95-19137. Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Proposed Amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations Regarding Tribal Gaming  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 149 (Thursday, August 3, 1995)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 39665-39668]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-19137]
    
    
    
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    Proposed Rules
                                                    Federal Register
    ________________________________________________________________________
    
    This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of 
    the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these 
    notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in 
    the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
    
    ========================================================================
    
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 149 / Thursday, August 3, 1995 / 
    Proposed Rules
    
    
    [[Page 39665]]
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    31 CFR Part 103
    
    RIN 1506-AA07
    
    
    Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Proposed Amendments to the 
    Bank Secrecy Act Regulations Regarding Tribal Gaming
    
    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 statute generally 
    referred to as the Bank Secrecy Act to include certain gaming 
    establishments operated by or on behalf of Indian tribes within the 
    definition of financial institution subject to those regulations. The 
    amendments would extend the reporting and recordkeeping requirements 
    and anti-money laundering safeguards of the Bank Secrecy Act to such 
    gaming establishments.
    
    DATES: Written comments on all aspects of the proposed regulation are 
    welcome and must be received on or before November 1, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments should be submitted to: Office of 
    Regulatory Policy and Enforcement, Financial Crimes Enforcement 
    Network, Department of the Treasury, 2070 Chain Bridge Road, Vienna, 
    Virginia 22182, Attention: NPRM--Tribal Gaming. Submission of comments. 
    An original and four copies of any comment 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. Inspection of comments. Comments may be inspected at the 
    Department of Treasury between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., in the 
    Treasury Library, which is located in room 5030, 1500 Pennsylvania 
    Avenue NW., Washington, D.C. 20220. Persons wishing to inspect the 
    comments submitted should request an appointment at the Treasury 
    Library at (202) 622-0990.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Leonard C. Senia, Compliance 
    Specialist, Office of Regulatory Policy and Enforcement, Financial 
    Crimes Enforcement Network, (703) 905-3931, or Joseph M. Myers, 
    Attorney-Advisor, Office of Legal Counsel, Financial Crimes Enforcement 
    Network, (703) 905-3557.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Introduction
    
        This document proposes (i) to amend the definition of ``casino'' in 
    31 CFR 103.11(i)(7)(i), (ii) to amend or add other definitions in 31 
    CFR 103.11, and (iii) to make a conforming change to the specification 
    in 31 CFR 103.36(b)(7) of certain records required to be maintained by 
    casinos. The proposed changes reflect the terms of section 409 of the 
    Money Laundering Suppression Act of 1994 (the ``Money Laundering 
    Suppression Act''), Title IV of the Riegle Community Development and 
    Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994, Pub. L. 103-325.
    
    Background
    
        The statute popularly known as the ``Bank Secrecy Act,'' Pub. L. 
    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 
    (i) keep records and file reports that are determined to have a high 
    degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, and regulatory matters, (ii) 
    implement counter-money laundering programs and compliance procedures, 
    and (iii) report potentially suspicious transactions to the federal 
    government. 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 the Bank Secrecy Act has been 
    delegated to the Director of FinCEN.
        The range of financial institutions to which the Bank Secrecy Act 
    applies includes not only banks and other depository institutions, but 
    also securities brokers and dealers, money transmitters, and the other 
    non-bank businesses that offer customers one or more financial 
    services. Gambling casinos were made subject to the Bank Secrecy Act as 
    of May 7, 1985, by regulation issued early that year, see 50 FR 5065 
    (February 6, 1985). Treasury has issued three sets of rules relating to 
    the application of the Bank Secrecy Act to casino gaming 
    establishments. See 50 FR 5064-5069 (February 6, 1985); 54 FR 1165-1167 
    (January 12, 1989); and 59 FR 61660-61662 (December 1, 1994) (modifying 
    and putting into final effect the rule originally published at 58 FR 
    13538-13550 (March 12, 1993)).
        Legalized casino gaming in the United States has grown greatly 
    since 1985. An important component of that growth has been the opening 
    of casinos and other gaming establishments on Indian lands, primarily 
    under the procedures established by the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act 
    (Pub. L. 100-497, codified at 18 U.S.C. 1166-1168, and 25 U.S.C. 2701-
    2721). State gaming regulators and staff members of the National Indian 
    Gaming Commission (the ``NIGC''), established pursuant to the Indian 
    Gaming Regulatory Act, have indicated that there were approximately 120 
    tribal casinos, of various sizes and types, operating during 1994 in a 
    total of 16 states. Industry statistics for 1993 (the last year for 
    which statistics are readily available) indicate that wagering at 
    tribal casinos exceeded $27 billion in that year, a steep rate of 
    increase from prior years' results.
        Section 409 of the Money Laundering Suppression Act codified the 
    application of the Bank Secrecy Act to gaming activities by adding 
    casinos and other gaming establishments to the list of financial 
    institutions specified in the Bank Secrecy Act itself.1 The 
    statutory specification reads:
    
