Interpretive Guidance-Sharing Suspicious Activity Reports by Securities Broker-Dealers, Mutual Funds, Futures Commission Merchants, and Introducing Brokers in Commodities With Certain U.S. Affiliates, 10161-10164 [E9-4695]
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sharing of a SAR or, more broadly, any
information that would reveal the
existence of a SAR, with a head office
or controlling company (including
overseas) promotes compliance with the
applicable requirements of the BSA by
enabling the head office or controlling
company to discharge its oversight
responsibilities with respect to
enterprise-wide risk management,
including oversight of a depository
institution’s compliance with applicable
laws and regulations.
The January 2006 Guidance deferred
taking a position on whether a
depository institution is permitted to
share a SAR with affiliates and directed
institutions not to share with such
affiliates. FinCEN has now concluded
that a depository institution that has
filed a SAR may share the SAR, or any
information that would reveal the
existence of the SAR, with an affiliate,
as defined herein, provided the affiliate
is subject to a SAR regulation.7 The
sharing of SARs with such affiliates
facilitates the identification of
suspicious transactions taking place
through the depository institution’s
affiliates that are subject to a SAR rule.
Therefore, such sharing within the
depository institution’s corporate
organizational structure is consistent
with the purposes of Title II of the
BSA.8
It is not consistent with the purposes
of Title II of the BSA for an affiliate that
has received a SAR from a depository
institution that has filed the SAR to
further share that SAR, or any
information that would reveal the
existence of that SAR with an affiliate
of its own, even if that affiliate is subject
to a SAR rule.
As is the case with sharing SARs with
head offices and controlling companies,
there may be circumstances under
which a depository institution, its
affiliate, or both entities would be liable
for direct or indirect disclosure by the
affiliate of a SAR or any information
that would reveal the existence of a
SAR. Therefore, the depository
institution, as part of its internal
controls, should have written
confidentiality agreements in place
ensuring that its affiliates protect the
confidentiality of the SAR through
appropriate internal controls.
7 See 31 CFR 103.15 to 103.21. See also, 12 CFR
208.62 (FRB); 12 CFR 353.3 (FDIC); 12 CFR 748.1
(NCUA); 12 CFR 21.11 (OCC); and 12 CFR 563.180
(OTS).
8 Because foreign branches of U.S. banks are
regarded as foreign banks for purposes of the BSA,
under this guidance, they are ‘‘affiliates’’ that are
not subject to a SAR regulation. Accordingly, a U.S.
bank that has filed a SAR may not share the SAR,
or any information that would reveal the existence
of the SAR, with its foreign branches.
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Consistent with the BSA and the
implementing regulations issued by
FinCEN and the Federal Banking
Agencies, a SAR, or any information
that would reveal the existence of a
SAR, must not be disclosed, even under
this guidance, if the depository
institution has reason to believe it may
be disclosed to any person involved in
the suspicious activity that is the subject
of the SAR.
Dated: February 27, 2009.
James H. Freis, Jr.,
Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network.
[FR Doc. E9–4693 Filed 3–6–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 103
[Docket Number: TREAS–FinCen–2008–
0022]
Interpretive Guidance—Sharing
Suspicious Activity Reports by
Securities Broker-Dealers, Mutual
Funds, Futures Commission
Merchants, and Introducing Brokers in
Commodities With Certain U.S.
Affiliates
AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network, Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Proposed guidance.
SUMMARY: The Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network (‘‘FinCEN’’) of the
Department of the Treasury, after
consulting with staffs of the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’) and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (‘‘CFTC’’), is
issuing for comment this proposed
interpretive guidance. Published
elsewhere in this part of the Federal
Register are proposed rules clarifying
the scope of the statutory prohibition on
the disclosure by a financial institution
of a report of a suspicious transaction
set forth in the Bank Secrecy Act
(‘‘BSA’’). The proposed rules include a
provision which states that the
prohibition does not apply when a
securities broker-dealer, mutual fund,
futures commission merchant, or
introducing broker in commodities
shares a suspicious activity report
(‘‘SAR’’), or any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR, within its
corporate organizational structure for
purposes consistent with Title II of the
BSA, as determined by regulation or
guidance. The proposed guidance
interprets this provision to permit a
securities broker-dealer, mutual fund,
futures commission merchant, or
introducing broker in commodities to
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share a SAR with its affiliates that are
also subject to SAR rules.
