costs. Two commenters believed that law 
    enforcement agencies already were being inundated with enough anti-
    money laundering information, such as currency transaction reports, and 
    they did not believe the additional information required by the rule 
    would provide sufficient benefit to warrant [[Page 221]] collection. A 
    few commenters suggested that money launderers simply would find 
    alternative methods to circumvent the recordkeeping requirements, 
    diluting the rule's effectiveness.
        Three of the four nonbank providers of money transmitting services 
    that commented strongly opposed the proposed requirements. One 
    commenter stated that the Treasury and the Board must consider the 
    fundamentally different nature of nonbank financial institution 
    operations before adopting a final rule. These commenters indicated 
    that the burden on nonbank financial institutions would clearly and 
    substantially outweigh the reasonably anticipated benefit to law 
    enforcement.
        Other commenters indicated that it was difficult to assess the 
    burden of the proposal because certain requirements, such as 
    retrievability, were not clearly defined. Many commenters suggested 
    that more types of transactions be exempted from the rule.
        Based on the comments received, the Treasury and the Board have 
    modified the proposed rule to reduce the burden associated with the 
    rule, while maintaining the usefulness of the rule to law enforcement 
    agencies. The final rule exempts wire transfers below $3,000, thereby 
    reducing the burden of collecting, maintaining, and retrieving wire 
    transfer records. This exemption should particularly benefit nonbank 
    providers of money transmitting services, which typically handle 
    smaller-value transfers. Other modifications to the rule limit 
    instances where verification is required. In addition, the final rule 
    clarifies the verification and retrievability requirements. As a result 
    of these changes, the Treasury and the Board believe that the benefit 
    of having the information available to law enforcement agencies 
    outweighs the burden associated with the final rule. Although the final 
    rule cannot prevent money launderers from using wire transfers for 
    illegal purposes, the Treasury and the Board believe that the rule will 
    help trace the proceeds of illegal activity and identify the 
    participants in money laundering schemes.
        The Treasury and the Board will monitor experience under this final 
    rule to assess its usefulness to law enforcement and its effect on the 
    cost and efficiency on the payments system. Within 36 months of the 
    effective date, the Treasury and the Board will review the 
    effectiveness of this final rule and will consider making any 
    appropriate modifications.
    
    B. Section-by-Section Analysis
    
    Section 103.11  Meaning of Terms
    
        The proposed rule added new definitions to the existing definitions 
    in the Treasury rules. A number of these new definitions applicable to 
    banks were identical to the terms used in Uniform Commercial Code 
    Article 4A (UCC 4A) (e.g., originator, originator's bank, payment 
    order, and others). In addition, the proposed rule added a number of 
    new definitions applicable to transactions by nonbank financial 
    institutions. These definitions were intended to parallel the 
    equivalent definitions in UCC 4A (e.g., transmittor, transmittor's 
    financial institution, transmittal order, and others). In order to 
    preserve as much uniformity as possible, some changes have been made to 
    certain proposed definitions to conform them more closely to the UCC 4A 
    definitions. Several definitions (e.g. accept, execution date, payment 
    date) are defined so as to make their usage also appropriate for 
    transactions involving nonbank financial institutions; otherwise, they 
    are similar, but not always equivalent in practice, to the UCC 4A 
    definitions. For example, under the final rule's definition of accept, 
    when a beneficiary's bank receives a transmittal order for a recipient 
    that is the customer of a nonbank financial institution holding an 
    account at the beneficiary's bank, the beneficiary's bank would accept 
    the transmittal order by executing a corresponding transmittal order to 
    the nonbank financial institution, rather than by crediting the account 
    of the nonbank financial institution, which would constitute acceptance 
    under UCC 4A. The definition of intermediary financial institution was 
    revised to include an intermediary bank. The definitions of 
    transmittor, transmittor's financial institution, recipient, and 
    recipient's financial institution also were revised to clarify the 
    scope of these definitions for transmittals of funds involving both a 
    bank and nonbank financial institution.
        The Official Comment to UCC 4A is helpful in understanding many of 
    the definitions adopted in the final rule. Terms used in this rule that 
    are not defined have the meaning given them in the UCC, unless 
    otherwise indicated.
        One bank asked whether the term payment order includes drawdowns. 
    Under the UCC 4A-104 Official Comment, this determination depends 
    generally on whether the drawdown is a credit transfer.1
    
        \1\ Under the Official Comment, a drawdown transfer is a funds 
    transfer if the person transferring the funds either instructs Bank 
    A to transfer funds from its account at Bank A to its account at 
    Bank B or if Bank A has an agreement with the person whereby Bank A 
    is authorized to follow instructions of Bank B, as agent of the 
    person, to transfer funds from the person's account at Bank A to 
    Bank B. In both instances, the transfer is a credit transfer because 
    the instruction goes from the person (although in one case via Bank 
    B as agent) to Bank A to send the funds to Bank B. A funds transfer 
    under UCC 4A must be a credit transfer. If there is no agreement 
    between the person and Bank A that Bank B act as agent for the 
    person, then a request or instruction from Bank B to Bank A to 
    transfer funds from the person's account at Bank A to Bank B would 
    be a debit transfer and would not be a funds transfer under UCC 4A 
    or the final regulation.
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        Another commenter asked whether a payment order includes a 
    transaction where Bank A instructs its correspondent, Bank B, to debit 
    Bank A's account with Bank B and pay a beneficiary that holds an 
    account with Bank B. This instruction meets the definition of payment 
    order in Sec. 103.11(y) and under UCC 4A-103. In this funds transfer, 
    Bank B is the beneficiary's bank and Bank A is either an intermediary 
    bank or an originator's bank, depending on the circumstances, and must 
    keep the appropriate records of the payment order.
        Another commenter described a situation where a depositor orders 
    his account closed by telephone and instructs the bank to remit the 
    balance with a cashier's check mailed to the depositor; the commenter 
    asked whether this transaction is a funds transfer under the 
    regulation. This transaction is not a funds transfer because it is not 
    a series of transactions under UCC 4A-104(a); rather, it is one 
    transaction, a withdrawal of funds from the bank by a cashier's check.
        Several credit union commenters objected to the inclusion of credit 
    unions in the definition of bank and stated that credit unions should 
    be considered nonbank financial institutions. The longstanding 
    definition of bank in the Treasury's existing Bank Secrecy Act 
    regulations (31 CFR 103.11(b))2 includes credit unions. The 
    definition of bank has not been changed in the final rule.
    
        \2\The citation for the definition of bank will become 31 CFR 
    103.11(c) when this rule becomes effective.
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        Several commenters requested clarification of the meaning of the 
    terms originator and beneficiary. In particular, these commenters asked 
    who the originator and beneficiary would be in instances where either a 
    corporation or a bank's trust department sends or receives a funds 
    transfer. When an employee sends a payment order to the originator's 
    bank as agent for a corporation, the corporation, and not the employee, 
    is the originator. When a [[Page 222]] bank's trust department makes a 
    funds transfer as trustee for one or more trust accounts, the bank is 
    the originator. If, however, the bank's trust department makes the 
    funds transfer on the specific instructions of a trust account holder, 
    then the account holder is the originator because it is the sender of 
    the first payment order to the bank. In both cases, the bank is the 
    originator's bank.
        Two commenters requested that a definition be added for the term 
    executing, which is used in the definition of the term accept. Both 
    commenters suggested adoption of the UCC 4A-301 definition of executed. 
    Certain definitions from UCC 4A are included in the regulation for 
    reference. Other terms, such as execute, that are not defined 
    specifically in the regulation, but are defined in relevant provisions 
    of the UCC, will have the meaning given them in the UCC, unless 
    otherwise indicated.
        One commenter requested that the term domestic bank be defined. The 
    terms domestic and bank are defined in Sec. 103.11. Under these 
    definitions, a domestic bank is one that is located within the United 
    States and would include branches and agencies of foreign banks located 
    and conducting business within the United States.3 A domestic 
    financial institution is one that is located in the United States. No 
    separate definition of domestic bank has been added to the regulation.
    