        \1\ The 1985 action initially making casinos subject to the Bank 
    Secrecy Act had been based on Treasury's statutory authority to 
    designate as financial institutions (i) businesses that engage in 
    activities ``similar to'' the activities of the businesses listed in 
    the Bank Secrecy Act, as well as (ii) other businesses ``whose cash 
    transactions have a high degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, or 
    regulatory matters.'' See 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(Y) and (Z) (as 
    renumbered by the Money Laundering Suppression Act).
    
        (2) financial institution means--
        (X) a casino, gambling casino, or gaming establishment with an 
    annual gaming revenue of more than $1,000,000 which--
        (i) is licensed as a casino, gambling casino, or gaming 
    establishment under the laws of 
    
    [[Page 39666]]
    any State or any political subdivision of any State; or
        (ii) is an Indian gaming operation conducted under or pursuant 
    to the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act other than an operation which is 
    limited to class I gaming (as defined in section 4(6) of such Act) * 
    * *.
    
    31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(X). As discussed more fully below, this notice is 
    part of the broader process of rethinking the application of the Bank 
    Secrecy Act to casinos that began with the issuance of burden-reducing 
    amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act regulations governing casinos in 
    December 1994.
        See 59 FR 61660-61662 (December 1, 1994).
    Explanation of Provisions
    
        A. Overview. The proposed regulations would amend the definition of 
    ``casino'' to include explicitly casinos operated on Indian lands; make 
    related changes to the regulatory definitions of ``person'' and 
    ``United States'' in 31 CFR 103.11(n) and 103.11(s), respectively; and 
    add definitions of the terms ``Indian Gaming Regulatory Act'', 
    ``State'', and ``Territories and Insular Possessions'', as proposed in 
    31 CFR 103.11 (v), (w), and (x), respectively. A related amendment is 
    proposed to the record retention requirements found in 31 CFR 
    103.36(b)(7), to reflect the regulatory system contemplated by the 
    Indian Gaming Regulatory Act.
        B. Definition of Casino. The definition of casino is proposed to be 
    amended to include explicitly casinos operated on Indian lands. Under 
    the proposed amendment, the term casino would include, inter alia, any 
    casino or gambling casino duly licensed or authorized to do business 
    under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act or other federal, state, or 
    tribal law or arrangement affecting Indian lands. The term would thus 
    include casinos that are doing business on Indian lands on a basis 
    other than that specified in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. For 
    example, a casino that operates on Indian lands under a view that 
    compliance with the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act is unnecessary or 
    inconsistent with inherent tribal rights would not for that reason be 
    exempted from the terms of the Bank Secrecy Act, to the extent that 
    those terms would otherwise apply to the casino's operations.2
    