DATES: Written comments on the
proposed guidance may be submitted on
or before June 8, 2009.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by docket number TREAS–
FinCen–2008–0022,1 by any of the
following methods:
• Federal e-rulemaking portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail:
regcomments@fincen.treas.gov. Include
docket number TREAS–FinCen–2008–
0022 in the subject line of the message.
• Mail: FinCEN, P.O. Box 39, Vienna,
VA 22183. Include docket number
TREAS–FinCen–2008–0022 in the body
of the text.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Regulatory Policy and Programs
Division, FinCEN, (800) 949–2732.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
FinCEN, through its authority under
the BSA as delegated by the Secretary of
the Treasury, may require financial
institutions to keep records and file
reports that FinCEN determines have a
high degree of usefulness in criminal,
tax, or regulatory investigations or
proceedings, or for intelligence or
counterintelligence activities to protect
against international terrorism. Within
this framework, FinCEN may require
financial institutions to file SARs and
has issued rules implementing that
specific authority with respect to certain
types of financial institutions.2
Sharing Within the Corporate
Organizational Structure
In January 2006, FinCEN, after
consulting with the staffs of the
Securities Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’) and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (‘‘CFTC’’),
determined that, subject to certain
exceptions or qualifications, a securities
broker-dealer, futures commission
merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities may share a SAR with its
parent entities, both domestic and
foreign.3 Moreover, guidance issued by
1 This single docket number is shared by three
related documents (a notice of proposed
rulemaking, and this and another piece of proposed
guidance related to that notice of proposed
rulemaking) published simultaneously by FinCEN
in today’s Federal Register. Accordingly,
commenters may submit comments related to any
of the proposals, or any combination of proposals,
in a single comment letter.
2 See 31 CFR 103.15 to 103.21.
3 ‘‘Guidance on Sharing of Suspicious Activity
Reports by Securities Broker-Dealers, Futures
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FinCEN in consultation with the SEC in
October 2006 stated that a U.S. mutual
fund may share a SAR with the
investment adviser that controls the
fund, whether domestic or foreign, so
that the investment adviser could
implement enterprise-wide risk
management and compliance functions
over all of the mutual funds that it
controls 4 and improve its identification
and reporting of suspicious activity.5
FinCEN also issued joint guidance with
the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (‘‘FRB’’), the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation
(‘‘FDIC’’), the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency (‘‘OCC’’), and the Office
of Thrift Supervision (‘‘OTS’’),
concluding that, subject to certain
exceptions or qualifications, a U.S.
branch or agency of a foreign bank may
share a SAR with its head office outside
the United States, and a U.S. bank or
savings association may disclose a SAR
to its controlling company, no matter
where the entity or party is located.6
Nothing in the proposed guidance for
sharing with affiliates supersedes any of
the guidance mentioned in the
preceding paragraph, or the adopting
release for the mutual fund SAR rule.7
These guidance documents reflected a
recognition by FinCEN, the FDIC, the
FRB, the OCC, the OTS, the SEC, and
the CFTC (referred to collectively in the
proposed guidance as the ‘‘Federal
regulators’’) that a head office,
controlling entity or party, or parent
Commission Merchants, and Introducing Brokers in
Commodities’’ (January 20, 2006).
4 ‘‘Control’’ for the purposes of the October 2006
Guidance is defined in section 2(a)(9) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a–
2(a)(9)) to mean ‘‘the power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or policies of a
company, unless such power is solely the result of
an official position with such company.’’ A mutual
fund typically is organized and operated by an
investment adviser that controls the fund. By
contrast, an investment adviser that performs
limited functions in managing a mutual fund’s
securities portfolio (also known as a ‘‘subadviser’’)
would not typically control the fund and therefore
would be outside the scope of the guidance.
