97-13302. Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Proposed Amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act RegulationsSpecial Currency Transaction Reporting Requirement for Money Transmitters  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 98 (Wednesday, May 21, 1997)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 27909-27917]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-13302]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    31 CFR Part 103
    
    RIN 1506-AA19
    
    
    Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Proposed Amendments to the 
    Bank Secrecy Act Regulations--Special Currency Transaction Reporting 
    Requirement for Money Transmitters
    
    AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, Treasury.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (``FinCEN'') is 
    proposing to amend the regulations implementing the Bank Secrecy Act to 
    require money transmitters and their agents to report and retain 
    records of transactions in currency or monetary instruments of at least 
    $750 but not more than $10,000 in connection with the transmission or 
    other transfer of funds to any person outside the United States, and to 
    verify the identity of senders of such transmissions or transfers. The 
    proposed rule is intended to address the misuse of money transmitters 
    by money launderers and is in addition to the existing rule requiring 
    currency transaction reports for amounts exceeding $10,000.
    
    DATES: Written comments on all aspects of the proposal are welcome and 
    must be received on or before August 19, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments should be submitted to: Office of Legal 
    Counsel, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, Department of the 
    Treasury, 2070 Chain Bridge Road, Vienna, Virginia 22182, Attention: 
    NPRM--Money Transmitters--Special CTR Rule. Comments also may be 
    submitted by electronic mail to the following Internet address: 
    regcomments@fincen.treas.gov,'' with the caption, in the body of the 
    text, ``Attention: NPRM--Money Transmitters--Special CTR Rule.'' For 
    additional instructions on the submission of comments, see 
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION under the heading ``Submission of Comments.''
        Inspection of comments. Comments may be inspected at the Department 
    of the Treasury between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., in the FinCEN reading 
    room, on the third floor of the Treasury Annex, 1500 Pennsylvania 
    Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20220. Persons wishing to inspect the 
    comments submitted should request an appointment by telephoning (202) 
    622-0400.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Peter Djinis, Associate Director, and 
    Charles Klingman, Financial Institutions Policy Specialist, FinCEN, at 
    (703) 905-3920; Stephen R. Kroll, Legal Counsel, Joseph M. Myers, 
    Deputy Legal Counsel, Cynthia L. Clark, on detail to the Office of 
    Legal Counsel, Albert R. Zarate, Attorney-Advisor, and Eileen P. Dolan, 
    Legal Assistant, Office of Legal Counsel, FinCEN, at (703) 905-3590.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Introduction
    
        This document contains a proposed rule that would amend 31 CFR part 
    103 to impose requirements on money transmitters and their agents to 
    report and retain records of transactions in currency or monetary 
    instruments of at least $750 but not more than $10,000 in connection 
    with the transmission or other transfer of funds to any person outside 
    the United States. The proposed rule also would amend the regulations 
    implementing the Bank Secrecy Act to require that money transmitters 
    verify the identity of the sender of the kind of transmission described 
    above. Treasury has been moved to this unusual step by continuing 
    evidence of serious abuses of the money transmitting industry by money 
    launderers.
    
    II. Background
    
    A. Statutory Provisions
    
        The Bank Secrecy Act, Titles I and II of Public Law 91-508, as 
    amended, codified at 12 U.S.C. 1829b, 12 U.S.C. 1951-1959, and 31 
    U.S.C. 5311-5330, authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury, inter alia, 
    to issue regulations requiring financial institutions to keep records 
    and file reports that are determined to have a high degree of 
    usefulness in criminal, tax, and regulatory matters, and to implement 
    counter-money laundering programs and compliance procedures. 
    Regulations implementing Title II of the Bank Secrecy Act (codified at 
    31 U.S.C. 5311-5330) appear at 31 CFR Part 103. The authority of the 
    Secretary to administer Title II of the Bank Secrecy Act has been 
    delegated to the Director of FinCEN.
        Section 5313 grants the Secretary of the Treasury broad authority 
    to require financial institutions to report domestic transactions in 
    coins or currency. Paragraph (a) of that section states:
    
        When a domestic financial institution is involved in a 
    transaction for the payment, receipt, or transfer of United States 
    coins or currency (or other monetary instruments the Secretary of 
    the Treasury prescribes), in an amount, denomination, or amount and 
    denomination, or under circumstances the Secretary prescribes by 
    regulation, the institution and any other participant in the 
    transaction the Secretary may prescribe shall file a report on the 
    transaction at the time and in the way the Secretary prescribes. A 
    person acting for another person shall make the report as the agent 
    or bailee of the person and identify the person for whom the 
    transaction is being made.
    
        Under 31 CFR 103.22, which was issued under the broad authority of 
    section 5313(a), financial institutions generally are required to 
    report transactions in currency in excess of $10,000. Under the Bank 
    Secrecy Act, the term ``financial institution'' at present (that is, 
    before the changes proposed to be made today) includes, inter alia, 
    ``licensed transmitter[s] of funds, or other person[s] engaged in the 
    business of transmitting funds.'' 31 CFR 103.11(n)(5).
        In 1992, Congress amended the Bank Secrecy Act to allow the 
    Secretary to require financial institutions to carry out anti-money 
    laundering programs. See 31 U.S.C. 5318(h) (added to the Bank Secrecy 
    Act by section 1517 of the Annunzio-Wylie Anti-Money Laundering Act, 
    Title XV of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992, Pub. L. 
    102-550 (October 28, 1992)). Under section 5318(h), anti-money 
    laundering programs must at a minimum include, inter alia, the 
    ``development of internal policies, procedures, and controls.'' In 
    1994, Congress again amended the Bank Secrecy Act, this time to require 
    the registration of money services businesses. See 31 U.S.C. 5330 
    (added to the Bank Secrecy Act by section 408 of the Money Laundering 
    Suppression Act of 1994, Title IV of the Riegle Community Development 
    and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994, Pub. L. 103-325 (September 23, 
    1994)). Section 5330 defines a money services
    