        \3\31 CFR Sec. 103.11(s), which will become 31 CFR 
    Sec. 103.11(nn) when this rule becomes effective, defines United 
    States to include the States of the United States, the District of 
    Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin 
    Islands, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, 
    American Samoa, the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, and the 
    territories and possessions of the United States.
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        As proposed in Sec. 103.33(f), nonbank financial institutions must 
    collect, verify and retain a record of the originator's identity, 
    because these institutions likely would send or receive transmittals of 
    funds for persons with no account relationship, and therefore, no 
    existing records. Many commenters, both banks and nonbank financial 
    institutions, noted that there are several types of ongoing customer 
    relationships, other than those persons that have a deposit account or 
    loan with a bank, or have an account with a financial institution that 
    is a broker or dealer in securities, that would result in the financial 
    institution having the desired information about the customer in its 
    customer record files. By acknowledging these relationships, the 
    requirements to verify information on noncustomers could be minimized.
        The final rule limits the verification requirements to originators/
    transmittors and beneficiaries/recipients that are not established 
    customers. An established customer is defined as a person with an 
    account with a financial institution or a person with respect to which 
    the financial institution has obtained and maintains on file the name 
    and address, as well as the customer's taxpayer identification number 
    or, if none, alien identification number or passport number and country 
    of issuance, and to which the financial institution provides financial 
    services relying on that information. Such relationships with banks may 
    include, but are not limited to, deposit accounts, loan agreements, 
    trust accounts, custody accounts, and mutual fund accounts. Such 
    relationships with nonbank financial institutions may include, but are 
    not limited to, accounts with broker/dealers and ongoing contractual 
    relationships between providers of money transmitting services and 
    business customers.
        Two commenters requested that a definition of copy be included in 
    the rule to clarify that new electronic technology, such as optical 
    disk storage, is allowed. The rule has been modified to explicitly 
    allow retention of an electronic record, which would include electronic 
    data storage methods.
        Two commenters requested that all automated teller machine (ATM) 
    and point-of-sale (POS) transactions be exempted from the rule. One 
    bank noted that ATMs are used increasingly for legitimate business 
    transactions that are not governed by the Electronic Fund Transfer Act. 
    Unless a financial institution could exclude all ATM transactions from 
    the recordkeeping requirements, it would be necessary for the 
    institution to develop new systems and procedures to ensure compliance. 
    The final rule excludes from the definitions of funds transfer and 
    transmittal of funds all transfers governed by the Electronic Fund 
    Transfer Act, as well as any other funds transfers that are made 
    through an automated clearinghouse, ATM, or POS system. The question of 
    the treatment, under the Bank Secrecy Act, of transfers governed by the 
    Electronic Fund Transfer Act will be studied by the Treasury.
    
    Section 103.33.  Records to be made and retained by financial 
    institutions.
    
        The proposed recordkeeping requirements varied depending on the 
    type of financial institution, its role in the particular funds 
    transfer, and the relationship of the parties to the transaction with 
    the financial institution. As proposed, the rule was structured into 
    three separate sections to apply to banks, nonbank financial 
    institutions, and broker/dealers. The proposed rule assumed that 
    nonbank financial institutions other than broker/dealers would not have 
    customers with account relationships and thus required these 
    institutions to verify and retain a record of the identity of all their 
    customers. Many commenters, however, indicated that nonbank financial 
    institutions do have established customers for which identification 
    information is maintained on file; thus, there is no need to reverify 
    the information. The final rule recognizes that many nonbank financial 
    institutions have established customers; therefore, the recordkeeping 
    requirements for nonbank financial institutions and broker/dealers, 
    contained in proposed sections (f) and (g), have been combined in the 
    final rule.
        The requirements imposed by Sec. 103.33(e) for banks and 
    Sec. 103.33(f) for nonbank financial institutions in the final rule are 
    similar. The section-by-section analysis in this notice, which uses the 
    terminology associated with funds transfers through banks, also is 
    applicable to transmittals of funds through nonbank financial 
    institutions, except where specifically noted.
    
    Section 103.33(e)(1) and Section 103.33(f)(1).
    
        Recordkeeping Requirements--The proposed rule required that 
    originator's banks retain, for each payment order accepted, the 
    originator's name and address, the amount, date, payment instructions 
    received with the payment order, beneficiary bank identification, and, 
    if received with the payment order, the beneficiary's name and address 
    or the beneficiary's account number. Intermediary banks and 
    beneficiary's banks would be required to retain a copy of each payment 
    order they accept.
        Dollar Threshold--Many commenters recommended that a threshold be 
    established to exclude funds transfers under a certain dollar amount 
    from the requirements. Commenters noted that a dollar threshold would 
    greatly reduce the burden of complying with the regulation by 
    decreasing the number of records retained, thereby minimizing the 
    storage and retrievability burden, and by decreasing the number of 
    funds transfers where identification must be verified. Many commenters 
    recommended a $10,000 threshold, which is the threshold for Currency 
    Transaction Reports. The next most-frequently suggested threshold was 
    $3,000, which is the threshold for [[Page 223]] recording purchases 
    with currency of certain monetary instruments, such as bank drafts and 
    cashier's checks. A few commenters recommended a $1,000 threshold. One 
    bank noted that a small-dollar exemption would particularly benefit its 
    noncustomer beneficiaries, who typically are tourists whose wallets and 
    identification documents have been either lost or stolen, and who 
    arrange to have a few hundred dollars wired to them from relatives or 
    friends.
        One nonbank provider of money transmitting services, noting that a 
    small-dollar threshold would reduce the burden and cost to comply with 
    the regulation, estimates that 99.96 percent of its transactions are 
    for amounts below $10,000, while 98.0 percent of its transactions are 
    for less than $3,000, and 95.0 percent are for less than $1,000. The 
    Federal Reserve Banks recently conducted a one-day survey of Fedwire 
    funds transfers and found that 22 percent of transactions for that 
    sample day were for amounts less than $3,000, while 36 percent of the 
    transactions were for amounts less than $10,000.
        To reduce the burden of the proposal, the final rule does not apply 
    to funds transfers of less than $3,000. This exemption will reduce the 
    burden of retaining records for small-dollar transactions and of 
    verifying the identity of noncustomer originators and beneficiaries, 
    reducing the costs to comply with the final rule.
        The Department of Justice commented that no threshold, or a 
    threshold lower than $3,000, should be imposed. It believes that a 
    dollar threshold would provide persons wishing to circumvent the rule 
    the opportunity to do so by sending multiple small-dollar funds 
    transfers. The Treasury and the Board believe that it is desirable to 
    have a logical relationship between the threshold for the funds 
    transfer recordkeeping requirements and the other thresholds 
    established in the Bank Secrecy Act regulations. In situations where a 
    person sends multiple small-dollar funds transfers to avoid the rule, 
    it is expected that the bank would notify law enforcement 
    appropriately.
        The Treasury intends to issue for comment proposed regulations that 
    would require banks to establish anti-money laundering measures, 
    including reporting of suspicious transactions and ``know your 
    customer'' policies and programs. In light of these anticipated 
    amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act regulations, the Treasury and the 
    Board believe that a $3,000 threshold will not hinder the usefulness of 
    the rule to law enforcement. The Treasury and the Board will monitor 
    the experience of the industry and law enforcement with the $3,000 
    threshold, and will consider modifying this threshold in the future if 
    it is determined that transactions are being structured in order to 
    evade the recordkeeping requirements. As part of its analysis of the 
    continued appropriateness of this final rule, the Treasury also will 
    monitor the effectiveness of banks' ``know your customer'' and 
    suspicious transaction reporting programs as applied to funds 
    transfers, once these rules take effect.
        Beneficiary Information--The Department of Justice, Office of Chief 
    Postal Inspector, and Internal Revenue Service expressed concern that 
    the proposed rule did not require beneficiary information to be 
    collected and retained by the originator's bank if the information is 
    not received with the payment order. They indicated that the absence of 
    beneficiary information at this stage of the funds transfer process 
    would limit significantly the utility of the funds transfer records to 
    law enforcement.
        In virtually all cases, the originator provides, as part of the 
    payment order it sends to the originator's bank, the identity of the 
    beneficiary. Typically, the originator provides the beneficiary's name 
    and address, or the beneficiary's account number, or some other 
    specific identifier of the beneficiary. Examples of a specific 
    identifier include the beneficiary's Clearing House Interbank Payments 
    System (CHIPS) universal identifier, its Dun and Bradstreet D-U-N-S 
    identifier, its stock exchange identifier, or, in some instances where 
    the beneficiary's address is not known, the beneficiary's name. The 
    originator provides this information with the payment order to ensure 
    that the beneficiary receives the proceeds of the funds transfer on a 
    timely basis. Given that the identification of the beneficiary may be 
    provided by means other than name and address or account number, the 
    Treasury and the Board have modified the proposed recordkeeping 
    requirement to allow for identification by other specific identifier of 
    the beneficiary.
        Although some identification of the beneficiary is included in 
    virtually all payment orders, the Treasury and the Board have retained 
    the requirement that the originator's bank retain such items of 
    identification of the beneficiary as are received with the payment 
    order. In cases where the originator provides the payment order to the 
    originator's bank through an electronic connection, the originator's 
    bank generally cannot ensure that the originator has provided, as part 
    of its payment order, the beneficiary information specified in the 
    rule. In these situations, the originator's bank generally does not 
    manually review the payment order prior to execution of the order. The 
    originator's bank is encouraged not only to require its customers to 
    provide beneficiary information but also to perform an edit to ensure 
    that information is contained in the beneficiary's field. It cannot 
    determine in an automated manner, however, whether the information 
    contained provides a meaningful identification of the beneficiary. In 
    addition, there may be limited cases (e.g., transfers in response to 
    drawdown requests) where the originator may not provide beneficiary 
    information as part of its payment order to the originator's bank.
        The Treasury and the Board believe that some originator's banks 
    would have to make substantial operating changes to ensure compliance 
    with the rule if they were required to collect and retain information 
    on the beneficiary for all payment orders they accept. Moreover, the 
    Treasury and the Board believe that requiring originator's banks to 
    retain beneficiary information as is received with the payment order 
    will not unduly impede law enforcement efforts. Beneficiary information 
    generally will be provided by the originator with the payment order and 
    therefore retained by the originator's bank. In those very few cases 
    where this information is not provided by the originator, it generally 
    can be obtained from the records of the beneficiary bank.
        The final rule requires that the originator's bank retain as many 
    of the means of identification of the beneficiary (e.g., name and 
    address, account number, other specific identifier) as are received 
    with the payment order. Originator's banks are encouraged to request 
    that originators provide complete beneficiary information when 
    possible.4 The Treasury and the Board understand that some banks, 
    particularly those that send payment orders electronically, may rely on 
    the records of the payment orders they execute, supplemented by the 
    originator name and address information in their customer information 
    file, to meet the recordkeeping requirements of this rule for 
    established customers. Because the current Fedwire funds transfer 
    format may not have sufficient space to include all means provided by 
    the originator of [[Page 224]] identifying the beneficiary, the final 
    rule provides an exception to the requirement that the bank retain as 
    many means of identifying the beneficiary as provided by the 
    originator, until completion of the bank's conversion to the expanded 
    Fedwire format. For nonbank financial institutions, this temporary 
    exception is limited to domestic brokers and dealers in securities, 
    because the Treasury and the Board believe that only this category of 
    nonbank financial institution is likely to send electronically 
    transmittals of funds that ultimately are effected through Fedwire. 
    (See elsewhere in today's Federal Register for the Board's notice of 
    its adoption of an expanded Fedwire funds transfer format.)
    