5 FIN–2006–G013, ‘‘Frequently Asked Questions:
Suspicious Activity Reporting Requirements for
Mutual Funds’’ (October 4, 2006).
6 ‘‘Interagency Guidance on Sharing Suspicious
Activity Reports with Head Offices and Controlling
Companies’’ (January 20, 2006).
7 Specifically, we note that in both the mutual
fund SAR rule adopting release (71 FR 26213) and
the October 2006 guidance, FinCEN acknowledged
the role of transfer agents and other service
providers in the suspicious activity monitoring,
detection, and reporting obligations of mutual
funds. These service providers may be unaffiliated
or affiliated with the mutual funds. The October
2006 guidance and adopting release clarified that a
mutual fund may contractually delegate its SAR
functions to such an agent, although the mutual
fund remains responsible for assuring compliance
with the rule, and therefore must monitor actively
the performance of its reporting obligations.
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entity of a depository institution,
broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, and introducing
broker in commodities, has oversight
responsibilities with respect to
enterprise-wide risk management. These
responsibilities include a valid need to
review compliance by U.S.-based
depository institutions, broker-dealers,
mutual funds, futures commission
merchants, and introducing brokers
with legal requirements to identify and
report suspicious activity.
The guidance documents regarding
the sharing of SARs with head offices,
controlling companies or parties, and
parent entities (referred to here as the
‘‘2006 Guidance’’) expressly noted that
the sharing of a SAR with a non-U.S.
entity raises concerns about the ability
of the foreign entity to protect the SAR
in light of possible requests for
disclosure abroad that may be subject to
foreign law. The 2006 Guidance also
provides that the recipient may not
disclose further any SAR, or the fact that
such a report has been filed; however,
the recipient may disclose without
permission underlying information. The
2006 Guidance also stated that FinCEN
and the other Federal regulators were
considering whether a financial
institution may share a SAR with other
entities within the financial institution’s
corporate organization located inside
the United States and those located
abroad, and instructed financial
institutions not to share SARs with such
entities until further guidance was
issued.
Proposed Regulatory Changes
In proposed regulations issued today,
FinCEN is proposing to revise the
regulations implementing the BSA
regarding the confidentiality of a SAR to
clarify, among other things, the scope of
the statutory prohibition against the
disclosure by a financial institution of a
SAR. These rules include a provision
clarifying that the statutory prohibition
does not apply to sharing by a securities
broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities, or any director,
officer, employee, or agent thereof, of a
SAR, or any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR, within the
corporate organizational structure of a
securities broker-dealer, mutual fund,
futures commission merchant, or
introducing broker in commodities for
purposes consistent with Title II of the
BSA, as determined by regulation or in
guidance, provided that no person
involved in any reported suspicious
transaction is notified that the
transaction has been reported.
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II. Proposed Guidance
This proposed guidance interprets the
general statement in the proposed SAR
confidentiality rules 8 that a securities
broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities, or any director,
officer, employee, or agent thereof, may
share a SAR, or information that reveals
the existence of a SAR, within its
corporate organizational structure for
purposes consistent with Title II of the
BSA. First, the proposed guidance
acknowledges that the 2006 Guidance
regarding securities broker-dealers,
mutual funds, futures commission
merchants, and introducing brokers in
commodities continues to be applicable.
It explains that sharing of a SAR or
information that reveals the existence of
a SAR by a securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities with its head office or its
controlling company, whether domestic
or foreign, promotes compliance with
the BSA by enabling the head office or
controlling company to discharge its
oversight responsibilities with respect to
enterprise-wide risk management,
including oversight of the securities
broker-dealer’s, mutual fund’s, futures
commission merchant’s, and
introducing broker in commodities’
compliance with applicable laws and
regulations.
