(a) General. No bank is required to file a report otherwise required
by section 1010.311 with respect to any transaction in currency between
an exempt person and such bank, or, to the extent provided in paragraph
(e)(6) of this section, between such exempt person and other banks
affiliated with such bank. (A limitation on the exemption described
in this paragraph (a) is set forth in paragraph (f) of this section.)
(b) Exempt person. For purposes of this section, an exempt person is:
(1) A bank, to the extent of such bank’s
domestic operations;
(2) A department or agency of the United States, of any State, or
of any political subdivision of any State;
(3) 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;
(4) 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 Capital Markets Companies”
heading), provided that, for purposes of this paragraph (b)(4), a
person that is a financial institution, other than a bank, is an exempt
person only to the extent of its domestic operations;
(5) Any subsidiary, other
than a bank, of any entity described in paragraph (b)(4) of this section
(a “listed entity”) that is organized under the laws of the United
States or of any State and at least 51 percent of whose common stock
or analogous equity interest is owned by the listed entity, provided
that, for purposes of this paragraph (b)(5), a person that is a financial
institution, other than a bank, is an exempt person only to the extent
of its domestic operations;
(6) To the extent of its domestic operations
and only with respect to transactions conducted through its exemptible
accounts, any other commercial enterprise (for purposes of this section,
a “non-listed business”), other than an enterprise specified in paragraph
(e)(8) of this section, that:
(i) Maintains a transaction
account, as defined in paragraph (e)(9) of this section, at the bank
for at least two months, except as provided in paragraph (c)(2)(ii)
of this section;
(ii) Frequently engages in transactions in currency with the bank
in excess of $10,000; and
(iii) Is incorporated or organized under
the laws of the United States or a State, or is registered as and
eligible to do business within the United States or a State; or
(7) With
respect solely to withdrawals for payroll purposes from existing exemptible
accounts, any other person (for purposes of this section, a “payroll
customer”) that:
(i) Maintains a transaction account,
as defined in paragraph (e)(9) of this section, at the bank for at
least two months, except as provided in paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this
section;
(ii) Operates
a firm that regularly with- draws more than $10,000 in order to pay
its United States employees in currency; and
(iii) Is incorporated or organized under
the laws of the United States or a State, or is registered as and
eligible to do business within the United States or a State.
3-1711.21
(c) Designation of certain
exempt persons.
(1) General. Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, a bank must
designate an exempt person by filing FinCEN Form 110. Such designation
must occur by the close of the 30-calendar 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 this
section. The designation must be made separately by each bank that
treats the customer as an exempt person, except as provided in paragraph
(e)(6) of this section.
(2) Special rules.
(i) A bank
is not required to file a FinCEN Form 110 with respect to the transfer
of currency to or from:
(A) Any of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks;
or
(B) Any exempt person
as described in paragraphs (b)(1) to (3) of this section.
(ii) Notwithstanding
subparagraphs (b)(6)(i) and (b)(7)(i) of this section, and if the
requirements under this section are otherwise satisfied, a bank may
designate a non-listed business or a payroll customer, as described
in paragraphs (b)(6) and (7) of this section, as an exempt person
before the customer has maintained a transaction account at the bank
for at least two months if the bank conducts and documents a risk-based
assessment of the customer and forms a reasonable belief that the
customer has a legitimate business purpose for conducting frequent
transactions in currency.
3-1711.22
(d) Annual review. At
least once each year, a bank must review the eligibility of an exempt
person described in paragraphs (b)(4) to (7) of this section to determine
whether such person remains eligible for an exemption. As part of
its annual review, a bank must review the application of the monitoring
system required to be maintained by paragraph (h)(2) of this section
to each existing account of an exempt person described in paragraphs
(b)(6) or (b)(7) of this section.
3-1711.23
(e) Operating rules.
(1) General rule. Subject to the specific rules of this section, a bank must take
such steps to assure itself that a person is an exempt person (within
the meaning of the applicable provision of paragraph (b) of this section),
to document the basis for its conclusions, and document its compliance,
with the terms of this section, 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, and in the
case of the monitoring system requirement set forth in paragraph (h)(2)
of this section, such steps that a reasonable and prudent bank would
take and document to identify suspicious transactions as required
by paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
(2) 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 (b)(2) or (b)(3) of 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 (b)(3) 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.
3-1711.24
(3) Stock exchange listings. In determining whether a person is
described in paragraph (b)(4) 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 site or sites maintained by the New York Stock Exchange,
the American Stock Exchange, or the NASDAQ.
