97-23639. Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Proposed Amendments to the Bank Secrecy Act RegulationsExemptions From the Requirement to Report Transactions in CurrencyPhase II  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 173 (Monday, September 8, 1997)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 47156-47166]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-23639]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    31 CFR Part 103
    
    RIN 1506-AA12
    
    
    Financial Crimes Enforcement Network; Proposed Amendments to the 
    Bank Secrecy Act Regulations--Exemptions From the Requirement to Report 
    Transactions in Currency--Phase II
    
    AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, Treasury.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (``FinCEN'') is (i) 
    proposing rules to further reform and
    
    [[Page 47157]]
    
    simplify the process by which banks may exempt transactions of retail 
    and other businesses from the requirement to report transactions in 
    currency in excess of $10,000, and (ii) restating generally, to reflect 
    such changes, the text of the Bank Secrecy Act rule requiring the 
    reporting by financial institutions of transactions in currency. The 
    proposed changes would constitute a further step to achieve the 
    reduction set by the Money Laundering Suppression Act of 1994 in the 
    number of currency transaction reports required to be filed annually by 
    depository institutions, as part of a continuing program to reduce 
    unnecessary burdens imposed upon financial institutions by the Bank 
    Secrecy Act and increase the cost-effectiveness of the counter-money 
    laundering policies of the Department of the Treasury.
    
    DATES: Written comments on all aspects of the proposal are welcome and 
    must be received on or before December 8, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments should be submitted to: Financial Crimes 
    Enforcement Network, Department of the Treasury, 2070 Chain Bridge 
    Road, Vienna, VA 22182.
        Attention: NPRM--CTR Exemptions, Phase II. 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--CTR Exemptions, Phase II.'' 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, N.W., Washington, D.C. 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, 
    FinCEN, (703) 905-3819; Charles Klingman, Financial Institutions Policy 
    Specialist, FinCEN, (703) 905-3602; Stephen R. Kroll, Legal Counsel, 
    Cynthia L. Clark, on detail to the Office of Legal Counsel, and Albert 
    R. Zarate, Attorney-Advisor, Office of Legal Counsel, FinCEN, (703) 
    905-3590.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Introduction
    
        This document contains a proposed rule that would amend 31 CFR 
    103.22 to (i) reform and simplify the process by which depository 
    institutions 1 may exempt transactions involving retail and 
    other businesses from the requirement to report transactions in 
    currency in excess of $10,000, and (ii) restate generally, to reflect 
    the proposed changes to the administrative exemption system, the 
    general requirement for financial institutions to report transactions 
    in currency. The proposed changes are designed to implement the terms 
    of 31 U.S.C. 5313(e) (and related provisions of 31 U.S.C. 5313 (f) and 
    (g)), which were added to the Bank Secrecy Act by section 402(a) 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 (September 23, 
    1994).
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        \1\ As explained below, the text of the rule itself uses the 
    term ``bank,'' which, as defined in 31 CFR 103.11(c), includes both 
    banks and other classes of depository institutions.
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    II. Background
    
    A. Statutory Provisions
    
        The Bank Secrecy Act, Titles I and II of 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 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.
        The reporting by financial institutions of transactions in currency 
    in excess of $10,000 has long been a major component of the Department 
    of the Treasury's implementation of the Bank Secrecy Act. The reporting 
    requirement is imposed by 31 CFR 103.22, a rule issued under the broad 
    authority granted to the Secretary of the Treasury by 31 U.S.C. 5313(a) 
    to require reports of domestic coins and currency transactions.
        Four new provisions (31 U.S.C. 5313 (d) through (g)) concerning 
    exemptions were added to 31 U.S.C. 5313 by the Money Laundering 
    Suppression Act. 31 U.S.C. 5313(d) provides that the Secretary of the 
    Treasury shall exempt a depository institution from the requirement to 
    report currency transactions with respect to transactions between the 
    depository institution and four categories of bank customer. The 
    requirements of that subsection are reflected in the terms of 31 CFR 
    103.22(h), which became effective, as an interim rule (the ``Interim 
    Rule''), with respect to transactions in currency after April 30, 1996, 
    see 61 FR 18204 (April 24, 1996), and is being published as a final 
    rule elsewhere in today's edition of the Federal Register. 2
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        \2\  Although the Interim Rule is today being amended and 
    reissued as a final rule, it is referred to in this document as the 
    Interim Rule for ease of reference.
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        31 U.S.C. 5313(e) authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to 
    exempt a depository institution from the requirement to report 
    transactions in currency between a depository institution and a 
    qualified business customer of the institution. Subsection (e)(2) 
    defines a ``qualified business customer'' as a business which
    
        (A) Maintains a transaction account (as defined in section 
    19(b)(1)(C) of the Act) at the depository institution;
        (B) Frequently engages in transactions with the depository 
    institution which are subject to the reporting requirements of 
    subsection (a); and
        (C) Meets criteria which the Secretary determines are sufficient 
    to ensure that the purposes of this subchapter are carried out 
    without requiring a report with respect to such transactions.
    
        Subsection (e)(3) provides that the Secretary of the Treasury shall 
    establish, by regulation, the criteria for granting and maintaining an 
    exemption under subsection (e)(1).
        Subsection (e)(4)(A) provides that the Secretary of the Treasury 
    shall establish guidelines for depository institutions to follow in 
    selecting customers for an exemption under this subsection. Under 
    subsection (e)(4)(B), those guidelines may include a description of the 
    type of businesses for which no exemption will be granted under this 
    subsection.
        Subsection (e)(5) provides that the Secretary of the Treasury shall 
    prescribe regulations requiring each depository institution to
    
        (A) Review, at least once each year, the qualified business 
    customers of such institution with respect to whom an exemption has 
    been granted under this subsection; and
        (B) Upon the completion of such review, resubmit information 
    about such customers, with such modifications as the institution 
    determines to be appropriate, to the Secretary for the Secretary's 
    approval.
    
        Subsection (e)(6) states that during the two-year period beginning 
    on the date of enactment of the Money Laundering Suppression Act, the 
    discretionary
    
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    exemption rules shall be applied by the Secretary of the Treasury on 
    the basis of such criteria as the Secretary determines to be 
    appropriate to achieve an orderly implementation of the requirements of 
    this subsection. Subsection (f) places limits on the liability of a 
    depository institution in connection with a transaction that has been 
    exempted from reporting under either 31 U.S.C. 5313(d) or (e) and 
    provides for the coordination of any exemption with other Bank Secrecy 
    Act provisions, especially those relating to the reporting of 
    suspicious transactions. New subsection (g) defines ``depository 
    institution'' for purposes of the new exemption provisions.
        Section 402(b) of the Money Laundering Suppression Act states 
    simply that in administering the new statutory exemption provisions:
    
    the Secretary of the Treasury shall seek to reduce, within a 
    reasonable period of time, the number of reports required to be 
    filed in the aggregate by depository institutions pursuant to 
    section 5313(a) of title 31 * * * by at least 30 percent of the 
    number filed during the year preceding [September 23, 1994,] the 
    date of enactment of [the Money Laundering Suppression Act].
    