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    business 1 as any business, other than a bank or the United 
    States Postal Service, that is required to file reports under 31 U.S.C. 
    5313 and that provides check cashing, currency exchange, or money 
    transmitting services, or issues or redeems money orders, traveler's 
    checks, and other similar instruments. In requiring the registration of 
    money services businesses, Congress recognized that such businesses are 
    ``frequently used in sophisticated schemes to * * * transfer large 
    amounts of money which are the proceeds of unlawful enterprise.'' 31 
    U.S.C. 5330 (Historical and Statutory Notes).2
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        \1\ The statute uses the term ``money transmitting business'' to 
    name those businesses subject to registration. See 31 U.S.C. 
    5330(a)(1) and (d)(1). However, FinCEN believes that the statutes's 
    use of this term to refer to all the types of businesses subject to 
    registration and its later use of the nearly identical term ``money 
    transmitting service'' to refer to a particular type of business 
    subject to registration, compare 31 U.S.C. 5330(d)(1)(A) with 31 
    U.S.C. 5330(d)(2), may lead to confusion. Therefore, FinCEN has 
    adopted the term ``money services business'' in place of the term 
    ``money transmitting business'' throughout this document and uses 
    the same terminology in the other rules it is proposing today.
        \2\ See also, H. Conf. Rep. 652, 103d Cong., 191 (1994).
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    B. Nature of the Problem
    
    1. Money Transmitters--General
        This notice is the third in a set of three notices of proposed 
    rulemaking being published in this separate part of the Federal 
    Register that deal with the application of the Bank Secrecy Act to 
    money services businesses. The first of these notices relates to the 
    registration of money services businesses (the ``Registration Rule''). 
    The second would impose on some of these businesses a requirement to 
    report suspicious transactions (the ``Suspicious Transaction Rule''). 
    In proposing these rules, the Department of the Treasury is responding 
    to the need to update and more carefully tailor the application of the 
    Bank Secrecy Act to a major, if little understood, part of the 
    financial sector in the United States.3
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        \3\ The Congress has long-recognized the need generally to 
    address problems of abuse by money launders of ``non-bank'' 
    financial institutions. See, e.g., Permanent Subcommittee on 
    Investigations, Senate Comm. on Governmental Affairs, Current Trends 
    in Money Laundering, S. Rep. No. 123, 102d Cong., 2d Sess. (1992).
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        ``Money services business'' is a newly coined term that refers to 
    five distinctive types of financial services providers: currency 
    dealers or exchangers; check cashers; issuers of traveler's checks, 
    money orders, or stored value; sellers or redeemers of traveler's 
    checks, money orders, or stored value; and money transmitters. These 
    businesses are quite numerous; based on a study performed for FinCEN by 
    Coopers & Lybrand, L.L.P., they comprise approximately 158,000 
    4 outlets or selling locations, and provide financial 
    services involving approximately $200 billion. To a significant extent, 
    the customer base for such businesses lies in that part of the 
    population that does not use, either in whole or in part, traditional 
    financial institutions, primarily banks.
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        \4\ The number does not include Post Offices (which sell money 
    orders), participants in stored value product trials, or sellers of 
    various stored value or smart cards in use in, e.g., public 
    transportation systems.
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        The proposed special reporting rule contained in this document 
    relates to money transmitters, a class of money services businesses. 
    For purposes of this notice of proposed rulemaking, and consistent with 
    the definition proposed in the Registration Rule, a money transmitter 
    is
    
        (i) any person, whether or not licensed or required to be 
    licensed, who accepts currency, or funds denominated in currency, 
    and transmits the currency or funds, or the value of the currency or 
    funds, by any means through a financial agency or institution, a 
    Federal Reserve Bank or other facility of the Board of Governors of 
    the Federal Reserve System, or an electronic funds transfer network; 
    or (ii) [a]ny other person engaged as a business in the transfer of 
    funds.
    
        Based on the study performed by Coopers & Lybrand, L.L.P., several 
    broad generalizations can be made about the money transmitting industry 
    in the United States. Due to the global trend of rapidly increasing 
    electronic commerce and the increase in the number of persons who use 
    international transfer services to send money to family and friends, 
    the United States market for money transmission services has grown 
    steadily over the last ten years. Money transmitters in the United 
    States remitted approximately $10.8 billion in 1996, exclusive of fees, 
    each year, through approximately 43,000 locations nationwide. The 
    international component of the money transmission market has been 
    growing at a rate of at least 20 per cent per year for the last five 
    years. Even these estimates are believed to be low, because there is by 
    all accounts a significant, ``informal'' international money transfer 
    market.
        The ``formal'' part of the non-bank money transmitter industry is 
    highly concentrated: the vast majority of the formal funds transfers 
    are handled by two major national companies through their network of 
    agents. Most of the money transmission outlets are concentrated in six 
    major states: California, New York, Texas, New Jersey, Florida, and 
    Illinois. There appears to be a disproportionately large number of 
    outlets as well in Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania.
        Most of the smaller money transmitters in competition with the 
    major national companies are oriented toward particular markets and 
    rely on their own service infrastructures for transferring funds and 
    for communications and settlement among outlets. These niche 
    transmitters often are bilingual, with outlets located in urban 
    communities. Their customers are willing to pay a premium for value 
    added services, such as receiving informal news from other countries.
        State regulators have been monitoring the growing money 
    transmission market with great interest. Twenty-three states now have 
    licensing requirements for money transmitters. Some states, such as New 
    York, also require each licensed money transmitter to register the 
    names and locations of each of its legal agents or vendors, but in 
    general, state regulations vary a great deal, and are primarily focused 
    on consumer protection issues.
    2. Use of Money Transmitters by Money Launderers
        Work of the El Dorado Task Force. Since 1992, the El Dorado Task 
    Force (the ``Task Force'') has been conducting an investigation into 
    the money transmitting industry in the New York metropolitan area and 
    its use by drug traffickers to return drug proceeds to narcotics source 
    countries.5 In the course of its work, the Task Force 
    uncovered widespread abuse within segments of the money transmitter 
    industry in New York.6 One major money transmitter has 
    itself pled guilty to money laundering charges,7 and 
    investigations of several other
    
