(1) In general. A bank required to have an anti-money laundering compliance program
under the regulations implementing 31 U.S.C. 5318(h), 12 U.S.C. 1818(s),
or 12 U.S.C. 1786(q)(1) must implement a written Customer Identification
Program (CIP) appropriate for the bank’s size and type of business
that, at a minimum, includes each of the requirements of paragraphs
(a)(1) through (5) of this section. The CIP must be a part of the
anti-money laundering compliance program.
(2) Identity
verification procedures. The CIP must include risk-based procedures
for verifying the identity of each customer to the extent reasonable
and practicable. The procedures must enable the bank to form a reasonable
belief that it knows the true identity of each customer. These procedures
must be based on the bank’s assessment of the relevant risks, including
those presented by the various types of accounts maintained by the
bank, the various methods of opening accounts provided by the bank,
the various types of identifying information available, and the bank’s
size, location, and customer base. At a minimum, these procedures
must contain the elements described in this paragraph (a)(2).
(i) Customer
information required.
(A) In general. The CIP must contain
procedures for opening an account that specify the identifying information
that will be obtained from each customer. Except as permitted by paragraphs
(a)(2)(i)(B) and (C) of this section, the bank must obtain, at a minimum,
the following information from the customer prior to opening an account:
(1) Name;
(2) Date
of birth, for an individual;
(3) Address, which shall be:
(i)
For an individual, a residential or business street address;
(ii) For an individual who does not
have a residential or business street address, an Army Post Office
(APO) or Fleet Post Office (FPO) box number, or the residential or
business street address of next of kin or of another contact individual;
or
(iii) For a person other
than an individual (such as a corporation, partnership, or trust), a principal
place of business, local office, or other physical location; and
(4) Identification
number, which shall be:
(i) For a U.S. person, a taxpayer
identification number; or
(
ii) For a non-U.S. person, one or more of the following: A taxpayer
identification number; passport number and country of issuance; alien
identification card number; or number and country of issuance of any
other government-issued document evidencing nationality or residence
and bearing a photograph or similar safeguard.
* (B) Exception for persons applying for a taxpayer
identification number. Instead of obtaining a taxpayer identification
number from a customer prior to opening the account, the CIP may include
procedures for opening an account for a customer that has applied
for, but has not received, a taxpayer identification number. In this
case, the CIP must include procedures to confirm that the application
was filed before the customer opens the account and to obtain the
taxpayer identification number within a reasonable period of time
after the account is opened.
(C) Credit card accounts. In connection with
a customer who opens a credit card account, a bank may obtain the
identifying information about a customer required under paragraph
(a)(2)(i)(A) by acquiring it from a third-party source prior to extending
credit to the customer.
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(ii) Customer
verification. The CIP must contain procedures for verifying the
identity of the customer, using information obtained in accordance
with paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section, within a reasonable time
after the account is opened. The procedures must describe when the
bank will use documents, non-documentary methods, or a combination
of both methods as described in this paragraph (a)(2)(ii).
(A) Verification
through documents. For a bank relying on documents, the CIP must
contain procedures that set forth the documents that the bank will
use. These documents may include:
(1)
For an individual, unexpired government-issued identification evidencing
nationality or residence and bearing a photograph or similar safeguard,
such as a driver’s license or passport; and
(2) For a person other than an individual
(such as a corporation, partnership, or trust), documents showing
the existence of the entity, such as certified articles of incorporation,
a government-issued business license, a partnership agreement, or
trust instrument.
(B) Verification through non-documentary methods. For a bank relying on non-documentary methods, the CIP must contain
procedures that describe the non-documentary methods the bank will
use.
(1) These methods may include contacting
a customer; independently verifying the customer’s identity through
the comparison of information provided by the customer with information
obtained from a consumer reporting agency, public database, or other
source; checking references with other financial institutions; and
obtaining a financial statement.
(2) The bank’s non-documentary procedures must address situations
where an individual is unable to present an unexpired government-issued
identification document that bears a photograph or similar safeguard;
the bank is not familiar with the documents presented; the account
is opened without obtaining documents; the customer opens the account
without appearing in person at the bank; and where the bank is otherwise
presented with circumstances that increase the risk that the bank
will be unable to verify the true identity of a customer through documents.