    B. Shortcomings of the Administrative Exemption System
    
        The enactment of 31 U.S.C. 5313 (d) through (g) reflects a 
    Congressional intention to ``reform * * * the procedures for exempting 
    transactions between depository institutions and their customers.'' See 
    H.R. Rep. 103-652, 103d Cong., 2d Sess. 186 (August 2, 1994). The 
    administrative exemption procedures at which the statutory changes are 
    directed are found in 31 CFR 103.22 (b)(2) and (c) through (f); those 
    procedures have not succeeded in eliminating the reporting of routine 
    currency transactions by businesses.
        Several reasons have been given for this lack of success. The first 
    is the retention by banks of liability for making incorrect exemption 
    determinations. The second is the complexity of the administrative 
    exemption procedures (which require banks, for example, to assign 
    dollar limits to each exemption based on the amounts of currency 
    projected to be needed for the customary conduct of the exempt 
    customer's lawful business, and which increase the risk of liability 
    for the bank). Finally, advances in technology have made it less costly 
    for some banks to report all currency transactions rather than to incur 
    the administrative costs (and risks) of exempting customers and then 
    administering the terms of particular exemptions properly.
        The problems created by the administrative exemption system also 
    include that system's failure to provide the Treasury with information 
    needed for thoughtful administration of the Bank Secrecy Act. Although 
    banks are required to maintain a centralized list of exempt customers 
    and to make that list available upon request, see 31 CFR 103.22 (f) and 
    (g), there is no way short of a bank-by-bank request for lists (with 
    the time and cost such a request would entail both for banks and 
    government) for Treasury to learn the extent to which routine 
    transactions are effectively screened out of the system or (for that 
    matter) the extent to which exemptions have been granted in situations 
    in which they are not justified.
        In crafting the 1994 statutory provisions relating to mandatory and 
    discretionary exemptions, Congress sought to alter the burden of 
    liability and uncertainty that the administrative exemption system 
    created. The statutory provisions embraced several categories of 
    transactions that were either already partially exempt or plainly 
    eligible for exemption under the administrative exemption 
    system.3
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        \3\ Thus, as noted below, transactions in currency between 
    domestic banks are already exempt from reporting, see 31 CFR 
    103.22(b)(1)(ii), and ``[d]eposits or withdrawals, exchanges of 
    currency or other payments and transfers by local or state 
    governments, or the United States or any of its agencies or 
    instrumentalities'' are one of the categories of transactions 
    specifically described as eligible for exemption by banks. See 31 
    CFR 103.22(b)(2)(iii).
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    C. Objectives of Proposed Changes
    
        The changes proposed in this document represent the next step in 
    the use of section 402 of the Money Laundering Suppression Act to 
    transform the Bank Secrecy Act provisions relating to currency 
    transaction reporting. The goal of FinCEN's work in this area, like the 
    Congress' goal in shaping the Money Laundering Suppression Act 
    provisions on exemptions, is to reduce the cost of compliance with, and 
    to further a fundamental restructuring of, the Bank Secrecy Act. The 
    restructuring emphasizes cost-effective collection of only that 
    information that is likely to benefit law enforcement and regulatory 
    authorities. See 61 FR 18205.
        Because this notice builds upon the provisions of the Interim Rule, 
    its scope and intention must be considered against the background of 
    the Interim Rule, whose terms are now found in 31 CFR 103.22(h). That 
    rule creates a streamlined exemption procedure eliminating from 
    reporting transactions in currency between banks and (i) other banks 
    operating in the United States; (ii) government departments and 
    agencies, and entities that exercise governmental authority; (iii) 
    companies listed on certain national stock exchanges; and (iv) certain 
    subsidiaries of those listed companies. As FinCEN explained when the 
    Interim Rule was published, the currency transactions of bank customers 
    in those categories are either required to be exempt from reporting by 
    statute, were already effectively exempt from reporting under the terms 
    of 31 CFR 103 or, in the case of listed companies and certain of their 
    subsidiaries, are enterprises whose routine currency transaction 
    reports are of little or no value to law enforcement officials.
        The task of this second stage reform of the exemption system is to 
    provide a similar blanket relief, to the extent possible, to those 
    categories of business enterprise of all sizes that cannot easily be 
    described in a single phrase and that are not subject to the sorts of 
    regulatory and market place oversight that shape the environment of 
    public companies. In accomplishing that task, FinCEN has attempted to 
    pare down the existing exemption system, while still providing federal 
    authorities with the tools to monitor and prevent abuse of the reformed 
    exemption system.
    
    III. Specific Provisions
    
    A. Overview
    
        Eliminating the administrative exemption system in section 103.22 
    requires the deletion of the bulk of that section, paragraphs (b)-(g). 
    Because that is so, and because the structure and many of the rules of 
    section 103.22(h) also apply to the proposed reformed exemption system 
    for other customers, the proposed rule completely restates section 
    103.22 so that its terms may be presented clearly. With two 
    exceptions--the treatment of the Postal Service and the treatment of 
    recordkeeping facilities of a financial institution 4--the 
    restatement does not involve any change to, or an intention to open for 
    comment, the terms of section 103.22 that do not relate to exemptions 
    from the requirement to report transactions in currency. Certain 
    provisions that have not been changed
    
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    have been moved for housekeeping purposes.
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        \4\ Language has been added in proposed new paragraph (b), 
    explicitly stating that the general obligation to report 
    transactions in currency in excess of $10,000 does not apply to 
    payments or transfers made solely in connection with the purchase of 
    postage or philatelic products from the Postal Service. Language 
    also has been added in proposed new paragraph (c), providing that a 
    financial institution includes all of its domestic branch offices, 
    and any recordkeeping facility for those offices, for purposes of 
    the requirement to report transactions in currency.
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        As discussed in more detail below, the changes proposed to be made 
    by the rule are:
         Deletion of present paragraphs (b)-(g) of section 103.22;
         Redesignation of paragraph (h) of section 103.22 (the 
    Interim Rule) as proposed new paragraph (d) in section 103.22;
         Addition of two new classes of ``exempt persons,'' namely, 
    non-listed businesses and payroll customers, in proposed new paragraphs 
    (d)(2)(vi) and (vii) of section 103.22;
         Addition of designation and annual filing rules for the 
    exemption of non-listed companies and payroll customers, in proposed 
    new paragraphs (d)(3)(iii) and (d)(4)(ii) of section 103.22;
         Addition of operating rules governing the exemption of 
    non-listed businesses and payroll customers, in proposed new paragraphs 
    (d)(5)(v)-(ix) of section 103.22; and
         Certain conforming changes to the structure of proposed 
    new paragraph (d) (old section 103.22(h)).
        For convenience, the proposed redistribution of the provisions of 
    present section 103.22 may be summarized as follows:
    