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    transmitters and their agents are underway.8
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        \5\ The Task Force was established by Treasury law enforcement 
    agencies in 1992 specifically to investigate narcotics related money 
    laundering in the New York metropolitan area. The Task Force is a 
    joint effort of federal, state, and local authorities, and includes 
    approximately 140 agents, police officers and administrative 
    personnel from the Customs Service, the Criminal Investigative 
    Division of the Internal Revenue Service, the Secret Service, the 
    New York State Banking Department, the New York City Police 
    Department, and a number of other local police authorities.
        \6\ The Task Force's investigations have led to the conviction 
    of 97 persons and the seizure and forfeiture of over $10 million 
    associated with money laundering through the licensed money 
    transmitters.
        \7\ United States v. Vigo Remittance Corp., No. 96-575 
    (J.S.)(E.D.N.Y.)(July 24, 1996)(entry of plea). It is fair to note 
    that, since its guilty plea, Vigo has strengthened its Bank Secrecy 
    Act compliance measures significantly.
        \8\ See, e.g., United States v. Remesas America Oriental, No. S1 
    96 Cr. 919 (S.D.N.Y. 1996).
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        The results of the Task Force's investigations confirm that the 
    money transmitting industry in New York shares many common 
    characteristics with the industry nationwide. First, the typical 
    legitimate customer of a money transmitter in New York is someone who, 
    because of lack of access for credit reasons or lack of sufficient 
    documentation, has decided not to use banks to obtain financial 
    services.
        Second, with rare exceptions, almost all licensed money 
    transmitters in New York operate through agents. Agents of the licensed 
    money transmitters receive the transmitted funds from the sender, along 
    with sender information, such as name, address, and telephone number, 
    and recipient information, usually name and telephone number. The 
    agents enter this information into computers provided by the money 
    transmitters, and invoices are generated. The agents then send the 
    information to the money transmitters by computer (or by fax, if the 
    particular agent does not have a computer).
        The agents must deposit the funds to be transmitted into bank 
    accounts set up for the agents but controlled by the money 
    transmitters. On a daily basis, each money transmitter will transfer 
    all of the money it intends to transmit into one of several main 
    transmission accounts maintained at a financial institution with access 
    to CHIPS and FEDWIRE.9 The funds are then moved through the 
    domestic and foreign banking system by way of wire transfer. Once the 
    transmitted funds have arrived at their destinations, foreign 
    correspondents notify the recipients that their money is available to 
    be picked up.
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        \9\ Clearing House Interbank Payments System (CHIPS) and FEDWIRE 
    are commonly-used funds transfer systems.
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        The primary method of laundering funds through money transmitters 
    in New York that has come to light to date is the structuring of 
    transactions beneath the thresholds for recordkeeping and reporting 
    imposed by existing Bank Secrecy Act rules. Corrupt agents accept 
    illicit funds, in amounts greater than $3,000 or $10,000, structure the 
    funds to avoid the recordkeeping and reporting requirements, and then 
    deposit the funds into accounts controlled by the money transmitter. 
    The money transmitter then transmits the funds to the designated 
    recipient locations.
        Most often, the traffickers bring the agents large amounts of 
    currency which need to be returned to a drug source country. The agents 
    create invoices which make it appear as if the money had been brought 
    in by a number of different senders, in amounts below the recordkeeping 
    and reporting thresholds. These corrupt agents also provide the money 
    transmitters with lists of recipient names in the foreign countries for 
    each remittance, again using a different name for each remittance. In 
    this way, each time it appears as if there were a number of smaller, 
    unrelated remittances instead of one remittance, in excess of $3,000, 
    that would trigger the recordkeeping rules of 31 CFR 103.33, or in 
    excess of $10,000, which would trigger the filing of a Currency 
    Transaction Report (``CTR'').
        New York Geographic Targeting Order. Based in large part on the 
    evidence produced by the Task Force, a large group of money 
    transmitters (now 23 licensed transmitters and their approximately 
    3,200 agents) in the New York Metropolitan Area have been the subject 
    of a Geographic Targeting Order (the ``Order''). Issued last August, 
    the Order is grounded in 31 U.S.C. 5326 and 31 CFR 103.26, and is 
    directed at the remittance of funds to Colombia.10 The 
    Order, first directed against 12 money transmitters and 1,600 agents, 
    was expanded in October 1996, and again in April 1997. Its original 60-
    day period has been extended several times under the statutory rules, 
    and the Order is at present set to expire on June 2, 1997.
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        \10\ The Order was issued by Raymond W. Kelly, Under Secretary 
    (Enforcement) of the Department of the Treasury, in response to an 
    application from the United States Attorneys for the Eastern 
    District of New York, the Southern District of New York, and the 
    District of New Jersey and senior officials of the Customs Service 
    and the Internal Revenue Service. (The statute allows such orders to 
    be issued either upon a request from an appropriate law enforcement 
    authority, or by the Treasury upon its own initiative.) Issuance of 
    an order requires a finding, amply documented in this case, that 
    there is reason to believe that special reporting or recordkeeping 
    requirements are necessary to carry out the purposes, or prevent 
    evasions of, the Bank Secrecy Act.
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        The Order requires daily reporting by agents of the 23 money 
    transmitters, and weekly reporting by their principals (i.e., state-
    licensed money transmission companies), of information about the 
    senders and recipients of all money transmissions of $750 or more to 
    Colombia paid for with currency or bearer monetary instruments, as well 
    as the reporting of any transactions or patterns of transactions that 
    appear suspicious. Special verification of identity rules for such 
    transactions are also imposed by the Order.
        A number of factors in addition to the direct evidence adduced by 
    the Task Force supported the Order's issuance. Perhaps most strikingly, 
    the New York area money transmitters' business volume to Colombia was 
    significantly out of harmony with legitimate demographic expectations. 
    New York State Banking Department figures indicated that the 12 
    originally targeted transmitters had been sending approximately $1.2 
    billion annually to South America; about two thirds of this amount, or 
    approximately $800 million, went to Colombia. To account for this 
    figure, each of the approximately 25,500 Colombian households in the 
    New York area (earning an average gross annual income of $27,000) would 
    have had to send approximately $30,000 per year through money 
    transmitters to Colombia.
        Implementation of the Order almost immediately caused dramatic 
    changes in the volume and character of money transmissions, indicating 
    a major reduction in the amount of illicit funds moving through New 
    York money transmitters.11 Analysis of data generated by the 
    Order is ongoing, but the targeted money transmitters' business volume 
    to Colombia appears to have dropped approximately 30 percent. (Three of 
    the money transmitters subject to the Order have simply stopped sending 
    any funds to Colombia.) Most of the money that would in the past have 
    been placed abroad through the use of money transmitters appears to 
    have been physically removed from the New York Metropolitan area, 
    either for transfer through money transmitters operating in other 
    American cities, or for bulk smuggling out of the United States. The 
    change demonstrates graphically both that narcotics money launderers 
    have been extensively abusing a segment of the relatively unsupervised 
    money transmitter industry, and that the underground market does 
    respond to regulatory and enforcement pressures.
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        \11\ One money transmitter surrendered its license to the New 
    York Banking Department immediately before the Order became 
    effective. Two other money transmitters subject to the Order simply 
    stopped sending any funds to Colombia.
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        Ancillary results of the Order also have been significant. The 
    Treasury has observed a dramatic increase in Customs Service 
    interdiction and seizure activity at air and seaports, on common 
    carriers, and on highways--over $50 million during the first seven 
    months of the Order's operation, a figure over three times higher than 
    that for comparable periods in prior years. Also significant is the 
    fact that the cost of sending funds to Colombia through money 
    transmitters in New York has dropped, from 7 percent to 5 percent of
    
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    the value of the transfer, since the Order was put in place.
        At the same time, it is clear that a significant number of money 
    transmitter agents have been willing to structure transactions beneath 
    the Order's $750 reporting threshold, in an attempt to move narcotics-
    tainted funds abroad even during a period of known surveillance of the 
    industry and its agents. (At least one money transmitter has itself 
    actively worked with federal authorities during this period to identify 
    suspicious transactions, even those involving its own agents.) The 
    number of transactions in amounts below $750 has risen sharply, and the 
    amount of funds transferred to Colombia in such increments appears to 
    have almost doubled. The Task Force has already executed search 
    warrants on twenty-two money transmitter agents suspected of 
    intentionally structuring transactions in violation of the Order; all 
    but five businesses served have closed, five people have been indicted, 
    and four people have already pleaded guilty. Three additional arrest 
    warrants are outstanding. The Task Force is continuing to pursue 
    investigations of this type, and the Treasury will consider imposing 
    civil penalties against violators who are not pursued criminally.
        Texas State Investigations. The New York GTO experience is not an 
    isolated phenomenon. The Texas Attorney General's office began 
    investigating so called ``giro houses'' in the Houston area in the 
    early 1990s. Giro houses are independent money transmitters that also 
    provide ancillary services such as cargo shipment and long distance 
    telephone access. Before 1991, there were as many as 100 giro houses in 
    Houston processing over $450 million per year in wire transfers, 
    primarily to Colombia. The Texas Attorney General's Office, working 
    with the Texas Department of Banking and the Houston office of the 
    Internal Revenue Service, opened formal investigations of a number of 
    giro houses. These investigations, like the El Dorado Task Force's 
    investigations in New York, revealed a pattern of money laundering 
    through false invoices designed to justify the large currency deposits 
    at local banks.
        From late 1994 through 1995 the Texas Attorney General's Office 
    obtained and executed 11 search warrants at Houston giro houses. Many 
    businesses closed while under investigation, and the overall effect of 
    the Texas investigations on the illegitimate trade was dramatic. A 
    recent count of giro houses lists eight sending funds to Colombia, and 
    the total amount of money processed through giro houses has dropped to 
    approximately $10 million.
        A significant factor in the Texas investigations has been the state 
    requirement that any wire transaction over $1,000 be recorded on a 
    receipt that includes driver's license and social security or other 
    photo identification numbers, birth date and address of the sender. 
    Because false identification and addresses are commonly used by money 
    launderers sending funds in excess of $1,000, the identification 
    requirement has provided a clear mechanism for detecting and proving 
    illegal behavior. In the case of businesses that are willing to 
    structure transactions beneath the $1,000 threshold, surveillance has 
    been used to document the deviation between the number of people 
    observed patronizing the business and the number of customers reflected 
    in business records during the surveillance period.
    
    C. Need for Special Reporting and Recordkeeping Rules for Money 
    Transmitters
    
        This notice proposes to amend the Bank Secrecy Act regulations to 
    require money transmitters and their agents to report and keep records 
    of, and verify the identity of senders of, transactions in currency or 
    monetary instruments of at least $750 but not more than $10,000 in 
    connection with a transmission or other transfer of funds to any person 
    outside the United States. While Treasury recognizes the significance 
    of this proposed action, it believes that the step is nevertheless 
    clearly warranted based on the potential, and the record of actual, 
    abuse of the money transmission industry documented, inter alia, by the 
    Task Force's investigations and the results of the Order.
        As indicated above, the Order and the Texas investigations have had 
    a significant impact in providing crucial information to the Treasury 
    as well as disrupting the flow to Colombia, through money transmitters, 
    of illegally-derived funds. But geographic targeting orders are by 
    their nature relatively temporary measures, intended to illuminate, 
    rather than solve, long-term enforcement problems. Given the structural 
    factors that created the situation to which the Order was addressed 
    (plus the evidence of extensive structuring that has taken place to 
    avoid even the Order-imposed threshold of $750), the likelihood that 
    launderers are now moving large sums through other money transmitters 
    in other cities, and will resume doing so in New York once the Order 
    expires, cannot responsibly be discounted, let alone ignored.
        The Task Force's investigations and the Order focused on money 
    transmitters in the New York Metropolitan Area. But the Texas giro 
    house investigations and the consensus of law enforcement officials 
    simply confirms what the New York situation itself would lead one to 
    expect, namely that elements of the money transmission industry, given 
    a combination of factors, are very susceptible to systematic misuse, 
    extending unfortunately in some cases to infiltration and corruption, 
    by money launderers.
        It should be emphasized at the outset that, as in the case of the 
    nations's banks and securities firms, most money services business 
    operators and agents are completely law-abiding and as interested in 
    cost-effective financial law enforcement as the Treasury itself. A 
    number of major national money remitters and issuers of traveler's 
    checks and money orders have already taken their own steps to devise 
    anti-money laundering compliance programs.
        The challenges for reasonable implementation of the Bank Secrecy 
    Act posed by the situation the New York Order illuminates are daunting. 
    Implementation of a comprehensive counter-money laundering strategy for 
    money transmitter and other money services businesses raises 
    significant issues not present in devising counter-money laundering 
    strategies for banks, largely due to unique structural factors 
    affecting money services businesses. Money transmitters (like other 
    money services businesses) operate largely through the medium of 
    independent enterprises that agree to serve as agents for the 
    businesses' products or services.
        Thus, the public does not deal directly with the businesses that 
    issue the instruments, or actually perform the services, purchased, and 
    the activities of the agents are subject to less systematic control 
    than in the case, for example, of branch banks or brokerage offices.
        Even more important, the experience encountered in New York and 
    Texas indicates that the rules of the Bank Secrecy Act are not now 
    appropriately tailored to reflect the particular operating realities, 
    problems, and potential for abuse of an industry that deals in sums far 
    below $10,000 per transaction. Given a truly ``cash'' industry, that 
    moves impressively large sums in the aggregate, with few of the 
    structural controls in place that banks and their regulators impose, 
    and that is not subject to the sorts of market discipline to which 
    banks are subject with respect to avoiding collaboration
    