Next, the guidance explains that
FinCEN also has concluded that the
proposed regulations may be interpreted
to permit a securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, and introducing broker in
commodities that has filed a SAR to
share the SAR, or any information that
would reveal the existence of the SAR,
with an affiliate 9 that is subject to a
SAR regulation.10
FinCEN has concluded that such
sharing within a corporate organization
is consistent with two important
purposes of the BSA: promoting efforts
to detect and report money laundering
and terrorist financing by financial
institutions that are subject to the BSA,
8 The proposed guidance interprets a provision in
the proposed SAR regulations. The final guidance
issued will be modified to correspond to any
changes made in the final SAR regulations.
9 For the purposes of this proposed guidance, an
‘‘affiliate’’ is effectively defined as a company under
common control with, or a subsidiary of, the
securities broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities. ‘‘Affiliate’’ does not include holding
companies because sharing with these entities is
already addressed in the 2006 Guidance.
10 See 31 CFR 103.15 to 103.21. See also, 12 CFR
208.62 (FRB); 12 CFR 353.3 (FDIC); 12 CFR 748.1
(NCUA); 12 CFR 21.11 (OCC); and 12 CFR 563.180
(OTS).
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 44 / Monday, March 9, 2009 / Proposed Rules
and ensuring the confidentiality of a
SAR or any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR. The
sharing by a securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities of a SAR, or any
information that would reveal the
existence of a SAR, can facilitate the
identification of suspicious transactions
taking place through the securities
broker-dealer’s, mutual fund’s, futures
commission merchant’s, or introducing
broker in commodities’ affiliates that are
also subject to SAR reporting
requirements. Although the sharing of
information underlying the filing of a
SAR has never been prohibited under
the BSA, it is understood that the
sharing of a SAR itself pursuant to this
proposed guidance may entail greater
efficiencies.11
Moreover, the proposed SAR
confidentiality rules provide that a
‘‘SAR, and any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR, are
confidential.’’ 12 Accordingly, affiliates
subject to a SAR rule are prohibited
from disclosing any SAR or information
that a SAR was filed, including both
SARs they have filed, and any SARs
they have received that have been filed
by others. In addition, because the
guidance applies only to the sharing of
a SAR by the securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, and introducing broker in
commodities ‘‘that has filed’’ the SAR,
the guidance includes a statement
clarifying that it is not permissible for
an affiliate that has received such a SAR
to share that SAR, or any information
that would reveal the existence of that
SAR with another affiliate, even if that
affiliate is an affiliate subject to a SAR
rule. The guidance also states that a
broker-dealer in securities, mutual fund,
futures commission merchant, and
introducing broker in commodities, as
part of its internal controls, should have
written confidentiality agreements in
place ensuring that its affiliates protect
the confidentiality of the SAR through
appropriate internal controls. Given the
above restrictions, FinCEN is satisfied
that the sharing permitted by this
guidance is consistent with the BSA
objective to ensure that suspicious
activity reporting remains confidential.
FinCEN has declined to permit
sharing with affiliates that are not
subject to a SAR rule, whether domestic
11 For
example, the sharing of a SAR eliminates
the need to create a separate summary document
which, if shared, might inadvertently reveal the
existence of a SAR itself.
12 See the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
published elsewhere in today’s Federal Register.
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or foreign.13 At this time, it is not
apparent that such sharing would be
consistent with the purposes of the
BSA, to promote efforts to detect and
report money laundering and terrorist
financing by financial institutions that
are subject to rules implementing the
BSA, and to ensure the confidentiality
of a SAR or any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR.
Finally, this proposed guidance is
intended only to remove unnecessary
obstacles to detecting and reporting
suspicious activity. It should not be read
to impose new BSA requirements or to
suggest that sharing with affiliates is
compulsory.
III. Request for Comment
FinCEN invites comments on all
aspects of the proposed guidance.
FinCEN solicits comment on whether
this proposed guidance would achieve
the intended effect of promoting
compliance with the BSA. We also
request comment on whether the
proposed guidance will be beneficial,
whether it raises any ambiguities, and
whether it will result in any negative
consequences. In addition, we
specifically invite comment on the
following:
• Whether the definition of ‘‘affiliate’’
is appropriate?