        \4\The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council 
    adopted a policy encouraging all financial institutions to include, 
    to the extent practical, the name, address, and account number of 
    the originator and beneficiary in the payment order text, including 
    payment orders sent through Fedwire, CHIPS, and S.W.I.F.T.
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        As noted earlier, the Treasury and the Board will monitor 
    experience of law enforcement and the industry under this rule. If the 
    Treasury and the Board determine that law enforcement efforts are 
    hindered materially due to lack of beneficiary information in the 
    records retained under this rule, the Treasury and the Board will 
    consider mandating that beneficiary information be retained for all 
    payment orders. In addition, the suspicious transaction reporting and 
    anti-money laundering policy and program rules due to be issued for 
    comment by the Treasury in 1995 should reduce materially any wrongdoing 
    stemming from the fact that an originator's bank is not explicitly 
    required by this rule to obtain beneficiary information.
        Other Questions--Another commenter asked whether the payment amount 
    to be retained in a bank's records under this rule must be denominated 
    in U.S. dollars or whether it could be denominated in a foreign 
    currency. The payment amount retained under the rule should be the 
    amount as denominated in the payment order. The recordkeeping rule 
    applies to transfers in foreign denominations above the equivalent of 
    $3,000. Banks should determine the U.S. dollar equivalent of the 
    transfer based on the spot exchange rate at the time of the transfer to 
    determine whether a foreign-denominated transfer exceeds the $3,000 
    threshold.
        One commenter requested an explanation of payment instructions that 
    are required to be retained by the originator's bank. This commenter 
    questioned whether payment instructions included instructions received 
    orally (in person or over the telephone), or by letter, facsimile, or 
    electronic terminal. Any payment instructions given by the originator, 
    either oral or written, must be retained if received with the payment 
    order. The originator's bank may retain either written documentation or 
    an audio recording of the originator's oral instructions. Such payment 
    instructions may include the purpose of the funds transfer, directions 
    to the beneficiary's bank regarding how to notify the beneficiary of 
    the receipt of funds (e.g., advise by phone), or other information.
    
    Section 103.33(e)(2), (e)(3), and (e)(5) and Section 103.33(f)(2), 
    (f)(3), and (f)(5)
    
        Additional Requirements for Persons Other Than Established 
    Customers--The proposed rule required banks to verify the name and 
    address of the originator, if the originator does not have a deposit or 
    loan account, and to retain a record of the verified information, the 
    type of identification reviewed, the number of the identification 
    document (e.g., driver's license), as well as a record of the 
    originator's social security number, alien identification number, or 
    employer identification number. Some commenters, primarily nonbank 
    financial institutions acting for non-account holders, argued that the 
    proposed verification requirement would be very burdensome to their 
    operations. Many commenters expressed concern with the requirement to 
    verify the name and address, and to record the identification number of 
    an originator or beneficiary that is not an account holder. A few 
    commenters noted that they may be forced to refrain from doing business 
    with non-account holders, due to the burden of the rule's verification 
    requirements. A few commenters asked whether the verification 
    requirement relates to the person placing the order or the originator.
        By limiting the verification requirement to originators and 
    beneficiaries that are not established customers and by excluding funds 
    transfers under $3,000 from the rule, the number of instances where 
    verification is required has been reduced substantially, with a 
    commensurate reduction in compliance burden. The final rule requires 
    that if a payment order is from an originator other than an established 
    customer and is made in person, the originator's bank shall verify the 
    identity of the person placing the payment order. If the person does 
    not identify another party on whose behalf the funds transfer is being 
    made, then the person is considered the originator.
        If it accepts the payment order, the originator's bank shall obtain 
    and retain a record of the person's name and address, the type of 
    identification reviewed, the number of the identification document 
    (e.g., driver's license), as well as the taxpayer identification number 
    or, if none, alien identification number or passport number and country 
    of issuance. If the originator's bank knows that the person placing the 
    payment order is not the originator, it shall obtain and retain a 
    record of the originator's taxpayer identification number or, if none, 
    alien identification number or passport number and country of issuance, 
    if known by the person placing the order. In cases where an agent or 
    representative of the originator places the payment order and does not 
    know the originator's identification number or in cases where the 
    originator or the person placing the payment order does not have such a 
    number, the originator's bank must note in the record the lack thereof.
        Two commenters questioned whether the rule requires an originator's 
    bank to obtain and verify the originator's identity if the originator's 
    payment order is made via phone, fax, electronic link, or mail. In 
    situations where the originator is not present to provide the required 
    information, there is no opportunity to verify it. Under the final 
    rule, if the payment order is not made in person, the originator's bank 
    is not required to verify the identity of the person or to retain 
    information pertaining to an identification document used for 
    verification, but is required to retain a copy or record of the method 
    of payment (e.g., check or credit card transaction) for the funds 
    transfer.
        For payment of the proceeds of a funds transfer in person by a 
    beneficiary's bank to a beneficiary that does not have a deposit or 
    loan account, the proposal required that a beneficiary's bank obtain 
    and retain a record of the beneficiary's name and address, and social 
    security number, alien identification number, or employer 
    identification number, or note in the record the lack of such number. 
    Several commenters, however, noted that if the proceeds of a funds 
    transfer are mailed to the beneficiary, there is no opportunity to 
    obtain the beneficiary's identification number.
        In the final rule, if the proceeds are delivered in person to a 
    beneficiary other than an established customer or its representative or 
    agent, the beneficiary's bank shall verify the identity of the person 
    receiving the proceeds and shall obtain and retain information similar 
    to that required to be retained by originator's banks for originators 
    that are not established customers. If the proceeds are delivered to 
    the beneficiary other than in person, the final rule requires the 
    beneficiary's bank to retain a copy of the check or other instrument 
    [[Page 225]] used to effect payment, or the information contained 
    thereon, as well as the name and address of the person to which it was 
    sent.
        The proposed rule required that an originator's bank verify the 
    name and address of originators and beneficiaries that are not account 
    holders by examination of a document that contained such information. A 
    few commenters questioned whether they had a duty to determine the 
    authenticity of the identification document provided by the person and 
    used for verification. One commenter questioned what constituted 
    adequate verification. Another commenter questioned what it should do 
    if a non-account holder provides identification that appears to be 
    falsified. Several commenters recommended that passports be allowed as 
    acceptable identification, even though they do not include addresses.
        The final rule has been clarified to require that the identity of 
    an originator or beneficiary that is not an established customer be 
    verified by examination of a document, preferably one that contains the 
    person's name, address, and photograph. For aliens and nonresidents, 
    the final rule has been amended to allow banks to rely on a passport or 
    other official document evidencing nationality or residence. Banks 
    should exercise care in accordance with applicable law and regulations 
    to ensure that the identification presented is not falsified.
    