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    with criminals, a single strategy does not easily suggest itself.
        The issue facing the Treasury is how to move from the world of a 
    temporary geographic targeting order to stabilize the situation of this 
    industry. The decision to propose a $750 currency transaction reporting 
    requirement for outbound transmissions reflects two determinations. The 
    first is that such a rule, while in effect, will create a source of 
    information that should help nationwide to stop the relatively 
    uncontrolled outflow of narcotics proceeds through money transmitters. 
    The second is that such a rule will allow more long-term (and less 
    absolute) measures, most important, heightened industry procedures and 
    programs based on a mandatory suspicious transaction reporting regime, 
    backed by nation-wide registration of money services businesses, the 
    time to become effective.
        Treasury has considered a number of alternatives in seeking to 
    craft the proposed rule. The value of reporting in this situation is 
    plain. Mandatory reporting creates a critical source of information for 
    Treasury enforcement and bank regulators about the transactions that 
    move through money transmitters. That the reporting requirement also 
    creates a deterrent effect and drives launderers from the system, 
    cannot, Treasury believes, be seriously debated.
        No Bank Secrecy Act requirement other than the New York Order (and 
    previous geographic targeting orders, in Phoenix in 1989 and Houston in 
    1991) has ever keyed reporting requirements or special recordkeeping 
    requirements at a level as low as $750. The next standard rung in the 
    ladder is $3,000; money transmitters, like other financial 
    institutions, currently are subject to a requirement to maintain 
    records of funds transfers of $3,000 or more, see 31 CFR 103.33, and to 
    a requirement to report transactions in currency of more than $10,000. 
    See 31 CFR 103.22(a). It is, in part, the evasion of the $3,000 
    recordkeeping requirement that the New York Order was put in place to 
    prevent.
        In addition, enforcement and regulatory analyses increasingly 
    confirm what the experience under the Order amply demonstrates, namely 
    that a $3,000 threshold has small relevance to an industry that most 
    commonly deals in sums far below that amount. A study by Coopers & 
    Lybrand concluded that the average transaction amount for funds 
    transferred by money transmitters to persons outside the United States 
    is approximately $320. The fact that $750 is more than twice the amount 
    of the average transaction decreases the likelihood that legitimate 
    transactions will be put off track by this simple reporting 
    requirement.
        Another issue is whether the rule should apply to transfers to all 
    destinations outside the United States, rather than, say, applying only 
    to transmissions to particular countries. Any rule directed at 
    transmissions to a particular nation would simply move the process to 
    create a switching station in some third country, for funds ultimately 
    bound to the country designated. (For example, there is some basis for 
    a conclusion that funds destined for Colombia, once the New York Order 
    was in place, were simply routed through transmitters in other Latin 
    American nations, on their way to their ultimate destination in 
    Colombia.) Not only is singling out a particular country likely to be 
    ineffective, but it could also contravene international agreements to 
    which the United States is a party.
        Money transmitters provide a valuable service, especially in lower-
    income communities in which access to banks may be limited. In issuing 
    this notice of proposed rulemaking, Treasury has sought to avoid 
    imposing undue hardship on any segment of the United States population. 
    On the contrary, by establishing a reporting threshold more than double 
    the average amount of funds transferred outside the United States by a 
    money transmitter, it is targeting the criminals who misuse money 
    transmitters to send the profits of their illegal activity to drug 
    source countries. Indeed, if the New York experience holds true, a 
    lower reporting threshold may actually lead to a reduction in the cost 
    to customers of remitting funds abroad through money transmitters.
        As indicated above, it is not necessarily the case that any special 
    $750 reporting rule, once made final, would be permanent. The 
    Department of the Treasury intends carefully to review the experience 
    of the industry and the results of reporting under the blanket $750 
    reporting rule. The Department of the Treasury intends, at the same 
    time that its programs emphasize a government-industry thrust to bring 
    counter-money laundering programs in the money services industry up to 
    a workable standard, to determine whether, and to what extent, a 
    special reporting rule continues to be necessary.
    
    D. Authority for Special Reporting and Recordkeeping Rule for Money 
    Transmitters
    
        This notice of proposed rulemaking is grounded in the broad 
    authority granted the Secretary of the Treasury by section 5313(a) and 
    section 5318(h). Section 5313(a) authorizes the Secretary to require a 
    domestic financial institution to report transactions involving coins, 
    currency or other monetary instruments. Section 5318(h) authorizes the 
    Secretary to require a financial institution to carry out anti-money 
    laundering programs, including at a minimum the development of internal 
    policies, procedures, and controls.
        While 31 CFR 103.22(a) imposes a general reporting and 
    recordkeeping threshold of more than $10,000 for domestic financial 
    institutions, section 5313(a) does not mandate any single threshold 
    amount. Instead, the statute grants the Secretary the discretion to 
    require reports of transactions ``in an amount, denomination, or amount 
    and denomination'' as the Secretary may prescribe. FinCEN believes this 
    language permits the Secretary to impose a reporting threshold lower 
    than $10,000, where the circumstances warrant.12
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \12\ This plain reading of section 5313(a) is consistent with 
    the statute's relevant legislative and administrative histories.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Similarly, the statute is silent on whether the Secretary may set a 
    different reporting threshold for different kinds of financial 
    institutions. Section 5313(a) does state, however, that reports of 
    transactions may be required ``under circumstances the Secretary 
    prescribes by regulation.'' FinCEN reads this broadly-stated language 
    as permitting the Secretary to set a reporting threshold for money 
    transmitters that is different than the reporting threshold for other 
    financial institutions.13
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \13\ Again, the relevant legislative and administrative 
    histories of section 5313(a) do not conflict with this plain reading 
    of the statute.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The proposal contained in this document that would lower the 
    general reporting threshold of more than $10,000 has historical 
    antecedents. Both Congress and the Department of the Treasury have in 
    the past each drafted a law or proposed a rule that would have lowered 
    the $10,000 reporting threshold generally applicable to financial 
    institutions. On these occasions, FinCEN is unaware of any challenge 
    ever being made to Treasury's legal authority under the Bank Secrecy 
    Act or its implementing regulations to make such a change.
        In August 1986, the House of Representatives considered legislation 
    (HR 5484) aimed at countering the misuse of financial institutions by 
    narcotics launderers. One provision of that bill would have authorized 
    the Secretary of the Treasury to order domestic financial institutions 
    to report
    