• Whether the scope of the guidance
should be expanded to permit sharing
with other affiliates within the United
States. Commenters suggesting that the
scope of the guidance be expanded
should address how additional sharing
would be consistent with the purposes
of Title II of the BSA;
• Whether the scope of the guidance
clearly limits sharing with affiliates to
only those affiliates within the United
States based on the application of
FinCEN’s SAR rules or whether further
clarification is needed to ensure that
SARs are shared only in a domestic
context;
• Whether the scope of the guidance
should be expanded to permit sharing
with other affiliates outside of the
United States. Commenters suggesting
that the scope of the guidance be
expanded should address how
additional sharing outside the U.S.
would be consistent with the purposes
of Title II of the BSA. In particular,
commenters should explain how a
foreign affiliate might protect a SAR in
light of a possible request for disclosure
13 FinCEN does not intend this guidance to permit
the sharing of SARs with affiliates where such
sharing would subject the SARs to the laws of a
foreign jurisdiction, and elsewhere in this notice
seeks specific comment on whether as drafted, the
guidance meets that purpose based on present
industry practices.
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10163
abroad that may be subject to foreign
law;
• Whether similar provisions to allow
sharing with certain affiliates should be
permitted among all financial
institutions subject to a SAR rule; and
• Whether financial institutions,
other than depository institutions,
securities broker-dealers, mutual funds,
futures commission merchants, or
introducing broker in commodities,
subject to a SAR rule should be
permitted to share a SAR, or any
information that would reveal the
existence of a SAR, with parent entities
and/or affiliates; and
Whether and how a securities brokerdealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, and introducing
broker in commodities can store and
provide access to SARs in an electronic
system in a way that prevents the SARs
from being subject to disclosure laws or
obligations of foreign jurisdictions.
Proposed Interpretive Guidance 14
Sharing Suspicious Activity Reports by
Securities Broker-Dealers, Mutual
Funds, Futures Commission Merchants,
and Introducing Brokers in
Commodities With Certain U.S.
Affiliates 1
The Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network (‘‘FinCEN’’), after consulting
with staff of the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘SEC’’) and the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’), is issuing this
guidance to confirm that under the Bank
Secrecy Act (‘‘BSA’’) and its
implementing regulations, securities
broker-dealers, mutual funds, futures
commission merchants, and introducing
brokers in commodities that have filed
a Suspicious Activity Report (‘‘SAR’’)
may share the SAR, or any information
that would reveal the existence of the
SAR, with certain affiliates. This
guidance does not address the
applicability of any other Federal or
state laws.
14 For purposes of the guidance text below, all
citations to Title 31 SAR regulations are references
to the amended regulations we anticipate
promulgating as discussed in the above section,
Proposed Regulatory Changes.
1 For purposes of this guidance, ‘‘affiliate’’ of a
person means any company under common control
with, or controlled by, such person. ‘‘Control’’ of a
company means the power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or policies of a
company whether through ownership of securities,
by contract, or otherwise. Any person who owns
beneficially, either directly or through one or more
controlled companies, more than 25 percent of the
voting securities of any company is presumed to
control the company. Any person who does not
own more than 25 percent of the voting securities
of any company will be presumed not to control the
company.
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The BSA prohibits the filer of a SAR
from notifying any person involved in a
suspicious transaction that the activity
has been reported.2 Regulations issued
by FinCEN 3 construe this
confidentiality provision as generally
prohibiting a securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities from disclosing a SAR, or
any information that would reveal the
existence of a SAR.
However, the regulations make clear
that, provided no person involved in the
transaction is notified that the
transaction has been reported, the
prohibition does not include disclosures
to (1) FinCEN; (2) any Federal, State, or
local law enforcement agency; (3) any
Federal or state regulatory agency that
examines the securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities for compliance with the
