95-22750. Suspicious Activity Reporting  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 178 (Thursday, September 14, 1995)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 47719-47722]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-22750]
    
    
    
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    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
    
    12 CFR Part 353
    
    RIN 3064-AB63
    
    
    Suspicious Activity Reporting
    
    AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is proposing 
    to revise and restructure its regulation on the reporting of suspicious 
    activities by insured state nonmember banks, including the reporting of 
    suspicious financial transactions, such as suspected violations of the 
    Bank Secrecy Act (BSA). This proposal implements a new interagency 
    suspicious activity referral process and updates and clarifies various 
    portions of the underlying reporting regulation. The proposal also 
    reduces substantially the burden on banks in reporting suspicious 
    activities while enhancing access to such information by both the 
    federal law enforcement and the federal financial institutions 
    supervisory agencies, thus meeting the goals of section 303 of the 
    Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received by November 13, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments shall be addressed to the Office of the 
    Executive Secretary, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th 
    Street NW., Washington, DC 20429. Comments may be hand delivered to 
    Room F-402, 1776 F Street NW., Washington, DC 20429, on business days 
    between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. [Fax number: 202/898-3838; (Internet 
    address: comments@fdic.gov] Comments will be available for inspection 
    at the Corporation's Reading Room, Room 7118, 550 17th Street NW., 
    Washington, DC between 9:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on business days.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Carol A. Mesheske, Chief, Special 
    Activities Section, (202/898-6750), or Gregory Gore, Counsel, (202) 
    898-7109. 
    
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    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        The federal financial institutions supervisory agencies (the 
    Agencies) 1 and the Department of the Treasury (Treasury), through 
    its Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), are responsible for 
    ensuring that financial institutions apprise federal law enforcement 
    authorities of any known or suspected violation of a federal criminal 
    statute and of any suspicious financial transaction. Suspicious 
    financial transactions, which will be the subject of regulations and 
    other guidance to be issued by Treasury, can include transactions that 
    the bank suspects involved funds derived from illicit activities, were 
    conducted for the purpose of hiding or disguising funds from illicit 
    activity, otherwise violated the money laundering statutes (18 U.S.C. 
    1956 and 1957), were potentially designed to evade the reporting or 
    recordkeeping requirements of the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) (31 U.S.C. 
    5311 through 5330), or transactions the bank believes were suspicious 
    for any other reason.
    
        \1\ The federal financial institutions supervisory agencies are 
    the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Office of Thrift 
    Supervision, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 
    the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the National Credit 
    Union Administration.
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        Fraud, abusive insider transactions, check kiting schemes, money 
    laundering, and other crimes can pose serious threats to a financial 
    institution's continued viability and, if unchecked, can undermine the 
    public confidence in the nation's financial industry. The Agencies and 
    federal law enforcement agencies need to receive timely and detailed 
    information regarding suspected criminal activity to determine whether 
    investigations, administrative actions, or criminal prosecutions are 
    warranted.
        An interagency Bank Fraud Working Group (BFWG), consisting of 
    representatives from many federal agencies, including the Agencies and 
    law enforcement agencies, was formed in 1984. The BFWG addresses 
    substantive issues, promotes cooperation among the Agencies and federal 
    and state law enforcement agencies, and improves the federal 
    government's response to white collar crime in financial institutions. 
    It is under the auspices of the BFWG that the revisions to this 
    regulation and the reporting requirements are being made.
    Suspicious Activity Report
    
        The Agencies have been working on a project to improve the criminal 
    referral process, to reduce unnecessary reporting burdens on banks, and 
    to eliminate confusion associated with the current duplicative 
    reporting of suspicious financial transactions in criminal referral 
    forms and currency transaction reports (CTRs). Contemporaneously, 
    Treasury analyzed the need to revise the procedures used by financial 
    institutions for reporting suspicious financial transactions. As a 
    result of these reviews, the Agencies and Treasury approved the 
    development of a new referral process that includes suspicious 
    financial transaction reporting.
        To implement the reporting process, and to reduce unnecessary 
    burdens associated with these various reporting requirements, the 
    Agencies and FinCEN developed a new interagency form for reporting 
    known or suspected federal criminal law violations and suspicious 
    financial transactions. The new report is designated the Suspicious 
    Activity Report (SAR). The SAR is a simplified and shortened version of 
    its predecessors. The new referral process and the SAR reduce the 
    burden on banks for reporting known or suspected violations and 
    suspicious financial transactions. The agencies anticipate the new 
    process will be instituted by October, 1995.
    