                                                   Distribution Table                                               
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         Present 103.22                                          Proposed 103.22                    
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    No provision...........................................  103.22(a).                                             
    103.22(a)(1):                                                                                                   
      Sentences 1-2........................................  103.22(b)(1).                                          
      Sentences 3-4........................................  103.22(c)(2).                                          
    103.22(a)(2)(i)-(ii)...................................  103.22(b)(2).                                          
    103.22(a)(2)(iii)......................................  103.22(c)(3).                                          
    103.22(a)(3)...........................................  Deleted in part; 103.22(c)(2).                         
    103.22(a)(4)...........................................  103.22(c)(1).                                          
    103.22(b)..............................................  Deleted, except 103.22(b)(1)(iii) and 103.22(b)(2)(iv).
    103.22(b)(1)(iii)......................................  103.22(d)(1).                                          
    103.22(b)(2)(iv).......................................  103.22(d)(2)(vii).                                     
    103.22(c)..............................................  Deleted.                                               
    103.22(d)..............................................  Deleted.                                               
    103.22(e)..............................................  Deleted.                                               
    103.22(f)..............................................  Deleted.                                               
    103.22(g)..............................................  Deleted.                                               
    103.22(h)(1) 5.........................................  103.22(d)(1).                                          
    103.22(h)(2) (i)-(iii).................................  103.22(d)(2) (i)-(iii).                                
    103.22(h)(2) (iv), (vi)................................  103.22(d)(2)(iv).                                      
    103.22(h)(2)(v)........................................  103.22(d)(2)(v).                                       
    No provision...........................................  103.22(d)(2)(vi).                                      
    No provision...........................................  103.22(d)(2)(vii).                                     
    103.22(h)(3) (i)-(ii)..................................  103.22(d)(3)(i).                                       
    103.22(h)(3)(iii)......................................  103.22(d)(3)(ii).                                      
    103.22(h)(3)(iv).......................................  103.22(d)(3)(i).                                       
    No provision...........................................  103.22(d)(3)(iii).                                     
    No provision...........................................  103.22(d)(4) (i)-(ii).                                 
    103.22(h)(4) (i)-(iv)..................................  103.22(d)(5) (i)-(iv).                                 
    103.22(h)(4)(v)........................................  103.22(d)(5)(x).                                       
    No provision...........................................  103.22(d)(5) (v)-(ix).                                 
    103.22(h)(5)...........................................  103.22(d)(6).                                          
    103.22(h)(6)(i)........................................  103.22(d)(7)(i).                                       
    103.22(h)(6)(ii).......................................  103.22(d)(7)(iii).                                     
    103.22(h)(6)(iii)......................................  103.22(d)(7)(iv).                                      
    No provision...........................................  103.22(d)(7)(ii).                                      
    103.22(h)(7)...........................................  103.22(d)(8).                                          
    103.22(h)(8)...........................................  103.22(d)(9).                                          
    103.22(h)(9)...........................................  Deleted.                                               
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    B. 103.22(a) General
    
        Paragraph  (a) describes generally the scope and organization of 
    proposed restated section 103.22. The reporting obligations of 
    financial institutions are restated in proposed paragraph (b). The 
    rules covering aggregation for reporting purposes--i.e., rules relating 
    to multiple branches of financial institutions and multiple 
    transactions conducted by their customers--previously found in the 
    third and fourth sentences of section 103.22(a)(1) and section 
    103.22(a)(4), are restated in proposed paragraph (c). The rules 
    governing exemption by banks of transactions with certain customers, as 
    noted, now appear in a single paragraph (d).
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        \5\ All references to paragraph (h) of section 103.22 are to the 
    final rule that appears elsewhere in today's edition of the Federal 
    Register.
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    C. 103.22(b) Filing Obligations
    
        Proposed paragraph (b) contains the blanket statement of the 
    obligation of financial institutions to report transactions in currency 
    in excess of $10,000. As is the case in the present rule, a separate 
    statement is made of the obligations of casinos.
        The only change in reporting obligations that appears in proposed 
    paragraph (b) relates to the Postal Service. The proposed paragraph 
    makes it clear that the general obligation to report transactions in 
    currency in excess of $10,000 does not apply to payments or transfers 
    made solely in connection
    
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    with the purchase of postage or philatelic products from the Postal 
    Service; the change reflects a proposed amendment to the treatment of 
    the Postal Service, for purposes of the Bank Secrecy Act, that was 
    published as part of a set of proposed rules relating to money services 
    businesses (``MSBs) on May 21, 1997. See 62 FR 27890.
        Comments are specifically requested on the interplay between the 
    ineligible businesses listed in proposed paragraph (d)(5)(viii) and the 
    proposed definitions of MSBs set forth in the proposed rules that were 
    published in the Federal Register on May 21, 1997. FinCEN recognizes 
    that the application of the two sets of proposed rules (exemptions and 
    MSBs) may present special difficulties in the case of, for example, 
    grocery stores that also sell money services products. FinCEN, 
    therefore, would welcome suggestions regarding ways of preventing the 
    application of the proposed definition of money services businesses to 
    a portion of those grocery stores' business activities from 
    disqualifying such stores from consideration as exempt persons for non-
    money services businesses activities. FinCEN also would welcome 
    comments on ways to shorten the list of ineligible businesses, given 
    the money services businesses registration and the annual aggregate 
    currency reporting requirement.
    
    D. 103.22(c) Aggregation
    
        Proposed new paragraph (c) restates the reporting rules applicable 
    to multiple branches of financial institutions and multiple 
    transactions of their customers. Those rules now appear in paragraphs 
    (a)(1) and (a)(4) of section 103.22. As an analogue to a change, 
    discussed below, that will permit affiliated banks to make a single 
    designation of each exempt person, one change is proposed to the rules 
    relating to aggregation. That change would add language to make it 
    clear that for purposes of the currency transaction reporting 
    requirements, a financial institution includes not only all domestic 
    branch offices, but also any recordkeeping facility, wherever located, 
    that contains records relating to the transactions of the institution's 
    domestic branch offices.
    