    Section 103.33(e)(4) and Section 103.33(f)(4)
    
        Retrievability Requirements--The proposal stated that banks must be 
    able to access funds transfer records readily by name or account number 
    of the originator or beneficiary, as the case may be, and may do so 
    through reference to some other record maintained by the bank. Many 
    commenters requested clarification of the term ``readily retrievable'' 
    and asked how much time would be allowed to provide funds transfer 
    records.
        The Treasury and the Board acknowledge that the term ``readily'' is 
    ambiguous and have eliminated it from the regulation. The existing 
    standards set forth in 31 CFR 103.38(d) will be used to assess whether 
    a bank has complied with the rule with respect to reporting records of 
    funds transfers in response to a request by a law enforcement agency. 
    Under this standard, the expected timeliness of retrievability will 
    vary by request. Generally, records should be accessible within a 
    reasonable period of time, considering the quantity of records 
    requested, the nature and age of the record, the amount and type of 
    information provided by the law enforcement agency making the request, 
    as well as the particular bank's volume and capacity to retrieve the 
    records. Usually, law enforcement agents will provide the approximate 
    transaction dates of the funds transfer records requested. In some 
    situations, law enforcement agencies may prefer to receive the 
    requested information as it becomes available, rather than wait until 
    the entire search is completed. Law enforcement agencies should provide 
    banks with the agencies' desired method of providing the information.
        The final rule does not require that funds transfer records be 
    retained at the location where the payment order is accepted or at 
    another particular location of the bank subject to the recordkeeping 
    requirements. Funds transfer records may be retained, for example, at 
    the bank's processing location for funds transfers. A bank should 
    ensure that its funds transfer records are retained at a location that 
    enables them to be accessible within a reasonable period of time.
        Several commenters questioned whether the retrievability standard 
    would apply to funds transfers executed prior to the rule's effective 
    date. The retrievability standard would apply only to funds transfers 
    made on or after the effective date. The Treasury and the Board note, 
    however, that establishing a specific retrievability standard under 
    this rule does not preclude banks' responsibilities to comply with a 
    properly executed subpoena or search warrant, regardless of whether the 
    transfer was executed before or after the effective date of the rule. 
    Banks must provide information with respect to funds transfers made 
    before the final rule's effective date in accordance with the Right to 
    Financial Privacy Act (12 USC 3401, et seq.) and the Electronic 
    Communications Privacy Act (18 USC 2701, et seq.).
        Many commenters believed that the proposed rule would require an 
    automated retrieval system to comply with the retrievability 
    requirement. Although an automated retrieval system is not required by 
    the rule, a bank may wish to consider implementing an automated system, 
    depending on the demand for funds transfer records and its current 
    means of keeping the records (several commenters indicated that funds 
    transfer records are sorted by date and, in some cases, by bank 
    branch). Based on the volume of law enforcement requests, a bank should 
    weigh the costs of implementing an automated system versus the costs of 
    searching manual records.
        A bank may access funds transfer records through reference to some 
    other existing record. If a law enforcement agency provides an account 
    number, the bank could reference its statement file for that account 
    number to determine funds transfer transaction reference numbers and 
    dates. Using this information, the bank could then retrieve the funds 
    transfer records by either manual or automated retrieval. If a law 
    enforcement agency provided a bank with a customer name, the bank could 
    reference its customer information file to determine the customer's 
    account number prior to accessing its statement file.
        Some commenters indicated that they should be allowed to choose 
    whether their records would be retrievable by name, account number, or 
    both. These commenters requested that the regulation be clarified to 
    state that the bank has the flexibility to establish the specific 
    retrievability method. As noted, banks have the flexibility to maintain 
    their funds transfer records to be retrievable by name, account number, 
    reference number, or other data element, so long as they have the 
    capability to retrieve the transfer records if the law enforcement 
    agency does not provide that particular data element in its request. 
    Despite the establishment of a retrievability standard under the rule, 
    banks still would be obligated to comply with any properly executed 
    subpoena or search warrant. Because law enforcement agencies may have 
    access to only one identifier (e.g., name or account number) during the 
    course of an investigation, banks are likely to receive requests 
    containing either piece of information, regardless of how the bank has 
    chosen to maintain its records. Thus, no changes have been made to the 
    final rule to allow banks to specify the method of retrievability.
        A few commenters noted that account numbers tend to change due to 
    mergers and questioned whether they would be required to retrieve 
    information based on the old or new account number. Commenters also 
    said that they retain, as part of their funds transfer records, the 
    account number at the time of the transaction, which may not be the 
    current account number. The funds transfer records should be 
    retrievable using the account number at the time of the transaction, as 
    it is likely that law enforcement agency requests may come from tracing 
    a transfer containing that account number. In situations where an 
    established customer's address has changed, the institution may provide 
    either the customer's current address or [[Page 226]] the address at 
    the time of the transaction. For example, if the bank retains the 
    address information as part of its funds transfer records, it would 
    retain the address at the time the funds transfer was processed. If the 
    bank retains this information as part of its customer information file, 
    it would retain the current address. For originators and beneficiaries 
    other than established customers, however, the bank would retain the 
    person's address at the time of the transaction, which is the only 
    address that has been documented.
        Several commenters, including commercial banks and credit unions, 
    also mentioned that retrieving information by a secondary account 
    holder's name would be more difficult than retrieving by a primary 
    account holder's name in the case of a joint account. Customer 
    information files typically are indexed on the primary account holder's 
    name only. Commenters indicated that a search by a secondary account 
    holder's name probably would require a manual search of the records. In 
    order to comply with subpoenas and search warrants submitted by law 
    enforcement agencies that request information by name, banks should 
    have the capability to retrieve payment order records by secondary 
    account holder name as well as by the name of the primary account 
    holder. Banks that find it difficult to search by secondary account 
    holder name for joint accounts may wish to consider the volume of law 
    enforcement requests when making decisions about whether to make 
    automation changes to facilitate searches by secondary account holder 
    name or to rely on manual searches to satisfy these requests.
        Many commenters noted that retrieving transactions by the name of 
    an originator or beneficiary other than an account holder would be 
    impractical, since a manual search of the bank's records would be 
    required. One bank estimated that a search by a non-account holder's 
    name would require three full days of manual searching for each day of 
    funds transfer activity, and that the results of manual searches might 
    not be very reliable. Banks may wish to consider implementing a 
    separate recordkeeping system--either manual files or an automated 
    database--containing only information related to payment orders for 
    originators or beneficiaries that are not established customers, in 
    order to search more easily for these transactions. If a bank has more 
    than one customer with the same name, the bank may request more 
    specific information from the law enforcement agency to determine the 
    exact individual desired. In situations where a law enforcement agency 
    provides a bank with a customer's account number only, then the bank 
    may search based on the account number only.
    
    Section 103.33(e)(6) and Section 103.33(f)(6)
    
        Exceptions--The proposed recordkeeping requirements exempted 
    certain transfers based on the parties to the transfer. Several 
    commenters requested that more transfers be exempted. Two commenters 
    recommended that transfers involving public utilities, corporations 
    listed on major stock exchanges, and businesses exempted from Currency 
    Transaction Reporting be exempted under the rule. The Treasury and the 
    Board believe that excluding such a broad category of entities would 
    diminish the usefulness of the regulation; therefore, these entities 
    are not exempted in the final rule.
        To eliminate the redundancy in the proposed list of exemptions and 
    to provide consistent treatment for wholly-owned domestic subsidiaries 
    of domestic banks and domestic brokers or dealers in securities, the 
    final rule has been revised to exempt transfers where the originator 
    and beneficiary are any of the following: (1) A domestic bank; (2) a 
    wholly-owned domestic subsidiary of a domestic bank; (3) a domestic 
    broker or dealer in securities; (4) a wholly-owned domestic subsidiary 
    of a domestic broker or dealer in securities; (5) the United States; 
    (6) a state or local government; (7) a federal, state or local 
    government agency or instrumentality. Funds transfers where both the 
    originator and beneficiary are the same person and the originator's 
    bank and the beneficiary's bank are the same domestic bank, as well as 
    transmittals of funds where both the transmittor and recipient are the 
    same person and the transmittor's financial institution and the 
    recipient's financial institution are the same domestic broker or 
    dealer in securities, also are exempted. These revisions expand the 
    proposed exemptions to include transfers between a wholly-owned 
    subsidiary of any domestic bank or broker or dealer in securities and 
    any other exempted entity.
    
    C. Other Issues
    
        Compliance Costs--Many commenters provided estimates on the cost to 
    implement the requirements of the proposed rule as well as an estimate 
    on the annual ongoing costs to collect the required information. The 
    cost estimates varied widely. A few smaller credit unions indicated 
    that they already were complying with the proposed requirements and 
    therefore expected no additional implementation or maintenance costs as 
    a result of the proposal. Larger commercial banks and credit unions, 
    however, estimated their implementation costs at $15,000 to $879,000, 
    and their maintenance costs as high as $350,000 per year. Two nonbank 
    providers of money transmitting services expected that compliance would 
    be very costly. One money transmittor estimated $946,000 of 
    implementation costs and $2 million of annual maintenance costs. 
    Another provider of money transmitting services estimated $3.3 million 
    of implementation costs, which includes increased transaction time, 
    additional hardware/software, and training costs. The same provider of 
    money transmitting services, however, estimated that with a $3,000 
    exemption threshold, its implementation cost would fall to $710,000.
        Implementing a $3,000 threshold and limiting the verification 
    requirements and supplemental recordkeeping requirements to transfers 
    involving originators or beneficiaries that are not established 
    customers will significantly reduce the burden and cost for banks to 
    comply with the rule. The burden for nonbank financial institutions, 
    particularly providers of money transmitting services, decreases 
    dramatically under the final rule, as the majority of transmittals of 
    funds they accept are for amounts of less than $3,000.
        Retention Period--Records required under the Bank Secrecy Act, 
    including funds transfer records, must be retained for five years. A 
    securities industry association, however, commented that Securities and 
    Exchange Commission (SEC) retention regulations, which apply to broker/
    dealers, may differ from the five-year period depending upon the 
    specific document containing the required information. The association 
    recommended that the rule be amended to allow broker/dealers to comply 
    with existing SEC rules, which would eliminate the need to modify 
    existing retention practices and the administrative difficulties of 
    maintaining inconsistent retention schedules. The Internal Revenue 
    Service recommended that records be maintained for ten years, to ensure 
    information related to audits would be available for its use.
        SEC regulations require registered broker/dealers subject to 
    Treasury's Bank Secrecy Act requirements to preserve their records 
    according to 31 CFR Part 103, if such retention periods 
    [[Page 227]] are longer than those required by the SEC (17 CFR 240.17a-
    8). Therefore, the retention period remains unchanged for broker/
    dealers. Under this final rule, the five-year retention period applies 
    only to records of funds transfers made on or after the rule's 
    effective date.
        The Treasury and the Board believe that a uniform retention period 
    should apply to all records that must be retained under the Bank 
    Secrecy Act regulations, and therefore, a longer retention period 
    should not be required for funds transfer records than for records of 
    other financial transactions. The Treasury and the Board are concerned 
    that expansion of the Bank Secrecy Act record retention requirement 
    from five to ten years may increase materially the cost of compliance 
    for financial institutions, but will monitor the adequacy of the record 
    retention requirement.
        Effective Date--Many commenters expressed concern regarding the 
    effective date, particularly given the need for banks to make 
    operational and procedural changes to comply with the rule's 
    retrievability and verification requirements. These commenters 
    indicated that the proposed December 31, 1993 effective date was 
    unrealistic given that the final rule had yet to be published with only 
    weeks remaining until the deadline. They indicated that changes to 
    existing manual and automated procedures to comply with the rule would 
    require a significant preparation time.
        Most commenters requested that the effective date be six to 12 
    months after publication of the final rule. Several commenters 
    suggested that the implementation date be delayed to coincide with the 
    effective date of the Treasury's companion Travel Rule. These 
    commenters indicated that a single implementation date for both rules 
    would prevent having to make changes twice to internal procedures and 
    computer systems.
        A few commenters recommended that the effective date be delayed 
    until the new Fedwire format is adopted. As noted above, recognizing 
    that originator's banks may strive to satisfy the recordkeeping 
    requirements of this rule primarily through retention of records of the 
    payment orders they execute, and that the current Fedwire format may 
    not have sufficient space to include all means provided by the 
    originator of identifying the beneficiary, the final rule provides an 
    exception to the requirement that the bank retain as many means of 
    identifying the beneficiary as provided by the originator for Fedwire 
    transfers, until the bank's conversion to the expanded Fedwire format 
    is complete. With this limited exception, the expanded format is not 
    necessary to comply with this rule, and delaying implementation of the 
    recordkeeping rule until after a new format is implemented would delay 
    realizing the benefits of this rule.
        In response to the concerns raised by commenters, on December 22, 
    1993, the Treasury announced a delay in the adoption of the final rule 
    to permit the Treasury to consider the rule as part of its ongoing 
    comprehensive review of the Treasury's anti-money laundering 
    enforcement policies, programs, and regulations. The Treasury and the 
    Board recognize that adequate lead time is necessary to allow banks 
    time to change procedures and/or install systems to comply with the 
    final rule. Therefore, the rule will become effective on January 1, 
    1996, at which time the Treasury's companion Travel Rule also will 
    become effective. [See the Treasury's notice elsewhere in today's 
    Federal Register adopting the final Travel Rule.]
    
    D. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The collection of information required by the final rule has been 
    submitted by the Treasury to the Office of Management and Budget in 
    accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 
    U.S.C. 3504(h)) under control number 1505-0063.
        The collection of information in this regulation is authorized by 
    12 U.S.C. 1829b and 1951-1959 and 31 U.S.C. 5311-5328. The likely 
    recordkeepers are financial institutions that perform transmittals of 
    funds.
        Estimated number of respondents and/or recordkeepers: 60,000.
        Estimated total annual recordkeeping burden: 1 million hours.
        Estimated average annual burden per respondent and/or recordkeeper: 
    16.3 hours.
        Estimated annual frequency of responses: Upon request.
        The estimated average annual burden hours have decreased 
    significantly from those included in the August 1993 proposal. The 
    decrease is due to the significant reduction in the number of 
    transmittals of funds subject to the recordkeeping requirements as a 
    result of the establishment of the $3,000 threshold, and due to the 
    reduction of circumstances in which additional recordkeeping and 
    verification requirements for noncustomers would apply.
    