    Proposal
    
        The FDIC proposes to revise 12 CFR part 353 by updating and 
    clarifying the current rule governing the filing of criminal referral 
    reports; expanding the rule to cover suspicious financial transactions; 
    implementing the new SAR; and simplifying reporting requirements. This 
    action should improve reporting of known or suspected violations and 
    suspicious financial transactions relating to federally insured 
    financial institutions while providing uniform data for entry into a 
    new interagency computer database. The FDIC expects that each of the 
    other Agencies will be making substantially similar changes 
    contemporaneously.
        The principal proposed changes to the current criminal referral 
    reporting rules include several notable changes. They include: (i) 
    Raising the mandatory reporting thresholds for criminal offenses, 
    thereby reducing banks' reporting burdens; (ii) filing only one form 
    with a single repository, rather than submitting multiple copies to 
    several federal law enforcement and banking agencies, thereby further 
    reducing reporting burdens; and (iii) clarifying the criminal referral 
    and reporting requirements of the Agencies and Treasury associated with 
    suspicious financial transactions, thereby eliminating confusion 
    concerning the filing of referrals related to suspicious financial 
    transactions of less than $10,000 and eliminating duplicative 
    referrals.
        The proposal also involves the manner in which financial 
    institutions file a SAR. In following the instructions on a SAR, banks 
    may file the referral form in several ways, including submitting an 
    original form or a photocopy or filing by magnetic means, such as by a 
    computer disk.
        The Agencies, working with FinCEN, are developing computer software 
    to assist banks in preparing and filing SARs. The software will allow a 
    bank to complete a SAR, to save the SAR on its computers, and to print 
    a hard copy of the SAR for its own records. The computer software will 
    also enable a bank to file a SAR using various forms of magnetic media, 
    such as computer disk or magnetic tape. The FDIC will make the software 
    available to all its supervised institutions free of charge.
    
    Part 353--Suspicious Activity Reports
    
        The title of the regulation has been changed to conform to the name 
    on the SAR. The current part is titled ``Reports of Apparent Crimes 
    Affecting Insured Nonmember Banks''. The proposed heading, ``Suspicious 
    Activity Reports'', conforms to the name of the report.
    
    Section 353.1  Purpose and Scope
    
        The proposal restructures the current Sec. 353.0, redesignates it 
    as Sec. 353.1, and clarifies the scope of the current rule. Under the 
    proposal, the SAR replaces the various criminal referral forms that the 
    Agencies currently require banks to file. Also, a bank files a SAR to 
    report a suspicious financial transaction. Presently, many banks are 
    confused over whether to file a CTR or a criminal referral form when a 
    suspicious financial transaction occurs, and often needlessly file both 
    forms or the wrong form.\2\
    
        \2\ The BSA requires all financial institutions to file CTRs in 
    accordance with the Department of the Treasury's implementing 
    regulations (31 CFR part 103). Part 103 requires a financial 
    institution to file a CTR whenever a currency transaction exceeds 
    $10,000. If a currency transaction exceeds $10,000 and is 
    suspicious, the bank, under these new requirements, will file both a 
    CTR (reporting the currency transaction) and a SAR (reporting the 
    suspicious criminal aspect of the transaction). If a currency 
    transaction equals or is below $10,000 but is suspicious, the bank 
    will file only a SAR.
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        Combining suspicious financial transaction reporting and criminal 
    referral reporting should reduce confusion, increase the accuracy and 
    efficiency of reporting, and reduce the burden on banks in reporting 
    known or 
    
    [[Page 47721]]
    suspected violations, including suspicious financial transactions.
    
    Section 353.2  Definitions
    
        Proposed new Sec. 353.2 defines the following terms: ``FinCEN'', 
    ``institution-affiliated party'', and ``known or suspected violation''. 
    The definitions should make the rule easier to interpret and apply.
    