        \2\ The authority for the application of the Bank Secrecy Act to 
    casinos that are neither licensed by state or local authorities nor 
    operated on Indian Lands pursuant to the Indian Gaming Regulatory 
    Act is found in 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(Y) and (Z), cited above, which 
    as noted were the basis for application of the Bank Secrecy Act to 
    casinos prior to the enactment of the Money Laundering Suppression 
    Act.
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        The general need for and appropriateness of treatment of casinos as 
    financial institutions for purposes of the Bank Secrecy Act have been 
    accepted, as indicated above, since the mid-1980s. Treasury made clear 
    in its first formal statements on this subject the need to prevent 
    casinos, which both deal in cash and cash-equivalent chips and can 
    offer a variety of other financial services to customers, from being 
    used to avoid the effect of the Bank Secrecy Act.3 There is no 
    reason to expect that the potential risk of such activity in casinos on 
    Indian lands, if those casinos were not subject to the Bank Secrecy 
    Act, is any less (or any greater) than for state-licensed casinos. 
    Prior to the enactment of the Money Laundering Suppression Act, the 
    issue whether the Bank Secrecy Act could be applied to gaming 
    operations on Indian lands was unsettled in light of the language of 
    section 20(d) of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, 25 U.S.C. 2719(d), 
    and the disinclination to apply general federal legislation to the 
    affairs of Indian tribes without clear Congressional authorization. 
    Section 409 of the Money Laundering Suppression Act grants direct 
    authority to the Secretary of the Treasury to apply the Bank Secrecy 
    Act to most tribal gaming operations and is backed by a strong 
    expression of Congressional intent, in the legislative documents 
    accompanying the statute, ``* * * to eliminate confusion about which 
    currency reporting system applies to Indian casinos.'' See H.R. Rep. 
    No. 652, 103d Cong., 2d Sess. 193 (1994). (The other currency reporting 
    system is that created, for trades or businesses not subject to the 
    Bank Secrecy Act, by section 6050I of the Internal Revenue Code of 
    1986.)
    
        \3\ The preamble to the final rule bringing casinos within the 
    Bank Secrecy Act stated that
        [i]n recent years Treasury has found that an increasing number 
    of persons are using gambling casinos for money laundering and tax 
    evasion purposes. In a number of instances, narcotics traffickers 
    have used gambling casinos as substitutes for other financial 
    institutions in order to avoid the reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements of the Bank Secrecy Act.
        Inclusion of casinos in the definition of financial 
    institution[s] in 31 CFR Part 103 was among the specific 
    recommendations in the October 1984 report of the President's 
    Commission on Organized Crime, `The Cash Connection: Organized 
    Crime, Financial Institutions, and Money Laundering'. The problem 
    was also the subject of hearings in 1984 before the House Judiciary 
    Subcommittee on Crime entitled `The Use of Casinos to Launder the 
    Proceeds of Drug Trafficking and Organized Crime'.
        In order to prevent the use of casinos in this fashion, Treasury 
    is amending the regulations in 31 CFR Part 103 to require gambling 
    casinos to file the same types of reports [and maintain the same 
    types of records] that it requires from financial institutions 
    currently covered by the Bank Secrecy Act.
        50 FR 5065, 5066, (February 6, 1985); see also 49 FR 32861, 
    32862 (August 17, 1984) (corresponding language in notice of 
    proposed rulemaking).
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        The retention in the proposed regulation of the term ``casino'', 
    rather than substitution in 31 CFR 103.11(i)(7)(i) of the broader 
    authorizing language of 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(X), is intentional. The 
    Department of the Treasury has generally sought to apply the Bank 
    Secrecy Act to gaming establishments that provide their customers with 
    a financial product--gaming--and as a corollary offer a broad array of 
    financial services, such as customer deposit or credit accounts, 
    facilities for transmitting and receiving funds transfers directly from 
    other institutions, and check cashing and currency exchange services, 
    that are similar to those offered by depository institutions and other 
    financial firms.
        By way of contrast, the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act defines 
    classes of gaming establishments with reference to specific games that 
    may be offered by those establishments. States or the NIGC may 
    authorize and regulate under that Act tribal gaming activities, such as 
    bingo, lotteries, and pari-mutuel betting, that are not generally 
    offered in casino settings. These types of gaming may create different 
    problems for law enforcement, tax compliance, and counter-money 
    laundering programs than do full-scale casino operations. Although the 
    Money Laundering Suppression Act grants the Department of the Treasury 
    authority to extend the Bank Secrecy Act to the full range of gaming 
    establishments in the United States, FinCEN wishes to concentrate at 
    this time on resolving the issues raised by extending the existing Bank 
    Secrecy Act structure to true casino-like establishments operating on 
    Indian lands.
        The other changes in the definition of casino are designed simply 
    to list explicitly the three classes of government authorities that can 
    authorize or license casinos subject to the Bank Secrecy Act. The 
    changes are intended neither to expand nor contract the coverage of the 
    Bank Secrecy Act to casinos operating under State authority or under 
    the authority of various United States territories or possessions.
        C. Treatment of Casinos Under the Bank Secrecy Act. Thus, under the 
    proposed regulations, casinos operating on Indian lands would become 
    subject not simply to the Bank Secrecy Act's currency transaction 
    reporting rules but to the full set of provisions (described by the 
    Congress as ``a comprehensive currency reporting and detailed 
    recordkeeping system with numerous 
    