    E. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        Two of the three requirements of a final regulatory flexibility 
    analysis (5 U.S.C. 604), (1) A succinct statement of the need for and 
    the objectives of the rule and (2) a summary of the issues raised by 
    the public comments, the agency's assessment of the issues, and a 
    statement of the changes made in the final rule in response to the 
    comments, are discussed above. The third requirement of a final 
    regulatory flexibility analysis is a description of significant 
    alternatives to the rule that would minimize the rule's economic impact 
    on small entities and reasons why the alternatives were rejected.
        The requirements in this rule will apply to all financial 
    institutions subject to the Bank Secrecy Act, regardless of size. An 
    exemption for small entities would not be appropriate because it would 
    permit money laundering operations to evade the recordkeeping process 
    by using small financial institutions. This would diminish 
    significantly the usefulness of these records for criminal, tax, or 
    regulatory investigations.
        The small entities that will be affected by this rule include small 
    banks and nonbank money transmitting businesses. In order to minimize 
    the economic impact on small entities, the rule allows financial 
    institutions that send or receive transmittal orders for established 
    customers to use existing records to satisfy some of the recordkeeping 
    requirements. The rule also exempts transmittals of funds below $3,000, 
    which should particularly benefit nonbank providers of money 
    transmitting services that handle smaller-value transfers. The Treasury 
    and the Board do not believe that the final rule would impose reporting 
    or recordkeeping burdens on small entities that require specialized 
    professional skills not available to them.
    
    F. Conclusion
    
        The Treasury and the Board have adopted a revised version of its 
    proposed rule.
    
    G. Executive Order 12866
    
        The Treasury finds that this final rule is not a ``significant'' 
    rule for purposes of Executive Order 12866. The rule is not anticipated 
    to have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more. It 
    will not affect adversely in a material way the economy, a sector of 
    the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
    health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or 
    communities. It creates no inconsistencies with, nor does it interfere 
    with actions taken or planned by other agencies. Finally, it raises no 
    novel legal or policy issues. A cost and benefit analysis therefore is 
    not required. [[Page 228]] 
    
    List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 103
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Brokers, 
    Currency, Foreign banking, Foreign currencies, Gambling, 
    Investigations, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
    Securities.
    
    Amendment
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 31 CFR Part 103 is 
    amended as set forth below:
    
    PART 103--FINANCIAL RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING OF CURRENCY AND 
    FOREIGN TRANSACTIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 103 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1829b and 1951-1959; 31 U.S.C. 5311-5329.
    
        2. Section 103.11 is amended as follows:
        a. By redesignating paragraphs (a), (b), (c) through (h), (i) 
    through (k), (l), (m), (n), (o), (p) through (r), and (s) through (u) 
    as paragraphs (b), (c), (f) through (k), (n) through (p), (t), (u), 
    (z), (ee), (gg) through (ii), and (nn) through (pp), respectively;
        b. By removing the words ``For purposes of Sec. 103.29 of this 
    part, deposit'' and adding in their place, ``Deposit'' in newly 
    designated paragraph (j); and
        c. By adding new paragraphs (a), (d), (e), (l), (m), (q), (r), (s), 
    (v), (w), (x), (y), (aa), (bb), (cc), (dd), (ff), (jj), (kk), (ll), and 
    (mm).
        The additions read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 103.11  Meaning of terms.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) Accept. A receiving financial institution, other than the 
    recipient's financial institution, accepts a transmittal order by 
    executing the transmittal order. A recipient's financial institution 
    accepts a transmittal order by paying the recipient, by notifying the 
    recipient of the receipt of the order or by otherwise becoming 
    obligated to carry out the order.
    * * * * *
        (d) Beneficiary. The person to be paid by the beneficiary's bank.
        (e) Beneficiary's bank. The bank identified in a payment order in 
    which an account of the beneficiary is to be credited pursuant to the 
    order or which otherwise is to make payment to the beneficiary if the 
    order does not provide for payment to an account.
    * * * * *
        (l) Established customer. A person with an account with the 
    financial institution, including a loan account or deposit or other 
    asset account, or a person with respect to which the financial 
    institution has obtained and maintains on file the person's name and 
    address, as well as taxpayer identification number (e.g., social 
    security or employer identification number) or, if none, alien 
    identification number or passport number and country of issuance, and 
    to which the financial institution provides financial services relying 
    on that information.
        (m) Execution date. The day on which the receiving financial 
    institution may properly issue a transmittal order in execution of the 
    sender's order. The execution date may be determined by instruction of 
    the sender but cannot be earlier than the day the order is received, 
    and, unless otherwise determined, is the day the order is received. If 
    the sender's instruction states a payment date, the execution date is 
    the payment date or an earlier date on which execution is reasonably 
    necessary to allow payment to the recipient on the payment date.
    * * * * *
        (q) Funds transfer. The series of transactions, beginning with the 
    originator's payment order, made for the purpose of making payment to 
    the beneficiary of the order. The term includes any payment order 
    issued by the originator's bank or an intermediary bank intended to 
    carry out the originator's payment order. A funds transfer is completed 
    by acceptance by the beneficiary's bank of a payment order for the 
    benefit of the beneficiary of the originator's payment order. Funds 
    transfers governed by the Electronic Fund Transfer Act of 1978 (Title 
    XX, Pub. L. 95-630, 92 Stat. 3728, 15 U.S.C. 1693, et seq.), as well as 
    any other funds transfers that are made through an automated 
    clearinghouse, an automated teller machine, or a point-of-sale system, 
    are excluded from this definition.
        (r) Intermediary bank. A receiving bank other than the originator's 
    bank or the beneficiary's bank.
        (s) Intermediary financial institution. A receiving financial 
    institution, other than the transmittor's financial institution or the 
    recipient's financial institution. The term intermediary financial 
    institution includes an intermediary bank.
    * * * * *
        (v) Originator. The sender of the first payment order in a funds 
    transfer.
        (w) Originator's bank. The receiving bank to which the payment 
    order of the originator is issued if the originator is not a bank, or 
    the originator if the originator is a bank.
        (x) Payment date. The day on which the amount of the transmittal 
    order is payable to the recipient by the recipient's financial 
    institution. The payment date may be determined by instruction of the 
    sender, but cannot be earlier than the day the order is received by the 
    recipient's financial institution and, unless otherwise prescribed by 
    instruction, is the date the order is received by the recipient's 
    financial institution.
        (y) Payment order. An instruction of a sender to a receiving bank, 
    transmitted orally, electronically, or in writing, to pay, or to cause 
    another bank to pay, a fixed or determinable amount of money to a 
    beneficiary if:
        (1) The instruction does not state a condition to payment to the 
    beneficiary other than time of payment;
        (2) The receiving bank is to be reimbursed by debiting an account 
    of, or otherwise receiving payment from, the sender; and
        (3) The instruction is transmitted by the sender directly to the 
    receiving bank or to an agent, funds transfer system, or communication 
    system for transmittal to the receiving bank.
    * * * * *
        (aa) Receiving bank. The bank to which the sender's instruction is 
    addressed.
        (bb) Receiving financial institution. The financial institution to 
    which the sender's instruction is addressed. The term receiving 
    financial institution includes a receiving bank.
        (cc) Recipient. The person to be paid by the recipient's financial 
    institution. The term recipient includes a beneficiary, except where 
    the recipient's financial institution is a financial institution other 
    than a bank.
        (dd) Recipient's financial institution. The financial institution 
    identified in a transmittal order in which an account of the recipient 
    is to be credited pursuant to the transmittal order or which otherwise 
    is to make payment to the recipient if the order does not provide for 
    payment to an account. The term recipient's financial institution 
    includes a beneficiary's bank, except where the beneficiary is a 
    recipient's financial institution.
    * * * * *
        (ff) Sender. The person giving the instruction to the receiving 
    financial institution.
    * * * * *
        (jj) Transmittal of funds. A series of transactions beginning with 
    the transmittor's transmittal order, made for the purpose of making 
    payment to the recipient of the order. The term includes any 
    transmittal order issued by the [[Page 229]] transmittor's financial 
    institution or an intermediary financial institution intended to carry 
    out the transmittor's transmittal order. The term transmittal of funds 
    includes a funds transfer. A transmittal of funds is completed by 
    acceptance by the recipient's financial institution of a transmittal 
    order for the benefit of the recipient of the transmittor's transmittal 
    order. Funds transfers governed by the Electronic Fund Transfer Act of 
    1978 (Title XX, Pub. L. 95-630, 92 Stat. 3728, 15 U.S.C. 1693, et 
    seq.), as well as any other funds transfers that are made through an 
    automated clearinghouse, an automated teller machine, or a point-of-
    sale system, are excluded from this definition.
        (kk) Transmittal order. The term transmittal order includes a 
    payment order and is an instruction of a sender to a receiving 
    financial institution, transmitted orally, electronically, or in 
    writing, to pay, or to cause another financial institution to pay, a 
    fixed or determinable amount of money to a recipient if:
        (1) The instruction does not state a condition to payment to the 
    recipient other than time of payment;
        (2) The receiving financial institution is to be reimbursed by 
    debiting an account of, or otherwise receiving payment from, the 
    sender; and
        (3) The instruction is transmitted by the sender directly to the 
    receiving financial institution or to an agent or communication system 
    for transmittal to the receiving financial institution.
        (ll) Transmittor. The sender of the first transmittal order in a 
    transmittal of funds. The term transmittor includes an originator, 
    except where the transmittor's financial institution is a financial 
    institution other than a bank.
        (mm) Transmittor's financial institution. The receiving financial 
    institution to which the transmittal order of the transmittor is issued 
    if the transmittor is not a financial institution, or the transmittor 
    if the transmittor is a financial institution. The term transmittor's 
    financial institution includes an originator's bank, except where the 
    originator is a transmittor's financial institution other than a bank.
    * * * * *
        3. Paragraph (b)(2) of Sec. 103.25 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 103.25  Reports of transactions with foreign financial agencies.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) Transmittal orders received by a respondent financial 
    institution from a foreign financial agency or sent by respondent 
    financial institution to a foreign financial agency, including all 
    information maintained by that institution pursuant to Sec. 103.33.
    * * * * *
        4. Section 103.33 is amended by adding new paragraphs (e) and (f), 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 103.33  Records to be made and retained by financial institutions.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Banks. With respect to a funds transfer in the amount of $3,000 
    or more by a bank:
        (1) Recordkeeping requirements. (i) For each payment order that it 
    accepts as an originator's bank, the bank shall obtain and retain 
    either the original or a microfilm, other copy, or electronic record of 
    the following information relating to the payment order:
        (A) The name and address of the originator;
        (B) The amount of the payment order;
        (C) The execution date of the payment order;
        (D) Any payment instructions received from the originator with the 
    payment order;
        (E) The identity of the beneficiary's bank; and
        (F) As many of the following items as are received with the payment 
    order:1
    