    Section 353.3  Reports and Records
    
        Proposed Sec. 353.3, which replaces and restructures current 
    Sec. 353.1, clarifies and expands the provision that requires a bank to 
    file a completed SAR. This provision raises the dollar thresholds that 
    trigger a filing requirement. It also modifies the scope of events that 
    a bank must report by using the term ``known or suspected violation,'' 
    which is defined at Sec. 353.2(c), and by requiring that a bank file a 
    SAR to report a suspicious financial transaction.
        Under the current rule, the FDIC requires a bank to file a criminal 
    referral form with many different federal agencies. The proposal 
    requires a bank to file only a single SAR at one location, rather than 
    the multiple copies of the criminal referral form that must now be 
    filed with various federal agencies.
        Under proposed Sec. 353.3, a bank effectively files a SAR with all 
    appropriate federal law enforcement agencies by sending a single copy 
    of the SAR to FinCEN, whose address will be printed on the SAR.
        FinCEN will input the information contained on the SARs into a 
    newly created database that FinCEN will maintain. This process meets 
    the regulatory requirement that a bank refer any known or suspected 
    criminal violation to the various federal law enforcement agencies. The 
    information is made available on computer to the appropriate law 
    enforcement and supervisory agencies as quickly as possible. The 
    database will enhance federal law enforcement and supervisory agencies' 
    ability to track, investigate, and prosecute, criminally, civilly, and 
    administratively, individuals suspected of violating federal criminal 
    law. This change will reduce the filing burdens of banks.
        The proposal modifies current Sec. 353.1(a)(2), which requires 
    reporting of known or suspected criminal activity when a bank has a 
    substantial basis for identifying a non-insider suspect where bank 
    funds or other assets involve or aggregate $1,000 or more. Proposed 
    Sec. 353.3(a)(2), which replaces current Sec. 353.1(a)(2), raises the 
    reporting threshold to $5,000, thereby reducing the reporting burden on 
    banks.
        The proposal also modifies current Sec. 353.1(a)(3), which requires 
    banks to report any known or suspected criminal violation involving 
    $5,000 or more where the bank has no substantial basis for identifying 
    a suspect. Specifically, proposed Sec. 353.3(a)(3), which replaces 
    current Sec. 353.1(a)(3), raises the dollar reporting threshold from 
    $5,000 to $25,000, thereby reducing the reporting burden on banks.
        Proposed Sec. 353.3(a)(4) clarifies the reporting requirement for 
    any financial transaction, regardless of the dollar amount, that: (1) 
    the bank suspects involved funds derived from illicit activity, was 
    conducted for the purpose of hiding or disguising funds from illicit 
    activity, or in any way violated the money laundering statutes (18 
    U.S.C. 1956 and 1957); (2) the bank suspects was potentially designed 
    to evade the reporting or recordkeeping requirements of the BSA (31 
    U.S.C. 5311 through 5330); or (3) the bank believes to be suspicious 
    for any reason.
    
    Section 353.3(b)  Time for Reporting
    
        Proposed Sec. 353.3(b), which replaces current Sec. 353.1(b), sets 
    forth the time requirements a bank must meet when filing a SAR. The 
    proposal clarifies the reporting requirement in the event a suspect or 
    group of suspects is not immediately identified. The proposal does not 
    substantively change the current requirements.
    
    Section 353.3(c)  Reports to State and Local Authorities
    
        No changes are being made to the current Sec. 353.1(c), except to 
    redesignate it as 353.3(c).
    
    Section 353.3(d)  Exemptions
    
        No changes are being made to the current 353.1(d), other than to 
    redesignate it as 353.3(d) and to delete the reference to 
    Sec. 326.3(a)(2)(i) of this chapter.
    
    Section 353.3(e)  Retention of Records
    
        Proposed Sec. 353.3(e) requires a bank to retain a copy of the SAR 
    and the original of any related documentation relating to a SAR for a 
    period of ten years. This time frame corresponds with the statute of 
    limitations for most federal criminal statutes involving financial 
    institutions. The current rule is silent on this issue.
        The proposed 353.3(e) clarifies the requirement that banks make all 
    supporting documentation available to appropriate law enforcement 
    agencies upon request. The proposal requires the supporting 
    documentation be identified and treated as filed with the SAR. This 
    approach ensures federal law enforcement agencies and the Agencies, 
    upon request, have access to any documentation necessary to prosecute a 
    violation or pursue an administrative action by requiring banks to 
    preserve underlying documentation for ten years.
    