    E. 103.22(d) Transactions of Exempt Persons
    
    1. General
        As noted above, proposed paragraph (d) of section 103.22 is a 
    restatement and further amendment of the exemption system provided in 
    paragraph (h) of section 103.22. That paragraph was drafted not only to 
    provide the first stage of regulatory relief contemplated by the Money 
    Laundering Suppression Act amendments to 31 U.S.C. 5313, but also to 
    provide a structure into which the terms of the second stage of relief 
    would conveniently fit.
    2. New Classes of Exempt Person
        Proposed paragraphs (d)(2) (vi) and (vii) introduce two new classes 
    of exempt persons, ``non-listed businesses'' and ``payroll customers.''
        Non-listed businesses. The definition of non-listed business is an 
    attempt to summarize, in a single sentence, all commercial enterprises 
    with a recurring need to deal with currency that are not listed 
    companies or their subsidiaries. Thus, every enterprise that might have 
    been eligible for either a ``unilateral'' or ``special'' exemption 
    under the superseded exemption system (and that is not already treated 
    as an exempt person by the Interim Rule) will now become eligible for 
    exemption under the terms of the new rule, by banks themselves, if such 
    person has been a bank customer for 12 months. There will be no 
    provision for applications to the Detroit Computing Center or elsewhere 
    for authority to recognize an exemption for a particular customer. 
    Transactions by certain customers, listed in proposed paragraph 
    (d)(5)(viii), remain ineligible for exemption.
        Proposed paragraph (d)(2)(vi)(A) requires that any business must 
    have been a bank customer for 12 months before it is eligible for 
    exemption as a non-listed business. That period is 10 months longer 
    than the present 60 day minimum period specified in the administrative 
    practice that has grown up around section 103.22(b) (2) and (d). The 
    difference is justified, in FinCEN's view, by the elimination of 
    virtually all of the other requirements of the present system.
        The limitations on the scope of the non-listed business definition, 
    contained in proposed new paragraphs (d)(2)(vi)(B)-(C), are 
    straightforward. They confine permissible exemptions to bank customers 
    with transaction account relationships with the exempting bank and 
    recurring use of currency, as required by 31 U.S.C. 5313(e)(2).
        Payroll Customer. The definition of payroll customer reflects, for 
    the most part, the terms of present paragraph 103.22(b)(2)(iv), and 
    tracks the format proposed above when defining a non-listed business. 
    Proposed paragraph (d)(2)(vii)(A) requires that any person must have 
    been a bank customer for at least 12 months before it is eligible for 
    exemption as a payroll customer. Proposed new paragraphs 
    (d)(2)(vii)(B)-(C) further confine permissible exemptions to bank 
    customers who regularly withdraw more than $10,000 to pay their United 
    States employees in currency and are United States residents.
    3. Special Requirements for Exemption of Non-Listed Businesses and 
    Payroll Customers.
        There are three special requirements for the recognition of the 
    exemption of non-listed businesses and payroll customers as exempt 
    persons:
         Filing of an ``Designation of Exempt Person'' form (as in 
    the case of all other classes of exempt persons);
         Inclusion on the designation form of a projection of the 
    exempt person's annual currency needs; and
         An annual filing confirming continuation of the exempt 
    person's status as such, listing the aggregate currency deposited and 
    withdrawn by the person during the year in question and any changes of 
    which the bank knows (or should know on the basis of its records) in 
    the ownership or control of the exempt person.
        Before briefly discussing the latter two requirements, it is 
    appropriate to note what the proposed rule would eliminate from the 
    administrative exemption system. There would no longer be any cash 
    limits or ``permitted ranges'' for exempt transactions; a customer that 
    is exempt is, simply, exempt for all purposes, with respect to the 
    currency transaction reporting requirement (although not with respect 
    to the suspicious transaction reporting or other Bank Secrecy Act 
    requirements). There is also no longer any requirement for submission 
    and signature of exemption statements, or for a mandatory exemption 
    list. (The operating rules of paragraph (d)(5), noted below, make 
    further changes in the exemption system in areas for which banks have 
    long requested relief.)
        The purpose of the extensive changes made to the exemption system 
    by the proposed rule--following upon the changes already made to that 
    system by the Interim Rule--is to make it as simple and cost-effective 
    as possible for banks to eliminate the burdens of currency transaction 
    reporting for legitimate customers. Any simplified system can 
    potentially be manipulated by criminals seeking to hide the movement of 
    illegally-obtained currency, despite the best efforts of conscientious 
    bank officials. The proposed requirement that banks initially estimate, 
    and then report annually, the gross totals of currency
    
    [[Page 47161]]
    
    transactions of exempted non-listed customers is designed simply to 
    prevent such unlawful manipulation of the greatly liberalized and 
    simplified exemption system.6 Even under that simplified 
    system, banks would remain subject to the suspicious activity reporting 
    requirements of 31 CFR 103.21, as well as similar reporting 
    requirements imposed by federal bank supervisory agencies. See also 12 
    CFR 21.11 (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency); 12 CFR 208.20 
    (Federal Reserve System); 12 CFR 353.3 (Federal Deposit Insurance 
    Corporation); 12 CFR 563.180 (Office of Thrift Supervision); 12 CFR 
    748.1 (National Credit Union Division). Thus, for example, a sharp 
    increase from one year to the next in the gross total of currency 
    transactions of its exempted customers, may trigger the obligation of a 
    bank to file a suspicious activity report.
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        \6\ The customer statement and dollar limitation provisions that 
    the proposed rule would eliminate were designed--however 
    imperfectly--to limit manipulation of the exemption procedures then 
    in force.
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        The need for some ``counterweight'' in the liberalized system was 
    raised forcefully with FinCEN by federal law enforcement officials 
    during formulation of the proposed rule. Enforcement officials are 
    concerned that necessary easing of the burdens of unnecessary currency 
    transaction reporting not have the unintended effect of opening up 
    avenues for more efficient money laundering. Such avenues could exist 
    if the new rules made it possible for criminals to siphon illegally-
    obtained currency into the daily currency deposits of small businesses 
    in amounts that would not individually attract attention but that in 
    the aggregate produce a steady flow of laundered funds into the banking 
    system.7 The possibility becomes more serious in the case of 
    businesses that maintain accounts at multiple banks, no one of which 
    has a complete picture of the business's currency transaction history 
    or banking needs.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \7\ Cash intensive money services business--e.g., currency 
    exchanges--have been identified in a number of investigations as 
    affording just such an opportunity for money launderers, a fact that 
    contributes to the exclusion of money services businesses from 
    eligibility for treatment as non-listed businesses eligible for 
    exemption.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        That the administrative exemption system's attempt to prevent 
    criminals from hiding within the folds of the exemption system has 
    proved both ineffective and burdensome does not eliminate the need to 
    build cost-effective barriers to abuse into the liberalized system. A 
    simple annual reporting rule has many benefits in this regard.
        At the same time, FinCEN is aware that a requirement for cumulation 
    and annual reporting of gross currency transactions may go beyond the 
    data processing capabilities of some bank systems. More important, it 
    is aware of the need to reach a thoughtful balance between 
    liberalization and anti-abuse provisions if the changed exemption 
    system is to accomplish its paramount objective of providing a cost-
    effective way to eliminate unnecessary filings from the currency 
    transactions reporting system. Thus, it invites suggestions about 
    alternate ways to structure anti-manipulation provisions. In that 
    connection, commenters are asked to consider the following 
    alternatives:
        1. Annual Reporting in Ranges of Value. There is no requirement 
    that annual cumulative currency transaction totals be absolutely 
    precise. It would be sufficient if the annual reporting, and initial 
    correlative estimation of business cash needs, be made in ranges, and 
    the rule could so state. Thus, for example, totals might simply be 
    reported in $25,000, $50,000, or even $100,000 increments in order to 
    accomplish the purposes of cumulation. Such a change would eliminate 
    the concern and cost of pinpoint recordkeeping in this instance.
        2. Reporting of Running Totals, rather than Annual Cumulation. 
    Running totals might be reported on other than an annual basis, so that 
    government computers could perform the necessary cumulation. A bank 
    that normally deleted in currency ledgers at the end of each calendar 
    quarter, for example, might then electronically transfer the necessary 
    data to FinCEN without having to build a new system, or new storage 
    capacity to accommodate annual recordkeeping.
        3. Limited Annual Reporting. Cumulation requirements might be 
    limited to businesses of certain sizes or types.
        In considering approaches other than cumulative currency 
    transaction totals, commenters should be aware that a primary purpose 
    of the proposed rule's anti-manipulation provisions is to limit the 
    amount of judgment banks must make about the meaning of variations in a 
    customer's currency transaction totals. While significant spikes or 
    variations in simple total volume could well implicate the suspicious 
    transaction reporting rules in appropriate cases, the anti-abuse 
    purpose of the cumulative reporting requirement (or any substitute that 
    might be adopted) is to create a buttress or second line of support for 
    the bank's own efforts and to avoid placing all of the pressure for 
    preventing abuses of the currency transaction reporting exemptions on 
    bank officials themselves.
        The success of the proposed liberalization of the currency 
    transaction reporting exemption rules in practice will depend in part 
    upon the receptiveness to the new procedures taken by federal bank 
    examiners. FinCEN is planning a program to familiarize examiners with 
    both the letter and the spirit of the new rules, and it would 
    appreciate comments on the sorts of issues that should be raised with 
    examiners during the course of that program.
        4. New Operating Rules. Six new operating rules are proposed to be 
    added to further simplify the exemption process.
        a. Proposed paragraph (d)(5)(v) requires the bank to aggregate all 
    customer accounts to apply the exemption provisions to that customer. 
    Thus, the bank is obligated, under the proposed rule, to exempt a 
    customer on a bank-wide basis and to count all accounts to determine, 
    for example, whether a customer's cash withdrawals or deposits exceed 
    $10,000. Thus, exemptions will no longer be determined on an account by 
    account basis, but rather on a bank-wide basis. Generally, FinCEN 
    believes that each customer possesses its own Employee Identification 
    Number (``EIN''); thus, this proposed rule does not cover customer 
    accounts with multiple EINs. Comments are welcomed on this topic.
        b. Proposed paragraph (d)(5)(vi) will permit affiliated banks to 
    make a single designation of exempt person, that will apply to all 
    accounts at all banks within the affiliated group; annual currency 
    transaction totals, for the moment at least, will still have to be 
    computed on a bank-by-bank basis.
        c. Proposed paragraph (d)(5)(vii) will permit sole proprietors to 
    continue to be eligible for exemption, so long as personal and business 
    funds are not commingled in the same accounts. FinCEN invites comments 
    on whether this prohibition against commingling will be burdensome for 
    banks to implement.
        d. Proposed paragraph (d)(5)(viii) contains a list of businesses 
    that may not be exempted under the new rules as non-listed companies 
    (although they may qualify for exemption under the more limited payroll 
    customer definition, for the purposes permitted by that definition). A 
    limitation of this kind on the new procedures is explicitly 
    contemplated by the terms of 31 U.S.C. 5313(e)(4)(B); the businesses 
    described are essentially the same as the groups of businesses that are 
    not permitted to be
    
    [[Page 47162]]
    
    granted an exemption under the present system.
        The proposed rule is, at present, silent about the treatment of 
    businesses with multiple activities of which one is an activity for 
    which an exemption is barred. FinCEN solicits comments on ways to deal 
    with that issue.
        e. Proposed paragraph (d)(5)(ix) defines a transaction account for 
    purposes of proposed paragraph (d) as any account described in section 
    19(b)(1)(C) of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 461(b)(1)(C). This definition does 
    not include any other accounts not described in 12 U.S.C. 461(b)(1)(C), 
    such as money market accounts. Thus, the definition of a transaction 
    account in the proposed rule is narrower than the definition of the 
    same term that is set forth at 31 CFR 103.11(hh). Proposed paragraph 
    (d)(5)(ix) also provides that a person may be exempt either as a non-
    listed business or as a payroll customer only to the extent of such 
    person's transaction accounts.
        f. Proposed paragraph (d)(5)(x) defines an established depositor 
    for purposes of proposed paragraph (d) of this section as any person 
    that has maintained a transaction account at the bank for at least 12 
    months. This definition is consistent with proposed paragraph 
    (d)(2)(vi)(A), which requires that a business maintain a transaction 
    account at the bank for at least 12 months before it may be exempted as 
    a non-listed business.
    
    Submission of Comments
    
        An original and four copies of any comment (except those 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.
    
    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.
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        The Department of the Treasury has determined that this proposed 
    rule is not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 
    12866.
    
    Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995 Statement
    
        Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (``Unfunded 
    Mandates Act''), Pub. L. 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 and has concluded that on balance this notice of proposed 
    rulemaking provides the most cost-effective and least burdensome 
    alternative to achieve the objectives of the rule.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        FinCEN certifies that this proposed amendment to the regulations 
    implementing the Bank Secrecy Act will not have a significant, adverse 
    financial impact on a substantial number of small depository 
    institutions.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        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 Internal Revenue Service Form 4789 is presented to 
    assist those persons wishing to comment on the information collection.
        FinCEN anticipates that this proposed rule, if made effective as 
    proposed, would result in at least a 2 million reduction in the number 
    of currency transaction reports required to be filed annually, and a 
    cost reduction to banks of $16 million. FinCEN believes that these 
    estimated reductions are reasonable, and probably conservative.
        Title: Currency Transaction Report.
        OMB Number: 1506-0005.
        Description of Respondents: All financial institutions, except 
    casinos.
        Estimated Number of Respondents: 250,000.
        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: 10,000,000 
    responses. Reporting burden estimate = 3,166,667 hours; recordkeeping 
    burden estimate = 833,333 hours. Estimated combined total of 4,000,000 
    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 
    $80,000,000.
        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 costs should be divided into two parts: (1) any additional 
    costs associated with reporting; and (2) any additional costs 
    associated with recordkeeping.
        In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act 
    of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq., and its implementing regulations, 5 
    CFR 1320, the following information concerning the collection of 
    information as required by 31 CFR 103.22 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 reduction in hours spent complying with exemption 
    requirements of 350,000 hours, and a reduction in cost to banks of 
    $7,500,000. This is a conservative estimate, based on comments and 
    discussions with banking industry representatives of the cost of 
    complying with the administrative exemption system requirements.
        Title: Currency transaction reporting exemption recordkeeping (31 
    CFR 103.22).
        OMB Number: 1506-0006.
        Description of Respondents: All banks.
    