    [[Page 27914]]
    
    and retain records of any transaction of more than $3,000 involving 
    currency or other monetary instruments. The version of the bill 
    containing this provision was never enacted into law.14
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \14\ Nevertheless, certain amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act 
    (e.g., making structuring a crime) eventually were made by the Money 
    Laundering Control Act of 1986, Subtitle H of the Anti-Drug Abuse 
    Act of 1986, Pub. L. 99-570 (October 27, 1986).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        When HR 5484 was introduced, the Department of the Treasury issued 
    a notice of proposed rulemaking that would have amended the Bank 
    Secrecy Act regulations to require domestic financial institutions to 
    report and retain records of certain transactions in currency less than 
    $10,000. See 51 FR 30233 (August 25, 1986). Specifically, the notice 
    would have required that financial institutions obtain and retain a 
    report from each purchaser of any official bank check, cashier's check, 
    money order or traveler's check, if the purchase involved a transaction 
    in currency of $3,000 or more. The rule then proposed would have 
    required that each such report be signed by the purchaser and certify 
    whether or not the purchaser had purchased more than $10,000 of these 
    kinds of instruments in any one day. Under the notice, the selling 
    financial institution would have been required to treat any affirmative 
    certification, or refusal to certify, as a reportable transaction, that 
    would require the financial institution to file a CTR. Based on 
    Treasury's conclusions that these proposals were ``not advisable at 
    this time,'' the proposals were eventually withdrawn. See 58 FR 6611 
    (February 29, 1988).
        The notice of proposed rulemaking containing these proposals 
    generated approximately 300 comments. While most commenters objected to 
    lowering the reporting threshold from $10,000 to $3,000 for 
    transactions involving the kinds of instruments listed above, no 
    commenter questioned Treasury's legal authority under the Bank Secrecy 
    Act and its implementing regulations to establish either a reporting 
    threshold other than $10,000 or a different reporting threshold for 
    different kinds of transactions.
    
    III. Specific Provisions
    
    A. 31 CFR 103.22(i)(1)  General
    
        Proposed paragraph (i)(1) states the special reporting rule for 
    money transmitters. It provides that money transmitters and their 
    agents must report transactions in currency or monetary instruments of 
    at least $750 but not more than $10,000 in connection with a 
    transmission or other transfer of funds to any person outside the 
    United States.
    Reporting Institutions
        Any enterprise that is a money transmitter, within the definition 
    proposed in the Registration Rule, or agent of a money transmitter, is 
    subject to the proposed special reporting rule contained in this 
    document.
        As proposed, the special reporting rule would not apply to 
    depository institutions, despite the fact that some depository 
    institutions accept funds transmission business from non-customers. 
    Depository institutions are subject to national examination by the 
    federal financial supervisory agencies for, inter alia, compliance with 
    the Bank Secrecy Act and adequacy of systems to prevent money 
    laundering. They are also subject to the obligation to report 
    suspicious transactions to the Department of the Treasury, and FinCEN 
    will be issuing a suspicious transaction report advisory to banks with 
    respect to the potential for abuse of the funds transmittal system by 
    non-account customers in the near future. In addition, FinCEN does not 
    possess information about the segment of the money transmission 
    business that involves bank transmissions for non-account customers 
    that indicates the sorts of abuses demonstrated, in the case of some 
    non-bank money transmitters and their agents, by the New York Order, 
    the Texas investigations, other enforcement activities, and industry 
    analyses.
        Under these circumstances, and in the absence of demonstrated abuse 
    of the bank non-customer segment of the money transmission industry, 
    the Department of the Treasury is not proposing the extension to 
    depository institutions, at this time, of the rules proposed for other 
    money transmitters by this notice of proposed rulemaking. However, 
    comments are specifically requested on the question whether either 
    competitive or other factors make it necessary for the special 
    reporting rules to apply to banks, for non-customers, as well as to 
    other money transmitters.
    Reportable Transactions
        The proposed reporting rule applies to transactions in currency or 
    monetary instruments of at least $750 but not more than $10,000 in 
    connection with a transmission or other transfer of funds to any person 
    outside the United States. (At the more than $10,000 level, the normal 
    reporting rules apply.) The $750 threshold for reporting under the 
    proposed rule reflects information about the money transmitting 
    industry provided voluntarily by the industry, collected by Coopers & 
    Lybrand, L.L.P., and confirmed by the Task Force's investigations and 
    the results of the Order. Law enforcement sources agree that, across 
    the industry and throughout the United States, the average legitimate 
    funds transfer to Colombia ranges in amount between $200 and 
    $500.15 Thus, reports about transfers of $750 or more should 
    impose neither an undue burden on the legitimate business conducted by 
    money transmitters nor an undue government intrusion into the financial 
    affairs of their legitimate customers. In this regard, it is worth 
    noting that the maximum available value of a U.S. Postal Service money 
    order--a monetary instrument widely used for bill paying by the same 
    part of the population that has a legitimate need for the services of 
    money transmitters such as those targeted by the proposed special 
    reporting rule--is $700.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \15\ According to the Coopers & Lybrand study, noted above, the 
    average amount of a funds transfer from the United States to another 
    country is approximately $320.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Any transmission or other transfer of funds to any person outside 
    the United States of at least $750 but not more than $10,000 would be 
    subject to the proposed reporting rule. As discussed above, any 
    limitation of the rule's attention to a particular country or group of 
    countries would ignore the reality that organized financial crime and 
    its money-moving circuits are worldwide in scope and would likely raise 
    far more problems than it solved. Any such limitation would be both 
    unfair and ill-tailored to the realities of the money laundering 
    problem.
        The reporting range for this proposed special reporting rule has 
    been set at an amount of at least $750 but no more than $10,000 to 
    avoid any overlap with the general reporting requirement of 31 CFR 
    103.22(a) to report transactions in currency of $10,000 or more. 
    Moreover, the proposed special reporting rule does not affect in any 
    way the obligation of money transmitters to comply with the suspicious 
    transaction reporting requirements, as set forth in the Suspicious 
    Transaction Rule. The proposed rule further does not affect the 
    obligation for money transmitters to comply with the recordkeeping 
    requirements for funds transfers as set forth in 31 CFR 103.33.
    