    [[Page 39667]]
    anti-money laundering safeguards'') to which other casinos in the 
    United States are subject. See H.R. Rep. No. 652, supra. 
        The Bank Secrecy Act generally imposes several sets of requirements 
    on casinos. First, each casino is required to file with the Department 
    of the Treasury a report of each receipt or disbursement of more than 
    $10,000 in currency in its gaming operations; aggregation of multiple 
    transactions is required in a number of situations. See 31 CFR 
    103.22(a)(2). In addition, later this year, Treasury will issue 
    regulations to require financial institutions, including casinos, to 
    file reports of suspicious transactions. See 31 U.S.C. 5318(g)(1).
        Each casino is also required by the Bank Secrecy Act to maintain 
    certain records relating to the casino's operation, including records 
    identifying account holders (see 31 CFR 103.36(a)), or showing 
    transactions for or through each customer's account (see, generally, 31 
    CFR 103.36(b)), and transactions involving persons, accounts or places 
    outside the United States, (see 31 CFR 103.36(b)(5)); records which are 
    prepared or used by a casino to monitor a customer's gaming activity or 
    records of purchases of more than $3,000 worth of checks or other 
    monetary instruments are also among the types of records that must be 
    maintained (see 31 CFR 103.36(b)(8) and (b)(9)). Finally, casinos must 
    institute training and internal control programs to assure and monitor 
    compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act (see 31 CFR 103.36(b)(10) and 
    103.54(a)).
        Gaming establishments within the scope of the proposed rule will 
    remain subject to the filing requirements of section 6050I of the 
    Internal Revenue Code, with respect to their gaming and financial 
    services operations, until this proposed rule becomes effective. See 
    section 6050I of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. 6050I(a) and (c); 
    Treas. Reg. 1.6050I-1(d)(2). Gaming establishments, whether non-tribal 
    or tribal, that are not included within the definition of casino in the 
    Bank Secrecy Act remain fully subject to the currency reporting rules 
    of section 6050I of the Internal Revenue Code; section 6050I of the 
    Code will also continue to apply to non-gaming and non-financial 
    services operations, for example hotel accommodations, at casinos that 
    are subject to the Bank Secrecy Act.
        D. Request for Comments on Specific Subjects. FinCEN recognizes 
    that the circumstances of tribal gaming are not uniform throughout the 
    United States, and it is keenly aware of the need to proceed 
    thoughtfully in adopting the rules of the Bank Secrecy Act to the 
    realities of the operation of casinos on Indian lands. FinCEN 
    specifically seeks comment on the following questions:
        1. Are there particular parts of the Bank Secrecy Act regulations 
    applicable to casinos generally that do not accurately reflect the way 
    tribal casinos operate?
        2. What types of financial services, other than gaming, are offered 
    by tribal casinos or by other financial businesses operating at such 
    casinos?
        3. How can compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act by tribal casinos 
    best be examined and enforced?
        4. How should compliance by tribal casinos with the Bank Secrecy 
    Act be integrated with the regulatory regimes created by the Indian 
    Gaming Regulatory Act and the tribal-state compacts required by that 
    statute for authorization of Class III gaming?
        In seeking guidance on these and other issues raised by this notice 
    of proposed rulemaking, FinCEN is interested in hearing from all 
    parties potentially affected by the proposed rules, including Indian 
    tribes on whose lands gaming is conducted, tribal or non-tribal 
    enterprises that manage casinos on such lands, and officials of state 
    and local governments within whose boundaries such lands are located. 
    FinCEN will consider holding a public hearing on the proposed rule if 
    comments suggest that a public hearing would be productive.
        Equalization of the treatment of state-licensed and tribal casinos 
    is necessary as a prelude to the consideration of broader issues 
    affecting the application of the Bank Secrecy Act to the gaming 
    industry. Those issues include whether clarifications should be made in 
    the definition of casino as new types of gaming develop (or whether the 
    term ``casino'' is sufficiently elastic to encompass such developments, 
    \4\) whether special rules should be applicable to small casinos, and 
    how best to implement the provisions added to the Bank Secrecy Act 
    generally with respect to gaming establishments by the Annunzio-Wylie 
    Anti-Money Laundering Act of 1992, Title XV of the Housing and 
    Community Development Act of 1992, Pub. L. 102-550, and the Money 
    Laundering Suppression Act.
    