        \1\ For funds transfers effected through the Federal Reserve's 
    Fedwire funds transfer system, only one of the items is required to 
    be retained, if received with the payment order, until such time as 
    the bank that sends the order to the Federal Reserve Bank completes 
    its conversion to the expanded Fedwire message format.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (1) The name and address of the beneficiary;
        (2) The account number of the beneficiary; and
        (3) Any other specific identifier of the beneficiary.
        (ii) For each payment order that it accepts as an intermediary 
    bank, the bank shall retain either the original or a microfilm, other 
    copy, or electronic record of the payment order.
        (iii) For each payment order that it accepts as a beneficiary's 
    bank, the bank shall retain either the original or a microfilm, other 
    copy, or electronic record of the payment order.
        (2) Originators other than established customers. In the case of a 
    payment order from an originator that is not an established customer, 
    in addition to obtaining and retaining the information required in 
    paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section:
        (i) If the payment order is made in person, prior to acceptance the 
    originator's bank shall verify the identity of the person placing the 
    payment order. If it accepts the payment order, the originator's bank 
    shall obtain and retain a record of the name and address, the type of 
    identification reviewed, the number of the identification document 
    (e.g., driver's license), as well as a record of the person's taxpayer 
    identification number (e.g., social security or employer identification 
    number) or, if none, alien identification number or passport number and 
    country of issuance, or a notation in the record of the lack thereof. 
    If the originator's bank has knowledge that the person placing the 
    payment order is not the originator, the originator's bank shall obtain 
    and retain a record of the originator's taxpayer identification number 
    (e.g., social security or employer identification number) or, if none, 
    alien identification number or passport number and country of issuance, 
    if known by the person placing the order, or a notation in the record 
    of the lack thereof.
        (ii) If the payment order accepted by the originator's bank is not 
    made in person, the originator's bank shall obtain and retain a record 
    of name and address of the person placing the payment order, as well as 
    the person's taxpayer identification number (e.g., social security or 
    employer identification number) or, if none, alien identification 
    number or passport number and country of issuance, or a notation in the 
    record of the lack thereof, and a copy or record of the method of 
    payment (e.g., check or credit card transaction) for the funds 
    transfer. If the originator's bank has knowledge that the person 
    placing the payment order is not the originator, the originator's bank 
    shall obtain and retain a record of the originator's taxpayer 
    identification number (e.g., social security or employer identification 
    number) or, if none, alien identification number or passport number and 
    country of issuance, if known by the person placing the order, or a 
    notation in the record of the lack thereof.
        (3) Beneficiaries other than established customers. For each 
    payment order that it accepts as a beneficiary's bank for a beneficiary 
    that is not an established customer, in addition to obtaining and 
    retaining the information required in paragraph (e)(1)(iii) of this 
    section:
        (i) if the proceeds are delivered in person to the beneficiary or 
    its representative or agent, the beneficiary's bank shall verify the 
    identity of the person receiving the proceeds and shall obtain and 
    retain a record of the name and address, the type of identification 
    reviewed, and the number of the identification document (e.g., driver's 
    license), as well as a record of the person's taxpayer identification 
    number (e.g., social security or employer [[Page 230]] identification 
    number) or, if none, alien identification number or passport number and 
    country of issuance, or a notation in the record of the lack thereof. 
    If the beneficiary's bank has knowledge that the person receiving the 
    proceeds is not the beneficiary, the beneficiary's bank shall obtain 
    and retain a record of the beneficiary's name and address, as well as 
    the beneficiary's taxpayer identification number (e.g., social security 
    or employer identification number) or, if none, alien identification 
    number or passport number and country of issuance, if known by the 
    person receiving the proceeds, or a notation in the record of the lack 
    thereof.
        (ii) if the proceeds are delivered other than in person, the 
    beneficiary's bank shall retain a copy of the check or other instrument 
    used to effect payment, or the information contained thereon, as well 
    as the name and address of the person to which it was sent.
        (4) Retrievability. The information that an originator's bank must 
    retain under paragraphs (e)(1)(i) and (e)(2) of this section shall be 
    retrievable by the originator's bank by reference to the name of the 
    originator. If the originator is an established customer of the 
    originator's bank and has an account used for funds transfers, then the 
    information also shall be retrievable by account number. The 
    information that a beneficiary's bank must retain under paragraphs 
    (e)(1)(iii) and (e)(3) of this section shall be retrievable by the 
    beneficiary's bank by reference to the name of the beneficiary. If the 
    beneficiary is an established customer of the beneficiary's bank and 
    has an account used for funds transfers, then the information also 
    shall be retrievable by account number. This information need not be 
    retained in any particular manner, so long as the bank is able to 
    retrieve the information required by this paragraph, either by 
    accessing funds transfer records directly or through reference to some 
    other record maintained by the bank.
        (5) Verification. Where verification is required under paragraphs 
    (e)(2) and (e)(3) of this section, a bank shall verify a person's 
    identity by examination of a document (other than a bank signature 
    card), preferably one that contains the person's name, address, and 
    photograph, that is normally acceptable by financial institutions as a 
    means of identification when cashing checks for persons other than 
    established customers. Verification of the identity of an individual 
    who indicates that he or she is an alien or is not a resident of the 
    United States may be made by passport, alien identification card, or 
    other official document evidencing nationality or residence (e.g., a 
    foreign driver's license with indication of home address).
        (6) Exceptions. The following funds transfers are not subject to 
    the requirements of this section:
        (i) Funds transfers where the originator and beneficiary are any of 
    the following:
        (A) A domestic bank;
        (B) A wholly-owned domestic subsidiary of a domestic bank;
        (C) A domestic broker or dealer in securities;
        (D) A wholly-owned domestic subsidiary of a domestic broker or 
    dealer in securities;
        (E) The United States;
        (F) A state or local government; or
        (G) A federal, state or local government agency or instrumentality; 
    and
        (ii) Funds transfers where both the originator and the beneficiary 
    are the same person and the originator's bank and the beneficiary's 
    bank are the same domestic bank.
        (f) Nonbank financial institutions. With respect to a transmittal 
    of funds in the amount of $3,000 or more by a financial institution 
    other than a bank:
        (1) Recordkeeping requirements. (i) For each transmittal order that 
    it accepts as a transmittor's financial institution, the financial 
    institution shall obtain and retain either the original or a microfilm, 
    other copy, or electronic record of the following information relating 
    to the transmittal order:
        (A) The name and address of the transmittor;
        (B) The amount of the transmittal order;
        (C) The execution date of the transmittal order;
        (D) Any payment instructions received from the transmittor with the 
    transmittal order;
        (E) The identity of the recipient's financial institution;
        (F) As many of the following items as are received with the 
    transmittal order:2
    