(4) Listed company subsidiaries. In determining whether a person
is described in paragraph (b)(5) of this section, a bank may rely
upon:
(i) Any reasonably authenticated corporate
officer’s certificate;
(ii) Any reasonably authenticated photocopy of Internal Revenue Service
Form 851 (Affiliation Schedule) or the equivalent thereof for the
appropriate tax year; or
(iii) A person’s Annual Report or Form
10-K, as filed in each case with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
(5) Aggregated accounts. In determining the
qualification of a customer as a non-listed business or a payroll
customer, a bank may treat all exemptible accounts of the customer
as a single account. If a bank elects to treat all exemptible accounts
of a customer as a single account, the bank must continue to treat
such accounts consistently as a single account for purposes of determining
the qualification of the customer as a non-listed business or payroll
customer.
(6) Affiliated banks. The designation required
by paragraph (c) of this section 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.
3-1711.25
(7) Sole proprietorships. A sole proprietorship may be treated as
a non-listed business if it otherwise meets the requirements of paragraph
(b)(6) 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 (b)(7) of this section, as applicable.
(8) Ineligible
businesses. A business engaged primarily in one or more of the
following activities may not be treated as a non-listed business for
purposes of this section: Serving as 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 (other than licensed parimutuel betting at race tracks);
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 by FinCEN. A business that engages in multiple business
activities may be treated as a non-listed business so long as no more
than 50% of its gross revenues are derived from one or more of the
ineligible business activities listed in this paragraph (e)(8).
(9) Exemptible accounts of a non-listed business
or payroll customer. The exemptible accounts of a non-listed
business or payroll customer include transaction accounts and money
market deposit accounts. However, money market deposit accounts maintained
other than in connection with a commercial enterprise are not exemptible
accounts. A transaction account, for purposes 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), and its implementing regulations (12
CFR part 204). A money market deposit account, for purposes of this
section, is any interest-bearing account that is described as a money
market deposit account in 12 CFR 204.2(d)(2).
(10) Documentation. The records maintained by a bank to document its compliance with
and administration of the rules of this section shall be maintained
in accordance with the provisions of section 1010.430.
3-1711.26
(f) 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 (a) of this section.
(g) Limitation on liability.
(1) No bank shall be subject to penalty
under this chapter for failure to file a report required
by section 1010.311 with respect to a transaction in currency by an
exempt person with respect to which the requirements of this section
have been satisfied, unless the bank:
(i) Knowingly files
false or incomplete information with respect to the transaction or
the customer engaging in the transaction; or
(ii) Has reason to believe that the
customer does not meet the criteria established by this section for
treatment of the transactor as an exempt person or that the transaction
is not a transaction of the exempt person.
(2) Subject to the specific
terms of this section, and absent any specific knowledge of information
indicating that a customer no longer meets the requirements of an
exempt person, a bank satisfies the requirements of this section to
the extent it continues to treat that customer as an exempt person
until the completion of that customer’s next required periodic review,
which as required by paragraph (d) of this section for an exempt person
described in paragraph (b)(4) to (7) of this section, shall occur
no less than once each year.
(3) 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 transactions
in currency by persons other than exempt persons.
3-1711.27
(h) Obligations to file suspicious
activity reports and maintain system for monitoring transactions in
currency.
(1) Nothing in this section relieves a
bank of the obligation, or reduces in any way such bank’s obligation,
to file a report required by section 1020.320 with respect to any
transaction, including any transaction in currency that a bank knows,
suspects, or has reason to suspect is a transaction or attempted transaction
that is described in section 1020.320(a)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii), or
relieves a bank of any reporting or recordkeeping obligation imposed
by this chapter (except the obligation to report transactions in currency
pursuant to this chapter to the extent provided in this section).
Thus, for example, a sharp increase from one year to the next in the
gross total of currency transactions made by an exempt customer, or
similarly anomalous transactions trends or patterns, may trigger the
obligation of a bank under section 1020.320.
(2) Consistent with its annual
review obligations under paragraph (d) of this section, a bank shall
establish and maintain a monitoring system that is reasonably designed
to detect, for each account of a non-listed business or payroll customer,
those transactions in currency involving such account that would require
a bank to file a suspicious transaction report. The statement in the
preceding sentence with respect to accounts of non-listed business
and payroll customers does not limit the obligation of banks generally
to take the steps necessary to satisfy the terms of paragraph (h)(1)
of this section and section 1020.320 with respect to all exempt persons.
(i) Revocation. Without any action on the part of the Department of the Treasury
and subject to the limitation on liability contained in paragraph
(g)(2) of this section:
(1) The status of an entity as an exempt
person under paragraph (b)(4) of this section ceases once such entity
ceases to be listed on the applicable stock exchange; and
(2) The status of a subsidiary
as an exempt person under paragraph (b)(5) of this section ceases
once such subsidiary ceases to have at least 51 per cent of its common
stock or analogous equity interest owned by a listed entity. (Approved
by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 1506-0012.)