        \4\ For example, an establishment that claimed to be a gambling 
    ``club'' rather than a casino because it simply offered customers an 
    opportunity to gamble with one another, but that in practice funded 
    certain customers so that other customers were in effect gambling 
    against ``house'' money, and that offered its customers financial 
    services of various kinds, is arguably a casino under present law. 
    Thus, for example, if such a ``club'' failed to file currency 
    transactions reports or allowed a customer to deposit funds in a 
    player bank account in the name of the customer without requiring 
    the customer to provide identifying information, the club would 
    arguably be operating in violation of the Bank Secrecy Act.
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        E. Other Changes in ``Meaning of Terms''. Changes are also proposed 
    to be made to the definitions of ``person'' and ``United States'' in 31 
    CFR 103.11(n) and (s), and definitions of the terms ``Indian Gaming 
    Regulatory Act'', ``State'', and ``Territories and Insular 
    Possessions'' are proposed to be added to Sec. 103.11 as new paragraphs 
    (v), (w), and (x), respectively. As explained immediately above, these 
    definitions are proposed to permit efficient application of 31 CFR Part 
    103 to tribal casinos. The proposed definitions of terms ``State'' and 
    ``Territories and Insular Possessions'' will be repeated in the rules 
    published to implement the provisions of section 402 of the Money 
    Laundering Suppression Act relating to the mandatory exemption of 
    certain transactions with depository institutions from the currency 
    transaction reporting requirements of 31 U.S.C. 5313 and 31 CFR 
    103.22.\5\
    
        \5\ The numbering scheme used in this notice of proposed 
    rulemaking reflects the July 1, 1994 edition of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations; the definitions contained in 31 CFR 103.11 will 
    automatically be renumbered as of January 1, 1996, when the rules 
    relating to funds transfers and transmittals of funds by financial 
    institutions take effect. FinCEN intends to issue in the near future 
    a notice of proposed rulemaking reordering all of the provisions of 
    31 CFR 103.11 as well as proposing changes in certain of those 
    provisions; the terms dealt with in this notice will appear in that 
    notice of proposed rulemaking without further changes relating to 
    tribal casinos.
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        F. Additions to Record Maintenance Requirements. The requirement of 
    31 CFR 103.36(b)(7) that casinos retain all records, documents or 
    manuals required to be maintained under state and local laws or 
    regulations is proposed to be amended to recognize that tribal casinos 
    are required to retain records in many cases either by tribal governing 
    authorities or under the terms of tribal-state compacts authorizing 
    Class III gaming on Indian lands under the Indian Gaming Regulatory 
    Act. The proposed change simply conforms the record retention 
    requirements to reflect the fact that a casino on tribal lands will 
    retain certain documents because tribal rules or tribal-state compacts, 
    rather than state regulation, require their retention.
    
    Proposed Effective Date
    
        The amendments to 31 CFR Part 103 proposed in this notice of 
    proposed rulemaking will become effective 90 days following publication 
    in the Federal Register of the final rule to which this notice relates. 
    
    
    [[Page 39668]]
    
    
    Special Analyses
    
        It has been determined that this notice of proposed rulemaking (i) 
    is not subject to the ``budgetary impact statement'' requirement of 
    section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4) 
    and (ii) is not a significant regulatory action as defined in Executive 
    Order 12866. It is not anticipated that this proposed rule, if adopted 
    as a final rule, will have an annual effect on the economy of $100 
    million or more. Nor will it, if so adopted, 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. The proposed rule is 
    neither inconsistent with, nor does it interfere with, actions taken or 
    planned by other agencies. Finally, it raises no novel legal or policy 
    issues.
        Because this rule affects Indian gaming establishments with gross 
    annual gaming revenues in excess of $1 million, it is hereby certified 
    that this proposed rule is not likely to have a significant economic 
    impact on a substantial number of small entities.
    Drafting Information
    
        Several individuals in FinCEN's Office of Legal Counsel and its 
    Office of Regulatory Policy and Enforcement participated in the 
    development of these regulations.
    
    List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 103
    
        Authority delegations (Government agencies), Banks and banking, 
    Currency, Foreign banking, Investigations, Law enforcement, Reporting 
    and recordkeeping requirements, Taxes.
    
    Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
    
        Accordingly, 31 CFR Part 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: Pub. L. No. 91-508, Title I, 84 Stat. 1114 (12 U.S.C. 
    1829b, 1951-1959); and the Currency and Foreign Transactions 
    Reporting Act, Pub. L. No. 91-508, Title II, 84 Stat. 1118, as 
    amended (31 U.S.C. 5311-5330).
    
        2. Section 103.11 is amended by revising paragraphs (i)(7)(i), (n), 
    and (s), and adding paragraphs (v), (w), and (x) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 103.11  Meaning of terms.
    
    * * * * *
        (i) * * *
        (7) (i) Casino. A casino or gambling casino that (A) is duly 
    licensed or authorized to do business as such in the United States, 
    whether under the laws of a State or of a Territory or Insular 
    Possession of the United States, or under the Indian Gaming Regulatory 
    Act or other federal, state, or tribal law or arrangement affecting 
    Indian lands (including, without limitation, a casino operating on the 
    assumption or under the view that no such authorization is required for 
    casino operation on Indian lands) and that (B) has gross annual gaming 
    revenue in excess of $1 million. The term includes the principal 
    headquarters and every domestic branch or place of business of the 
    casino.
    * * * * *
        (n) Person. An individual, a corporation, a partnership, a trust or 
    estate, a joint stock company, an association, a syndicate, joint 
    venture, or other unincorporated organization or group, an Indian Tribe 
    (as that term is defined in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act), and all 
    entities cognizable as legal personalities.
    * * * * *
        (s) United States. The States of the United States, the District of 
    Columbia, the Indian lands (as that term is defined in the Indian 
    Gaming Regulatory Act), and the Territories and Insular Possessions of 
    the United States.
    * * * * *
        (v) Indian Gaming Regulatory Act. The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act 
    of 1988, codified at 25 U.S.C. 2701 et seq.
        (w) State. The States of the United States and, wherever necessary 
    to carry out the provisions of this Part, the District of Columbia.
        (x) Territories and Insular Possessions. The Commonwealth of Puerto 
    Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, Guam, the Commonwealth of the 
    Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, and all other territories and 
    possessions of the United States other than the Indian lands and the 
    District of Columbia.
    
    
    Sec. 103.36  [Amended]
    
        3. Section 103.36(b)(7) is amended by adding after the words 
    ``state and local laws or regulations'' the words ``, regulations of 
    any governing Indian tribe or tribal government, or terms of (or any 
    regulations issued under) any Tribal-State compacts entered into 
    pursuant to the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, with respect to the 
    casino in question''.
    
        Dated: July 26, 1995.
    Stanley E. Morris,
    Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
    [FR Doc. 95-19137 Filed 7-31-95; 3:30 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4820-03-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/03/1995
Department:
Treasury Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
95-19137
Dates:
Written comments on all aspects of the proposed regulation are welcome and must be received on or before November 1, 1995.
Pages:
39665-39668 (4 pages)
RINs:
1506-AA07: Amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations Affecting Tribal and State-Licensed Gaming Establishments
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1506-AA07/amendment-to-the-bank-secrecy-act-regulations-affecting-tribal-and-state-licensed-gaming-establishme
PDF File:
95-19137.pdf
CFR: (2)
31 CFR 103.11
31 CFR 103.36