(C) Additional verification for certain customers. The CIP must address situations where, based on the bank’s risk
assessment of a new account opened by a customer that is not an individual,
the bank will obtain information about individuals with authority
or control over such account, including signatories, in order to verify
the customer’s identity. This verification method applies only when
the bank cannot verify the customer’s true identity using the verification
methods described in paragraphs (a)(2)(ii)(A) and (B) of this section.
(iii) Lack of verification. The CIP must include
procedures for responding to circumstances in which the bank cannot
form a reasonable belief that it knows the true identity of a customer.
These procedures should describe:
(A) When the bank should not open an account;
(B) The terms under which a customer
may use an account while the bank attempts to verify the customer’s
identity;
(C) When the bank should
close an account, after attempts to verify a customer’s identity have
failed; and
(D) When the bank should
file a Suspicious Activity Report in accordance with applicable law
and regulation.
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(3) Recordkeeping. The CIP must include procedures for making and maintaining a record
of all information obtained under the procedures implementing paragraph
(a) of this section.
(i) Required records. At a minimum,
the record must include:
(A) All identifying information about a customer obtained under paragraph
(a)(2)(i) of this section;
(B) A description
of any document that was relied on under paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(A) of
this section noting the type of document, any identification number
contained in the document, the place of issuance and, if any, the
date of issuance and expiration date;
(C) A description of the methods and the results of any measures
undertaken to verify the identity of the customer under paragraph
(a)(2)(ii)(B) or (C) of this section; and
(D) A description of the resolution of any substantive discrepancy
discovered when verifying the identifying information obtained.
(ii) Retention of records. The bank must retain
the information in paragraph (a)(3)(i)(A) of this section for five
years after the date the account is closed or, in the case of credit
card accounts, five years after the account is closed or becomes dormant.
The bank must retain the information in paragraphs (a)(3)(i)(B), (C),
and (D) of this section for five years after the record is made.
(4) Comparison with government lists. The CIP
must include procedures for determining whether the customer appears
on any list of known or suspected terrorists or terrorist organizations
issued by any Federal government agency and designated as such by
Treasury in consultation with the Federal functional regulators. The
procedures must require the bank to make such a determination within
a reasonable period of time after the account is opened, or earlier,
if required by another Federal law or regulation or Federal directive
issued in connection with the applicable list. The procedures must
also require the bank to follow all Federal directives issued in connection
with such lists.
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(5) (i) Customer notice. The CIP must
include procedures for providing bank customers with adequate notice
that the bank is requesting information to verify their identities.
(ii) Adequate notice. Notice is adequate if the bank generally describes
the identification requirements of this section and provides the notice
in a manner reasonably designed to ensure that a customer is able
to view the notice, or is otherwise given notice, before opening an
account. For example, depending upon the manner in which the account
is opened, a bank may post a notice in the lobby or on its Web site,
include the notice on its account applications, or use any other form
of written or oral notice.
(iii) Sample notice. If appropriate, a bank may
use the following sample language to provide notice to its customers:
Important Information About Procedures
for Opening a New Account
To
help the government fight the funding of terrorism and money laundering
activities, Federal law requires all financial institutions to obtain,
verify, and record information that identifies each person who opens
an account.
What this means for
you: When you open an account, we will ask for your name, address,
date of birth, and other information that will allow us to identify
you. We may also ask to see your driver’s license or other identifying
documents.
(6) Reliance on another financial institution. The CIP may include procedures specifying when a bank will rely
on the performance by another financial institution (including an
affiliate) of any procedures of the bank’s CIP, with respect to any
customer of the bank that is opening, or has opened, an account or
has established a similar formal banking or business relationship
with the other financial institution to provide or engage in services,
dealings, or other financial transactions, provided that:
(i) Such reliance is reasonable
under the circumstances;
(ii)
The other financial institution is subject to a rule implementing
31 U.S.C. 5318(h) and is regulated by a Federal functional regulator;
and
(iii) The other financial
institution enters into a contract requiring it to certify annually
to the bank that it has implemented its anti-money laundering program,
and that it will perform (or its agent will perform) the specified
requirements of the bank’s CIP.