    B. 31 CFR 103.22(i)(2)  Identification Required
    
        Proposed paragraph (i)(2) requires that before any money 
    transmitter or agent completes a transaction in currency of at least 
    $750 but not more
    
    [[Page 27915]]
    
    than $10,000 in connection with any transmission or other transfer of 
    funds to any person outside the United States, the money transmitter or 
    agent involved must verify and record the name and address of the 
    sender of the funds and satisfy with respect to such transaction the 
    requirements of 31 CFR 103.28, provided that for purposes of the 
    special reporting requirement, only a drivers license, passport, alien 
    registration card or state-issued identification card, containing a 
    photograph of the individual involved, may be accepted for verification 
    of identity.
    
    C. 31 CFR 103.22(i)(3)  Person Required To File and Keep Records
    
        As is the case with the Suspicious Transaction Rule, proposed 
    paragraph (i)(3) places responsibility for reporting on each money 
    transmitter, as well as on its agents,
    
    regardless of whether, and the terms on which, the money transmitter 
    treats such person as an agent or independent contractor for other 
    purposes.
    
        The allocation of principal-agent liability in particular cases, 
    under the governing terms of the Bank Secrecy Act, is too complex a 
    subject to be dealt with in this notice of proposed rulemaking. 
    However, the Department of the Treasury believes that at a minimum the 
    operators of money transmitters have a duty to know their agents 
    sufficiently well to be able to fulfill the reporting and recordkeeping 
    obligations involved in compliance with the proposed rule. As in the 
    case of the rules for suspicious activity reporting by banks, 31 CFR 
    103.21, and exemptions from the requirement to report transactions in 
    currency by banks, 31 CFR 103.22(h), the proposed rule is intended to 
    introduce a concept of due diligence into the reporting procedures, and 
    that diligence applies equally to a review of activities of agents as 
    to a review (by both principals and agents) of transactions of 
    consumer-customers of money transmitters.
        Treasury invites comments on whether the rule should contain more 
    detailed procedures or rules dealing with the allocation of 
    responsibility between principals (the money transmitters) and agents, 
    as well as specific rules for compliance programs that recognize the 
    realities of the business operations in this part of the financial 
    sector.
    
    D. 31 CFR 103.22(i)(4)  Recordkeeping
    
        Proposed paragraph (i)(4) makes it clear that records maintained by 
    a money transmitter or its agent in compliance with and administration 
    of the rules of this paragraph (i) must be maintained in accordance 
    with the recordkeeping provisions of 31 CFR 103.38, which, inter alia, 
    requires that records be maintained for a period of five years.
    
    E. 31 CFR 103.27(a)(3)
    
        Proposed paragraph (a)(3) states the filing deadline applicable to 
    any report required to be filed by proposed paragraph (i)(1). Any such 
    report must be filed within 30 days following the day on which the 
    reportable transaction occurred.
    
    IV. Proposed Effective Date
    
        The amendments to 31 CFR Part 103 contained in this notice of 
    proposed rulemaking will become effective 30 days following the 
    publication in the Federal Register of the final rule to which this 
    notice of proposed rulemaking relates.
    
    V. Submission of Comments
    
        An original and four copies of any comment (other than one sent 
    electronically) must be submitted. All comments will be available for 
    public inspection and copying, and no material in any such comments, 
    including the name of any person submitting comments, will be 
    recognized as confidential. Accordingly, material not intended to be 
    disclosed to the public should not be submitted.
    
    VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        FinCEN certifies that the proposed rule contained in this document 
    will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
    small entities. The average money transmission from the United States 
    to another country is approximately $320. This amount is substantially 
    below the $750 threshold that triggers reporting under the proposed 
    rule. Thus, FinCEN believes that the threshold has been set at a level 
    that will avoid a significant economic burden on small businesses.
    
    VII. Paperwork Reduction Act Notices
    
    Special Currency Transaction Report for Money Transmitters
    
        In accordance with requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq., and its implementing regulations, 5 CFR 
    part 1320, the following information concerning the collection of 
    information on International Transmission of Funds Report is presented 
    to assist those persons wishing to comment on the information 
    collection.
        FinCEN anticipates that this proposed rule, if enacted as proposed, 
    would result in a total of 300,000 International Transmission of Funds 
    Report forms to be filed. This result is an estimate, based on a 
    projection of the size and volume of the industry.16
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \16\ Given the state of our knowledge of the industry and 
    patterns of illegal transactions, these estimates are extremely hard 
    to generate.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Title: International Transmission of Funds Report.
        OMB Number: To be determined.
        Description of Respondents: Money transmitters.
        Estimated Number of Respondents: 100,000.
        Frequency: As required.
        Estimate of Burden: Reporting average of 19 minutes per response; 
    recordkeeping average of 5 minutes per response.
        Estimate of Total Annual Burden on Respondents: 300,000 responses. 
    Reporting burden estimate = 95,000 hours; recordkeeping burden estimate 
    = 25,000 hours. Estimated combined total of 120,000 hours.
        Estimate of Total Annual Cost to Respondents for Hour Burdens: 
    Based on $20 per hour, the total cost to the public is estimated at 
    $2,400,000.
        Estimate of Total Other Annual Costs to Respondents: None.
        Type of Review: New.
        FinCEN specifically invites comments on the following subjects: (a) 
    Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the 
    proper performance of the mission of FinCEN, including whether the 
    information shall have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of FinCEN's 
    estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of information; (c) 
    ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to 
    be collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of 
    information on respondents, including through the use of automated 
    collection techniques or other forms of information technology.
        In addition, the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 requires agencies 
    to estimate the total annual cost burden to respondents or 
    recordkeepers resulting from the collection of information. Thus, 
    FinCEN also specifically requests comments to assist with this 
    estimate. In this connection, FinCEN requests commenters to identify 
    any additional costs associated with the completion of the form. These 
    comments on costs should be divided into two parts: (1) Any additional 
    costs associated with reporting; and (2) any additional costs 
    associated with recordkeeping.
    