    Section 353.3(f)  Notification to the Board of Directors
    
        Current Sec. 353.1(f) requires notification regarding the filing of 
    a SAR to an insured state nonmember bank's board of directors by the 
    bank's management. To reduce burdens on the boards of directors of 
    banks, especially those large banks that file many SARs, the proposal 
    recognizes that the required notification may be made to a committee of 
    the board.
    
    Section 353.3(g)  Confidentiality of SARs
    
        FDIC proposes to add a new paragraph relating to the 
    confidentiality of a SAR. Proposed Sec. 353.3(g) states that a SAR and 
    the information contained in a SAR are confidential, and an insured 
    state nonmember bank should decline to produce a SAR citing this 
    regulation and applicable law (31 U.S.C. 5318(g)), or both.
    
    Comments
    
        The FDIC invites public comment on all aspects of this proposal.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the 
    FDIC hereby certifies that this proposed rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
    This proposal primarily reorganizes the process for making criminal 
    referrals and has no material impact on banks, regardless of size. 
    Accordingly, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not required.
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This proposed rule would revise a collection of information that is 
    currently approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under 
    control number 3064-0077. The revisions raise the reporting thresholds 
    and will permit reporting institutions to use a simplified, shorter 
    form; to file one form only; and to eliminate the submission of 
    supporting documentation with a report. These revisions have been 
    submitted to OMB for review and approval in accordance with the 
    requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
        The estimated average burden associated with the collection of 
    information contained in a SAR is approximately .6 hours per 
    respondent. 
    
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    The burden per respondent will vary depending on the nature of the 
    suspicious activity being reported.
        Estimated Number of Respondents: 6,500.
        Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 3,900.
        Comments concerning the accuracy of this burden estimate and 
    suggestions for reducing this burden should be directed to the 
    Assistant Executive Secretary (Administration), Room F-400, Federal 
    Deposit Insurance Corporation, Washington, DC 20429, and to the Office 
    of Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project (3064-0077), 
    Washington, DC 20503.
    
    List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 353
    
        Banks, banking, Crime, Currency, Insider abuse, Money laundering, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, 12 CFR part 353 is 
    proposed to be revised to read as follows:
    
    PART 353--SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY REPORTS
    
    Sec.
    353.1  Purpose and scope.
    353.2  Definitions.
    353.3  Reports and records.
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1818, 1819.
    
    
    Sec. 353.1  Purpose and scope.
    
        The purpose of this part is to ensure that insured state nonmember 
    banks file a Suspicious Activity Report when they detect a known or 
    suspected violation of federal law or suspicious financial transaction. 
    This part applies to all insured state nonmember banks as well as any 
    insured, state-licensed branches of foreign banks.
    
    
    Sec. 353.2  Definitions.
    
        For the purposes of this part:
        (a) FinCEN means the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network of the 
    Department of the Treasury.
        (b) Institution-affiliated party means any institution-affiliated 
    party as that term is defined in sections 3(u) and 8(b)(5) of the 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(u) and 1818(b)(5)).
        (c) Known or suspected violation means any matter for which there 
    is a basis to believe that a violation of a federal criminal statute 
    (including a pattern of criminal violations) has occurred or has been 
    attempted, is occurring, or may occur, and there is a basis to believe 
    that a financial institution was an actual or potential victim of the 
    criminal violation or was used to facilitate the criminal violation.
    
    
    Sec. 353.3  Reports and records.
    