        \2\ For transmittals of funds effected through the Federal 
    Reserve's Fedwire funds transfer system by a domestic broker or 
    dealers in securities, only one of the items is required to be 
    retained, if received with the transmittal order, until such time as 
    the bank that sends the order to the Federal Reserve Bank completes 
    its conversion to the expanded Fedwire message format.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (1) The name and address of the recipient;
        (2) The account number of the recipient; and
        (3) Any other specific identifier of the recipient; and
        (G) Any form relating to the transmittal of funds that is completed 
    or signed by the person placing the transmittal order.
        (ii) For each transmittal order that it accepts as an intermediary 
    financial institution, the financial institution shall retain either 
    the original or a microfilm, other copy, or electronic record of the 
    transmittal order.
        (iii) For each transmittal order that it accepts as a recipient's 
    financial institution, the financial institution shall retain either 
    the original or a microfilm, other copy, or electronic record of the 
    transmittal order, as well as any form completed or signed by the 
    person receiving the proceeds of the transmittal of funds.
        (2) Transmittors other than established customers. In the case of a 
    transmittal order from a transmittor that is not an established 
    customer, in addition to obtaining and retaining the information 
    required in paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this section:
        (i) If the transmittal order is made in person, prior to acceptance 
    the transmittor's financial institution shall verify the identity of 
    the person placing the transmittal order. If it accepts the transmittal 
    order, the transmittor's financial institution shall obtain and retain 
    a record of the name and address, the type of identification reviewed, 
    and the number of the identification document (e.g., driver's license), 
    as well as a record of the person's taxpayer identification number 
    (e.g., social security or employer identification number) or, if none, 
    alien identification number or passport number and country of issuance, 
    or a notation in the record the lack thereof. If the transmittor's 
    financial institution has knowledge that the person placing the 
    transmittal order is not the transmittor, the transmittor's financial 
    institution shall obtain and retain a record of the transmittor's 
    taxpayer identification number (e.g., social security or employer 
    identification number) or, if none, alien identification number or 
    passport number and country of issuance, if known by the person placing 
    the order, or a notation in the record the lack thereof.
        (ii) If the transmittal order accepted by the transmittor's 
    financial institution is not made in person, the transmittor's 
    financial institution shall obtain and retain a record of the name and 
    address of the person placing the transmittal order, as well as the 
    person's taxpayer identification number (e.g., social security or 
    employer identification number) or, if none, alien identification 
    number or passport number and country of issuance, or a notation in the 
    record of the lack thereof, and a copy or record of the method of 
    payment (e.g., check or [[Page 231]] credit card transaction) for the 
    transmittal of funds. If the transmittor's financial institution has 
    knowledge that the person placing the transmittal order is not the 
    transmittor, the transmittor's financial institution shall obtain and 
    retain a record of the transmittor's taxpayer identification number 
    (e.g., social security or employer identification number) or, if none, 
    alien identification number or passport number and country of issuance, 
    if known by the person placing the order, or a notation in the record 
    the lack thereof.
        (3) Recipients other than established customers. For each 
    transmittal order that it accepts as a recipient's financial 
    institution for a recipient that is not an established customer, in 
    addition to obtaining and retaining the information required in 
    paragraph (f)(1)(iii) of this section:
        (i) If the proceeds are delivered in person to the recipient or its 
    representative or agent, the recipient's financial institution shall 
    verify the identity of the person receiving the proceeds and shall 
    obtain and retain a record of the name and address, the type of 
    identification reviewed, and the number of the identification document 
    (e.g., driver's license), as well as a record of the person's taxpayer 
    identification number (e.g., social security or employer identification 
    number) or, if none, alien identification number or passport number and 
    country of issuance, or a notation in the record of the lack thereof. 
    If the recipient's financial institution has knowledge that the person 
    receiving the proceeds is not the recipient, the recipient's financial 
    institution shall obtain and retain a record of the recipient's name 
    and address, as well as the recipient's taxpayer identification number 
    (e.g., social security or employer identification number) or, if none, 
    alien identification number or passport number and country of issuance, 
    if known by the person receiving the proceeds, or a notation in the 
    record of the lack thereof.
        (ii) If the proceeds are delivered other than in person, the 
    recipient's financial institution shall retain a copy of the check or 
    other instrument used to effect payment, or the information contained 
    thereon, as well as the name and address of the person to which it was 
    sent.
        (4) Retrievability. The information that a transmittor's financial 
    institution must retain under paragraphs (f)(1)(i) and (f)(2) of this 
    section shall be retrievable by the transmittor's financial institution 
    by reference to the name of the transmittor. If the transmittor is an 
    established customer of the transmittor's financial institution and has 
    an account used for transmittals of funds, then the information also 
    shall be retrievable by account number. The information that a 
    recipient's financial institution must retain under paragraphs 
    (f)(1)(iii) and (f)(3) of this section shall be retrievable by the 
    recipient's financial institution by reference to the name of the 
    recipient. If the recipient is an established customer of the 
    recipient's financial institution and has an account used for 
    transmittals of funds, then the information also shall be retrievable 
    by account number. This information need not be retained in any 
    particular manner, so long as the financial institution is able to 
    retrieve the information required by this paragraph, either by 
    accessing transmittal of funds records directly or through reference to 
    some other record maintained by the financial institution.
        (5) Verification. Where verification is required under paragraphs 
    (f)(2) and (f)(3) of this section, a financial institution shall verify 
    a person's identity by examination of a document (other than a customer 
    signature card), preferably one that contains the person's name, 
    address, and photograph, that is normally acceptable by financial 
    institutions as a means of identification when cashing checks for 
    persons other than established customers. Verification of the identity 
    of an individual who indicates that he or she is an alien or is not a 
    resident of the United States may be made by passport, alien 
    identification card, or other official document evidencing nationality 
    or residence (e.g., a foreign driver's license with indication of home 
    address).
        (6) Exceptions. The following transmittals of funds are not subject 
    to the requirements of this section:
        (i) Transmittals of funds where the transmittor and the recipient 
    are any of the following:
        (A) A domestic bank;
        (B) A wholly-owned domestic subsidiary of a domestic bank;
        (C) A domestic broker or dealer in securities;
        (D) A wholly-owned domestic subsidiary of a domestic broker or 
    dealer in securities;
        (E) The United States;
        (F) A state or local government; or
        (G) A federal, state or local government agency or instrumentality; 
    and
        (ii) Transmittals of funds where both the transmittor and recipient 
    are the same person and the transmittor's financial institution and the 
    recipient's financial institution are the same domestic broker or 
    dealer in securities.
    
        In concurrence:
    
        By the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 
    December 21, 1994.
    William W. Wiles,
    Secretary of the Board.
    
        By the Department of the Treasury, December 19, 1994.
    Stanley E. Morris,
    Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
    [FR Doc. 94-31977 Filed 12-30-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6210-01-P; 4810-25-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
1/1/1996
Published:
01/03/1995
Department:
Treasury Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
94-31977
Dates:
January 1, 1996.
Pages:
220-231 (12 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. R-0807
RINs:
1505-AA37
PDF File:
94-31977.pdf
CFR: (5)
31 CFR 103.33(f)
31 CFR 103.11(nn)
31 CFR 103.11
31 CFR 103.25
31 CFR 103.33