    [[Page 47163]]
    
        Estimated Number of Respondents: 19,000.
        Frequency: As required.
        Estimate of Burden: Recordkeeping average of 2 hours per response.
        Estimate of Total Annual Burden on Respondents: 25,000. 
    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 Request: 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 costs 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.
    
    List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 103
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Authority delegations 
    (Government agencies), Banks and banking, Currency, Foreign banking, 
    Foreign currencies, Gambling, Investigations, Law enforcement, 
    Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities, Taxes.
    
    Amendment
    
        For the reasons set forth above in the preamble, 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: 12 U.S.C. 1829b and 1951-1959; 31 U.S.C. 5311-5330.
    
        2. Section 103.22 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 103.22  Reports of Transactions in Currency.
    
        (a) General. This section 103.22 sets forth the rules for the 
    reporting by financial institutions of transactions in currency. The 
    reporting obligations themselves are stated in paragraph (b). The 
    reporting rules relating to aggregation are stated in paragraph (c). 
    Rules permitting banks to exempt certain transactions from the 
    reporting obligations appear in paragraph (d).
        (b) Filing obligations--(1) Financial institutions other than 
    casinos. Each financial institution other than a casino shall file a 
    report of each deposit, withdrawal, exchange of currency or other 
    payment or transfer, by, through, or to such financial institution 
    which involves a transaction in currency of more than $10,000, except 
    as otherwise provided herein. In the case of the Postal Service, the 
    obligation contained in the preceding sentence shall not apply to 
    payments or transfers made solely in connection with the purchase of 
    postage or philatelic products.
        (2) Casinos. Each casino shall file a report of each transaction in 
    currency, involving either cash in or cash out, of more than $10,000.
        (i) Transactions in currency involving cash in include, but are not 
    limited to:
        (A) Purchases of chips, tokens, and plaques;
        (B) Front money deposits;
        (C) Safekeeping deposits;
        (D) Payments on any form of credit, including markers and counter 
    checks;
        (E) Bets of currency;
        (F) Currency received by a casino for transmittal of funds through 
    wire transfer for a customer;
        (G) Purchases of a casino's check; and
        (H) Exchanges of currency for currency, including foreign currency.
        (ii) Transactions in currency involving cash out include, but are 
    not limited to:
        (A) Redemptions of chips, tokens, and plaques;
        (B) Front money withdrawals;
        (C) Safekeeping withdrawals;
        (D) Advances on any form of credit, including markers and counter 
    checks;
        (E) Payments on bets, including slot jackpots;
        (F) Payments by a casino to a customer based on receipt of funds 
    through wire transfer for credit to a customer;
        (G) Cashing of checks or other negotiable instruments;
        (H) Exchanges of currency for currency, including foreign currency; 
    and
        (I) Reimbursements for customers' travel and entertainment expenses 
    by the casino.
        (c) Aggregation--(1) Multiple branches. A financial institution 
    includes all of its domestic branch offices, and any recordkeeping 
    facility, wherever located, that contains records relating to the 
    transactions of the institution's domestic branch offices, for purposes 
    of this section's reporting requirements.
        (2) Multiple transactions--general. In the case of financial 
    institutions other than casinos, for purposes of this section, multiple 
    currency transactions shall be treated as a single transaction if the 
    financial institution has knowledge that they are by or on behalf of 
    any person and result in either cash in or cash out totalling more than 
    $10,000 during any one business day (or in the case of the Postal 
    Service, any one day). Deposits made at night or over a weekend or 
    holiday shall be treated as if received on the next business day 
    following the deposit.
        (3) Multiple transactions--casinos. In the case of a casino, 
    multiple currency transactions shall be treated as a single transaction 
    if the casino has knowledge that they are by or on behalf of any person 
    and result in either cash in or cash out totalling more than $ 10,000 
    during any gaming day. For purposes of this paragraph (c)(3), a casino 
    shall be deemed to have the knowledge described in the preceding 
    sentence, if: any sole proprietor, partner, officer, director, or 
    employee of the casino, acting within the scope of his or her 
    employment, has knowledge that such multiple currency transactions have 
    occurred, including knowledge from examining the books, records, logs, 
    information retained on magnetic disk, tape or other machine-readable 
    media, or in any manual system, and similar documents and information, 
    which the casino maintains pursuant to any law or regulation or within 
    the ordinary course of its business, and which contain information that 
    such multiple currency transactions have occurred.
    
    [[Page 47164]]
    
        (d) Transactions of exempt persons--(1) General. No bank is 
    required to file a report otherwise required by paragraph (b) of this 
    section with respect to any transaction in currency between an exempt 
    person and such bank, or, to the extent provided in paragraph 
    (d)(5)(vi) of this section, between such exempt person and other banks 
    affiliated with such bank. In addition, a non-bank financial 
    institution is not required to file a report otherwise required by 
    paragraph (b) of this section with respect to a transaction in currency 
    between the institution and a commercial bank. (A limitation on the 
    exemption described in this paragraph (d)(1) is set forth in (d)(6) of 
    this section.)
        (2) Exempt person. For purposes of this section, an exempt person 
    is:
        (i) A bank, to the extent of such bank's domestic operations;
        (ii) A department or agency of the United States, of any state, or 
    of any political subdivision of any state;
        (iii) Any entity established under the laws of the United States, 
    of any state, or of any political subdivision of any state, or under an 
    interstate compact between two or more states, that exercises 
    governmental authority on behalf of the United States or any such state 
    or political subdivision;
        (iv) Any entity, other than a bank, whose common stock or analogous 
    equity interests are listed on the New York Stock Exchange or the 
    American Stock Exchange or whose common stock or analogous equity 
    interests have been designated as a Nasdaq National Market Security 
    listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market (except stock or interests listed 
    under the separate ``Nasdaq Small-Cap Issues'' heading), provided that, 
    for purposes of this paragraph (d)(2)(iv), a person that is a financial 
    institution, other than a bank, is an exempt person only to the extent 
    of its domestic operations;
        (v) Any subsidiary, other than a bank, of any entity described in 
    paragraph (d)(2)(iv) of this section (a ``listed entity'') that is 
    organized under the laws of the United States or of any state and at 
    least 51 per cent of whose common stock is owned by the listed entity, 
    provided that, for purposes of this paragraph (d)(2)(v), a person that 
    is a financial institution, other than a bank, is an exempt person only 
    to the extent of its domestic operations;
        (vi) To the extent of its domestic operations, any other commercial 
    enterprise (for purposes of this paragraph (d), a ``non-listed 
    business''), other than an enterprise specified in paragraph 
    (d)(5)(viii), that
        (A) Has maintained a transaction account at the bank for at least 
    12 months,
        (B) Frequently engages in transactions in currency with the bank in 
    excess of $10,000, and
        (C) Is incorporated or organized under the laws of the United 
    States or a State, or is registered as and eligible to do business 
    within a State; and
        (vii) With respect solely to withdrawals for payroll purposes from 
    existing transaction accounts, any other person (for purposes of this 
    paragraph (d), a ``payroll customer'') who
        (A) Has maintained a transaction account at the bank for at least 
    12 months,
        (B) Operates a firm that regularly withdraws more than $10,000 in 
    order to pay its United States employees in currency, and
        (C) Is a United States resident.
        (3) Initial designation of exempt persons. (i) General. A bank must 
    designate each exempt person with whom it engages in transactions in 
    currency by the close of the 30-day period beginning after the day of 
    the first reportable transaction in currency with that person sought to 
    be exempted from reporting under the terms of paragraph (d) of this 
    section. Except where the person sought to be exempted is another bank 
    as described in paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section, a non-listed 
    business as described in paragraph (d)(2)(vi) of this section, or a 
    payroll customer as described in paragraph (d)(2)(vii) of this section, 
    designation by such bank of such exempt person shall be made by a 
    single filing of Internal Revenue Service Form 4789, in which line 36 
    is marked ``Designation of Exempt Person'' and items 2-14 (Part I, 
    Section A) and items 37-49 (Part III) are completed, or by filing any 
    form specifically designated by FinCEN for this purpose. The 
    designation must be made separately by each bank that treats the person 
    in question as an exempt person, except as provided in paragraph 
    (d)(5)(vi) of this section. The designation requirements of this 
    paragraph (d)(3) apply whether or not the particular exempt person to 
    be designated has previously been treated as exempt from the reporting 
    requirements of Sec. 103.22(a) under the rules contained in 31 CFR 
    103.22(b) through (g) (see 31 CFR chapter I revised as of July 1, 
    1997). A special transitional rule, which extends the time for initial 
    designation for customers that have been previously treated as exempt, 
    is contained in paragraph (d)(7)(ii) of this section.
        (ii) Special rules for banks. When designating another bank as an 
    exempt person, a bank must either make the filing required by paragraph 
    (d)(3)(i) of this section or file, in such a format and manner as 
    FinCEN may specify, a current list of its domestic bank customers. In 
    the event that a bank files its current list of domestic bank 
    customers, the bank must make the filing as described in paragraph 
    (d)(3)(i) of this section for each bank that is a new customer and for 
    which an exemption is sought under this paragraph (d).
        (iii) Special rules for non-listed businesses and payroll 
    customers. When designating a non-listed business or a payroll customer 
    as an exempt person, a bank, in addition to the filing required by 
    paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section, shall include information, in such 
    form as FinCEN shall determine, about such customer's projected annual 
    currency deposits and withdrawals through all transaction accounts.
        (4) Annual filing with respect to certain exempt persons--(i) 
    General. No annual filing is required for continuation of the treatment 
    as an exempt person of a customer described in paragraphs (d)(2) (i)-
    (v).
        (ii) Non-listed businesses and payroll customers. The designation 
    of a non-listed business or a payroll customer as an exempt person must 
    be updated annually, beginning no later than February 28, 1999, and 
    each February 28 thereafter, on such form as FinCEN shall specify. 
    Annual updates must include a statement of the exempt person's annual 
    currency deposits and withdrawals through all transaction accounts for 
    the calendar year next preceding the date on which such filing is 
    required, as well as information about any change in control of the 
    exempt person involved of which the bank knows (or should know on the 
    basis of its records).
        (5) Operating rules for designating exempt persons--(i) General 
    rule. Subject to the specific rules of this paragraph (d), a bank must 
    take such steps to assure itself that a person is an exempt person 
    (within the meaning of applicable provisions of paragraph (d)(2) of 
    this section), and to document the basis for its conclusions and its 
    compliance with the terms of this paragraph (d), that a reasonable and 
    prudent bank would take and document to protect itself from loan or 
    other fraud or loss based on misidentification of a person's status.
        (ii) Governmental departments and agencies. A bank may treat a 
    person as a governmental department, agency, or entity if the name of 
    such person reasonably indicates that it is described in paragraph 
    (d)(2)(ii) or (d)(2)(iii) of
    
    [[Page 47165]]
    