        (a) Suspicious activity reports required. A bank shall file a 
    suspicious activity report with the appropriate federal law enforcement 
    agencies in accordance with the form's instructions, by transmitting a 
    completed suspicious activity report to FinCEN in the following 
    circumstances:
        (1) Whenever the bank detects a known or suspected violation of 
    federal criminal law and has a substantial basis to believe that one of 
    its directors, officers, employees, agents, or other institution-
    affiliated parties committed or aided in the commission of the 
    violation;
        (2) Whenever the bank detects a known or suspected violation of 
    federal criminal law, involving or aggregating $5,000 or more (before 
    reimbursement or recovery), and the bank has a substantial basis for 
    identifying a possible suspect or group of suspects;
        (3) Whenever the bank detects a known or suspected violation of 
    federal criminal law, involving or aggregating $25,000 or more (before 
    reimbursement or recovery), and the bank has no substantial basis for 
    identifying a possible suspect or group of suspects; or
        (4) Whenever the bank detects any financial transaction conducted, 
    or attempted, at the bank involving funds derived from illicit activity 
    or for the purpose of hiding or disguising funds from illicit 
    activities, or for the possible violation or evasion of the Bank 
    Secrecy Act reporting and/or recordkeeping requirements. A suspicious 
    activity report must be filed for all instances where money laundering 
    is suspected or where the bank believes that the transaction was 
    suspicious for any reason, regardless of the identification of a 
    potential suspect or the amount involved in the violation.
        (b) Time for reporting. (1) A bank shall file the suspicious 
    activity report no later than 30 calendar days after the date of 
    initial detection of an act described in paragraph (a) of this section. 
    If no suspect was identified on the date of detection of an act 
    triggering the filing, a bank may delay filing a suspicious activity 
    report for an additional 30 calendar days after the identification of a 
    suspect. In no case shall reporting be delayed more than 60 calendar 
    days after the date of detecting a known or suspected violation.
        (2) In situations involving violations requiring immediate 
    attention, such as when a reportable violation is ongoing, the bank 
    shall immediately notify by telephone, or other expeditious means, the 
    appropriate law enforcement agency and the appropriate FDIC regional 
    office (Division of Supervision) in addition to filing a timely report.
    
        (c) Reports to state and local authorities. A bank is encouraged to 
    file a copy of the suspicious activity report with state and local law 
    enforcement agencies where appropriate.
    
        (d) Exemptions. (1) A bank need not file a suspicious activity 
    report for a robbery, burglary or larceny, committed or attempted, that 
    is reported to appropriate law enforcement authorities.
    
        (2) A bank need not file a suspicious activity report for lost, 
    missing, counterfeit, or stolen securities if it files a report 
    pursuant to the reporting requirements of 17 CFR 240.17f-1.
    
        (e) Retention of records. A bank shall maintain a copy of any 
    suspicious activity report filed and the originals of any related 
    documentation for a period of ten years from the date of filing the 
    suspicious activity report. A bank shall make all supporting 
    documentation available to appropriate law enforcement agencies upon 
    request. Supporting documentation shall be identified and treated as 
    filed with the suspicious activity report.
    
        (f) Notification to board of directors. The management of the bank 
    shall promptly notify its board of directors, or a designated committee 
    thereof, of any report filed pursuant to this section. The term ``board 
    of directors'' includes the managing official of an insured state-
    licensed branch of a foreign bank for purposes of this part.
    
        (g) Confidentiality of suspicious activity reports. Suspicious 
    activity reports are confidential. Any person subpoenaed or otherwise 
    requested to disclose a suspicious activity report or the information 
    contained in a suspicious activity report shall decline to produce the 
    information citing this part, applicable law (e.g., 31 U.S.C. 5318(g)), 
    or both.
    
        By Order of the Board of Directors.
    
        Dated at Washington, DC, this 6th day of September, 1995.
    
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
    
    Robert E. Feldman,
    
    Deputy Executive Secretary.
    
    [FR Doc. 95-22750 Filed 9-13-95; 8:45 am]
    
    BILLING CODE 6714-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
09/14/1995
Department:
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
95-22750
Dates:
Comments must be received by November 13, 1995.
Pages:
47719-47722 (4 pages)
RINs:
3064-AB63: Reports of Apparent Crimes Affecting Insured Nonmember Banks
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/3064-AB63/reports-of-apparent-crimes-affecting-insured-nonmember-banks
PDF File:
95-22750.pdf
CFR: (5)
12 CFR 353.3(a)(2)
12 CFR 326.3(a)(2)(i)
12 CFR 353.1
12 CFR 353.2
12 CFR 353.3