    Recordkeeping Requirements of 31 CFR 103.22(i)
    
        In accordance with requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1995,
    
    [[Page 27916]]
    
    44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq., and its implementing regulations, 5 CFR Part 
    1320, the following information concerning the collection of 
    information as required by 31 CFR 103.22(i) is presented to assist 
    those persons wishing to comment on the information collection.
        Title: Currency transaction special reporting.
        OMB Number: 1506-0006.
        Description of Respondents: All financial institutions.
        Estimated Number of Respondents: 100,000.
        Frequency: As required.
        Estimate of Burden: Recordkeeping average of 10 minutes per 
    response; 300,000 responses.
        Estimate of Total Annual Burden on Respondents: Recordkeeping 
    burden estimate = 50,000 hours.
        Estimate of Total Annual Cost to Respondents for Hour Burdens: 
    Based on $20 per hour, the total cost to the public is estimated to be 
    $1,000,000.
        Estimate of Total Other Annual Costs to Respondents: None.
        Type of Review: Extension.
        FinCEN specifically invites comments on the following subjects: (a) 
    Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the 
    proper performance of the mission of FinCEN, including whether the 
    information shall have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of FinCEN's 
    estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of information; (c) 
    ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to 
    be collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of 
    information on respondents, including through the use of automated 
    collection techniques or other forms of information technology.
        In addition, the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 requires agencies 
    to estimate the total annual cost burden to respondents or 
    recordkeepers resulting from the collection of information. Thus, 
    FinCEN also specifically requests comments to assist with this 
    estimate. In this connection, FinCEN requests commenters to identify 
    any additional costs associated with the completion of the form. These 
    comments on cost should be divided into two parts: (1) Any additional 
    costs associated with reporting; and (2) any additional costs 
    associated with recordkeeping.
        Comments may be submitted to FinCEN, at the address specified at 
    the beginning of this document, Attention: Paperwork Reduction Act.
        Responses to this request for comments under the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act will be summarized and included in the request for Office 
    of Management and Budget approval. All comments will become a matter of 
    public record.
    
    VIII. Executive Order 12866
    
        The Department of the Treasury has determined that this proposed 
    rule is not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 
    12866.
    
    IX. Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995 Statement
    
        Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (``Unfunded 
    Mandates Act''), Public Law 104-4 (March 22, 1995), requires that an 
    agency prepare a budgetary impact statement before promulgating a rule 
    that includes a federal mandate that may result in expenditure by 
    state, local and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the 
    private sector, of $100 million or more in any one year. If a budgetary 
    impact statement is required, section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Act 
    also requires an agency to identify and consider a reasonable number of 
    regulatory alternatives before promulgating a rule. FinCEN has 
    determined that it is not required to prepare a written statement under 
    section 202 because it believes that the proposed amendments will not 
    result in the expenditure of $100 million or more in any one year by 
    either state, local and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the 
    private sector.
    
    List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 103
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Authority delegations 
    (Government agencies), Banks, banking, Currency, Foreign banking, 
    Foreign currencies, Gambling, Investigations, Law enforcement, 
    Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities, Taxes.
    
    Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
    
        For the reasons set forth above in the preamble, 31 CFR 103 is 
    proposed to be amended as follows:
    
    PART 103--FINANCIAL RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING OF CURRENCY AND 
    FOREIGN TRANSACTIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 103 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1829b and 1951-1959; 31 U.S.C. 5311-5330.
    
        2. Paragraph (i) of section 103.22 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 103.22  Reports of currency transactions.
    
    * * * * *
        (i) Reporting of the transmission or other transfer of funds 
    outside the United States--(1) General. In addition to any reports 
    required by paragraph (a) of this section, each money transmitter or 
    its agent shall file a report, in such manner as FinCEN may prescribe, 
    of any transaction or attempted transaction in currency or monetary 
    instruments in an amount of at least $750 but not more than $10,000, in 
    connection with a request or order for the transmission or other 
    transfer of funds, directly or indirectly, to any person outside the 
    United States. For purposes of the preceding sentence, multiple 
    transactions in currency shall be treated as a single transaction if 
    the money transmitter or its agent has knowledge that the transactions 
    are by or on behalf of any person and result in the transmission or 
    other transfer of funds of at least $750 but not more than $10,000 on a 
    single calendar day.
        (2) Identification required. Before concluding any transaction 
    described in paragraph (i)(1) of this section, a money transmitter or 
    its agent must verify and record the name and address of the individual 
    presenting such transaction and satisfy with respect to such 
    transaction the requirements of Sec. 103.28, provided that for purposes 
    of this paragraph (i), only a drivers license, passport, alien 
    registration card, state-issued identification card, containing a 
    photograph of the individual involved, may be accepted for verification 
    of identity.
        (3) Person required to file and keep records. The obligation to 
    report each transaction that is described in paragraph (i)(1) of this 
    section and to maintain records as described in paragraph (i)(4) of 
    this section, rests with the money transmitter involved and its agent, 
    regardless of whether, and the terms on which, the money transmitter 
    treats such person as an agent or independent contractor for other 
    purposes. Notwithstanding this paragraph (i)(3), the filing of a report 
    and maintaining of records by either the money transmitter involved or 
    its agent satisfies the obligations imposed by this paragraph (i). If 
    an agent of a money transmitter completes and files a report, a copy of 
    the report also must be sent to the money transmitter for which the 
    agent is acting.
        (4) Recordkeeping. The records maintained by a money transmitter or 
    its agent to document its compliance with and administration of the 
    rules of this paragraph (i) shall be maintained in accordance with the 
    provisions of Sec. 103.38.
        (5) Excluded persons. This paragraph (i) does not require reporting 
    by depository institutions as defined in 31 U.S.C. 5313(g).
    
    [[Page 27917]]
    
        (6) Effective date. This paragraph (i) is effective [30 days 
    following the publication in the Federal Register of the final rule to 
    which this notice of proposed rulemaking relates].
        3. In Sec. 103.27, paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4) are redesignated as 
    paragraphs (a)(4) and (a)(5), respectively, and new paragraph (a)(3) is 
    added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 103.27  Filing of reports.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) A report required by Sec. 103.22(i) shall be filed within 30 
    days following the day on which the reportable transaction occurred.
    * * * * *
        Dated: May 16, 1997.
    Stanley E. Morris,
    Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
    [FR Doc. 97-13302 Filed 5-16-97; 4:32 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4820-03-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/21/1997
Department:
Treasury Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
97-13302
Dates:
Written comments on all aspects of the proposal are welcome and must be received on or before August 19, 1997.
Pages:
27909-27917 (9 pages)
RINs:
1506-AA19: Amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations--Special Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements--Money Services Businesses (MSBs)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1506-AA19/amendments-to-the-bank-secrecy-act-regulations-special-reporting-and-recordkeeping-requirements-mone
PDF File:
97-13302.pdf
CFR: (2)
31 CFR 103.22
31 CFR 103.27