    this section, or if such person is known generally in the community to 
    be a State, the District of Columbia, a tribal government, a Territory 
    or Insular Possession of the United States, or a political subdivision 
    or a wholly-owned agency or instrumentality of any of the foregoing. An 
    entity generally exercises governmental authority on behalf of the 
    United States, a State, or a political subdivision, for purposes of 
    paragraph (d)(2)(iii) of this section, only if its authorities include 
    one or more of the powers to tax, to exercise the authority of eminent 
    domain, or to exercise police powers with respect to matters within its 
    jurisdiction. Examples of entities that exercise governmental authority 
    include, but are not limited to, the New Jersey Turnpike Authority and 
    the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
        (iii) Stock exchange listings. In determining whether a person is 
    described in paragraph (d)(2)(iv) of this section, a bank may rely on 
    any New York, American or Nasdaq Stock Market listing published in a 
    newspaper of general circulation, on any commonly accepted or published 
    stock symbol guide, on any information contained in the Securities and 
    Exchange Commission ``Edgar'' System, or on any information contained 
    on an Internet World-Wide Web site or sites maintained by the New York 
    Stock Exchange, the American Stock Exchange, or the National 
    Association of Securities Dealers.
        (iv) Listed company subsidiaries. In determining whether a person 
    is described in paragraph (d)(2)(v) of this section, a bank may rely 
    upon:
        (A) Any reasonably authenticated corporate officer's certificate;
        (B) Any reasonably authenticated photocopy of Internal Revenue 
    Service Form 851 (Affiliation Schedule) or the equivalent thereof for 
    the appropriate tax year; or
        (C) A person's Annual Report or Form 10-K, as filed in each case 
    with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
        (v) Aggregated accounts. In determining the qualification of a 
    customer as an exempt person, a bank shall treat all transaction 
    accounts of the customer as a single account, except as provided in 
    paragraph (d)(5)(vii) of this section relating to sole proprietorships.
        (vi) Affiliated banks. The designation required by this paragraph 
    may be made by a parent bank holding company or one of its bank 
    subsidiaries on behalf of all bank subsidiaries of the holding company, 
    so long as the designation lists each bank subsidiary to which the 
    designation shall apply. Projected and annual currency transaction 
    activity must be listed in such affiliated group designation on a bank-
    by-bank basis.
        (vii) Sole proprietorships. A sole proprietorship may be treated as 
    a non-listed business if it otherwise meets the requirements of 
    paragraph (d)(2)(vi) of this section, as applicable. In addition, a 
    sole proprietorship may be treated as a payroll customer if it 
    otherwise meets the requirements of paragraph (d)(2)(vii) of this 
    section, as applicable. However, the exemption permitted by this 
    paragraph applies only to business transactions of the sole 
    proprietorship, not to personal transactions of the proprietor, and the 
    sole proprietorship's accounts may not be aggregated with personal 
    accounts of the proprietor for purposes of this paragraph (d). Thus, no 
    exemption may be granted to an account in which personal and sole 
    proprietorship funds are commingled.
        (viii) Ineligible businesses. A business engaged in one or more of 
    the following activities may not be treated as a non-listed business 
    for purposes of this paragraph (d): financial institutions or agents of 
    financial institutions of any type; purchase or sale to customers of 
    motor vehicles of any kind, vessels, aircraft, farm equipment or mobile 
    homes; the practice of law, accountancy, or medicine; auctioning of 
    goods; chartering or operation of ships, buses, or aircraft; gaming of 
    any kind; investment advisory services or investment banking services; 
    real estate brokerage; pawn brokerage; title insurance and real estate 
    closing; trade union activities; and any other activities that may be 
    specified, prospectively, by FinCEN by written notice published in the 
    Federal Register.
        (ix) Transaction account. A transaction account, for purposes of 
    paragraph (d) of this section, is any account described in section 
    19(b)(1)(C) of the Federal Reserve Act, 12 U.S.C. 461(b)(1)(C). For 
    purposes of paragraphs (d)(2)(vi) and (d)(2)(vii) of this section, a 
    person is an exempt person only to the extent of such person's 
    transaction accounts.
        (x) Documentation. The records maintained by a bank to document its 
    compliance with and administration of the rules of this paragraph (d) 
    shall be maintained in accordance with the provisions of section 
    103.38.
        (6) Limitation on exemption. A transaction carried out by an exempt 
    person as an agent for another person who is the beneficial owner of 
    the funds that are the subject of a transaction in currency is not 
    subject to the exemption from reporting contained in paragraph (d)(1) 
    of this section.
        (7) Limitation on liability; transitional rule. (i) No bank shall 
    be subject to penalty under this subchapter for failure to file a 
    report required by section 103.22(b) with respect to a transaction in 
    currency by an exempt person with respect to which the requirements of 
    this paragraph (d) have been satisfied, unless the bank:
        (A) Knowingly files false or incomplete information with respect to 
    the transaction or the customer engaging in the transaction, or
        (B) Has reason to believe that the customer does not meet the 
    criteria established by this paragraph (d) for treatment of the 
    transactor as an exempt person or that the transaction is not a 
    transaction of the exempt person.
        (ii) If on [INSERT DATE 30 DAYS AFTER THE FINAL REGULATIONS TO 
    WHICH THIS NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING RELATES ARE PUBLISHED IN THE 
    Federal Register] a bank treated a person as an exempt person under the 
    rules contained in 31 CFR 103.22 (b)-(g) (July 1, 1996), the bank must 
    designate that person as an exempt person under paragraph (d)(2) of 
    this section (or cease to treat such person as exempt if such person 
    does not qualify for treatment as an ``exempt person'' under paragraph 
    (d)(2) of this section) not later than the end of the first calendar 
    year beginning after [INSERT DATE 30 DAYS AFTER THE FINAL REGULATIONS 
    TO WHICH THIS NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING RELATES ARE PUBLISHED IN 
    THE Federal Register]. Provided that the bank complies with the 
    preceding sentence, the bank may treat such a customer as exempt from 
    [INSERT DATE 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE THE FINAL REGULATIONS TO WHICH THIS 
    NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING RELATES ARE PUBLISHED IN THE Federal 
    Register]. The first annual currency report for a customer is not due 
    until the end of the first year beginning after [INSERT DATE 30 DAYS 
    AFTER THE FINAL REGULATIONS TO WHICH THIS NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING 
    RELATES ARE PUBLISHED IN THE Federal Register].
        (iii) Absent specific knowledge of any information that would be 
    grounds for revocation as provided in paragraph (d)(9) of this section, 
    a bank is required to verify the status of those entities it has 
    designated as exempt persons only once each year.
        (iv) A bank that files a report with respect to a currency 
    transaction by an exempt person rather than treating such person as 
    exempt shall remain subject, with respect to each such report, to the 
    rules for filing reports, and the penalties for filing false or 
    incomplete reports that are applicable to reporting of
    
    [[Page 47166]]
    
    transactions in currency by persons other than exempt persons. A bank 
    that continues for the period permitted by paragraph (d)(7)(ii) of this 
    section to treat a person described in paragraph (d)(2) as exempt from 
    the reporting requirements of section 103.22(a) on a basis other than 
    as provided in this paragraph (d) shall remain subject to the rules 
    governing an exemption on such other basis and to the penalties for 
    failing to comply with the rules governing such other exemption.
        (8) Obligation to file suspicious activity reports, etc. Nothing in 
    this paragraph (d) relieves a bank of the obligation, or alters in any 
    way such bank's obligation, to file a report required by section 103.21 
    with respect to any transaction, including any transaction in currency, 
    or relieves a bank of any reporting or recordkeeping obligation imposed 
    by this Part (except the obligation to report transactions in currency 
    pursuant to this section to the extent provided in this paragraph (d)).
        (9) Revocation. The status of any person as an exempt person under 
    this paragraph (d) may be revoked by FinCEN by written notice, which 
    may be provided by publication in the Federal Register in appropriate 
    situations, on such terms as are specified in such notice. Without any 
    action on the part of the Treasury Department and subject to the 
    limitation on liability contained in paragraph (d)(7)(iii) of this 
    section:
        (i) The status of an entity as an exempt person under paragraph 
    (d)(2)(iv) ceases once such entity ceases to be listed on the 
    applicable stock exchange; and
        (ii) The status of a subsidiary as an exempt person under paragraph 
    (d)(2)(v) ceases once such subsidiary ceases to have at least 51 per 
    cent of its common stock owned by a listed entity.
    * * * * *
    
        Dated: August 27, 1997.
    Stanley E. Morris,
    Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
    [FR Doc. 97-23639 Filed 9-5-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4820-03-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
09/08/1997
Department:
Treasury Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
97-23639
Dates:
Written comments on all aspects of the proposal are welcome and must be received on or before December 8, 1997.
Pages:
47156-47166 (11 pages)
RINs:
1506-AA12: Amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act Regulations--Discretionary Exemption of Certain Transactions From Currency Transaction Reporting Requirements
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1506-AA12/amendment-to-the-bank-secrecy-act-regulations-discretionary-exemption-of-certain-transactions-from-c
PDF File:
97-23639.pdf
CFR: (1)
31 CFR 103.22