Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) Institute of International Bankers Annual Seminar on Regulatory Examination, Risk Management and Compliance Issues October 29 th & 30th
Office of Compliance - Mission Created in 2004, the Office’s mission is to: Support, and as appropriate, oversee the agencies and organizations that conduct Bank Secrecy Act examinations Better ensure industry compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act
Role of the Office of Compliance Promote exam consistency by working with other agencies to coordinate examination procedures and training Monitor and assess the compliance of specific financial institutions and across the U.S. financial system Analyze Bank Secrecy Act and examination information for potential referral to regulatory agencies
Information Sharing Agreements FinCEN negotiates and signs “ Memorandum of Understanding ” with agency to establish standards for information sharing “ Two-way ” sharing - Agreement specifies the type of information that: –Agency will provide to FinCEN –FinCEN will provide to the agency
Case Assessment Process Cases originate from referrals from MOU partners of institutions with significant Bank Secrecy Act violations and deficiencies; through self-reporting (backfiling); and are internally-developed Cases are tracked, analyzed and reported utilizing a Case Management System For certain cases, the Office of Regulatory Analysis may assist the Office of Compliance by analyzing an institution’s Bank Secrecy Act data
Transfer to the Office of Enforcement Factors influencing the decision to transfer a case to the Office of Enforcement include but are not limited to: Significance of violations or deficiencies –Number; pervasiveness; time-span; rate of failure Nature of violations –Cause; repetitive; reflective of an AML program weakness Method of discovery
Transfer to the Office of Enforcement (cont.) Mitigating factors –Size; financial condition; staffing or turnover; compliance record; good faith Corrective action taken by institution –Prompt; comprehensive; oversight by management and/or the board of directors Type of action being pursued by the primary regulator Law enforcement interest
Interagency Statement on Enforcement of Bank Secrecy Act/Anti-Money Laundering Requirements (July 2007) Positive step with regard to clarity and consistency in BSA implementation makes regulatory framework more efficient for regulated industries and more effective for law enforcement FinCEN Director Freis: “Myths about major penalties for minor lapses in BSA requirements should be dispelled.” Bank Secrecy Act Compliance Interagency Statement
Bank Secrecy Act Compliance FinCEN Compliance Perspective Civil money penalty enforcement actions are pursued only in the most egregious cases: systemic, program-level breakdowns FinCEN has imposed only two civil money penalties in the last calendar year Vast majority of cases we review are handled in various manners by our Office of Compliance working with federal and state regulators
Bank Secrecy Act Compliance Enforcement Goals Sanction egregious violations: Systemic non-compliance Compel corrective action Deter future non-compliance
Matching Risk-Based Examinations to Risk-Based Obligations Money Services Businesses Making Regulations More Clear Feedback Matching Risk-Based Examinations to Risk-Based Obligations Money Services Businesses Making Regulations More Clear Feedback Bank Secrecy Act Effectiveness & Efficiency
UPDATES SAR Sharing Cross-Border Reporting
FinCEN’s Web Site: Laws, Regulations, Advisories Frequently Asked Questions Interpretive Rulings SAR Activity Reviews National Money Laundering Strategy Money Services Businesses Information and Guidance FinCEN’s Regulatory Helpline: