The act does not apply when a financial institution, rather
than a customer, is being investigated. However, the federal agency
seeking access to customer records must provide the financial institution
with the certification of compliance required.
Records may also be provided incidental to
processing a government loan, loan guaranty, loan insurance agreement,
or default upon a government-guaranteed or -insured loan. Again, the
federal agency seeking access must provide the financial institution
with the written certification of compliance. The federal agency must
also give to the loan applicant a notice of its access rights when
the customer initially applies for the loan. The financial institution
is then required to keep a record of all disclosures made to government
authorities, and the customer is entitled to inspect this record.
No notice is required and the customer does not have the
right to challenge any access when the government is engaging in authorized
foreign intelligence activities or when the Secret Service is conducting
its protective functions. A certificate of compliance must be furnished
to the institution.
Although the Securities and Exchange Commission is covered
by the act, it can obtain a customer’s records from an institution,
without prior notice to the customer, by obtaining an order from a
United States district court. It must provide the institution with
a certificate of compliance, along with the court order prohibiting
disclosure of the fact that the documents have been obtained. The
court order will set a delay-of-notification date after which the
institution will notify the customer that the SEC has obtained his
or her records.