BSA; or (4) a self-regulatory
organization for the purpose of
examining the filing financial
institution for compliance with its SAR
reporting requirements. The regulations
also provide that the prohibition does
not apply to: (i) The disclosure of the
underlying facts, transactions, and
documents upon which a SAR is based,
including, but not limited to,
disclosures related to filing a joint SAR
and in connection with certain
employment references or termination
notices; and (ii) the sharing of a SAR, or
any information that would reveal the
existence of a SAR, within the corporate
organizational structure of a securities
broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities for purposes
consistent with Title II of the BSA, as
determined by regulation or in
guidance.4
In previously issued guidance
(‘‘January 2006 Guidance’’), FinCEN, in
consultation with the staffs of the SEC
and the CFTC, determined that a
securities broker-dealer, futures
commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities may share a SAR
with its parent entity (whether domestic
2 See
31 U.S.C. 5318(g)(2).
31 CFR 103.15(d), 103.17(e), and 103.19(e).
4 See the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
published elsewhere in today’s Federal Register.
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3 See
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or foreign).5 In October 2006, FinCEN
additionally published guidance stating
that a mutual fund may share SARs with
an investment adviser that controls the
fund, whether domestic or foreign.6
These guidance documents continue to
be applicable and comport with the SAR
regulations referenced above.7 The
sharing of a SAR or, more broadly, any
information that would reveal the
existence of a SAR, with a parent entity
or investment adviser that controls a
mutual fund (including a foreign parent
entity or foreign investment adviser)
promotes compliance with the
applicable requirements of the BSA by
enabling the parent entity or investment
adviser that controls a mutual fund to
discharge its oversight responsibilities
with respect to enterprise-wide risk
management and compliance with
applicable laws and regulations.
The January 2006 Guidance deferred
taking a position on whether a securities
broker-dealer, futures commission
merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities is permitted to share a
SAR with affiliates and directed
institutions not to share with such
affiliates. FinCEN, in consultation with
SEC and CFTC staff, has now concluded
that a securities broker-dealer, mutual
fund, futures commission merchant, or
introducing broker in commodities that
has filed a SAR may share the SAR, or
any information that would reveal the
existence of the SAR, with an affiliate,
provided the affiliate is subject to a SAR
regulation 8 issued by FinCEN, the
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, the National
Credit Union Administration, the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency, or
the Office of Thrift Supervision. The
sharing of SARs with such affiliates
5 ‘‘Guidance on Sharing of Suspicious Activity
Reports by Securities Broker-Dealers, Futures
Commission Merchants, and Introducing Brokers in
Commodities’’ (January 20, 2006).
6 ‘‘Frequently Asked Questions: Suspicious
Activity Reporting Requirements for Mutual Funds’’
(October 4, 2006).
7 See supra note 4.
8 See 31 CFR 103.15 to 103.21. See also, 12 CFR
21.11 (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency);
12 CFR 208.62, 211.5(k), 211.24(f), 225.4(f) (Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System); 12
CFR 353.3 (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation);
12 CFR 563.180 (Office of Thrift Supervision); 12
CFR 748.1(c) (National Credit Union
Administration).
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facilitates their compliance with the
identification of suspicious transactions
taking place through the securities
broker-dealer’s, mutual fund’s, futures
commission merchant’s, or introducing
broker in commodities’ affiliates that are
subject to a SAR rule. Therefore, such
sharing within the corporate
organizational structure of a securities
broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities is consistent
with the purposes of Title II of the BSA.
It is not consistent with the purposes
of Title II of the BSA for an affiliate that
has received a SAR from a securities
broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities to share that
SAR, or any information that would
reveal the existence of that SAR with an
affiliate of its own, even if that affiliate
is subject to a SAR rule.
As is the case with sharing SARs with
parent entities, there may be
circumstances under which a securities
broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities, its affiliate, or
both entities would be liable for direct
or indirect disclosure by the affiliate of
a SAR or any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR. Therefore,
the securities broker-dealer, mutual
fund, futures commission merchant, or
introducing broker in commodities, as
part of its internal controls, should have
written confidentiality agreements in
place ensuring that its affiliates protect
the confidentiality of the SAR through
appropriate internal controls.
Consistent with the BSA and the
implementing regulations issued by
FinCEN, a SAR, or any information that
would reveal the existence of a SAR,
must not be disclosed, even under this
guidance, if the securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities has reason to believe it
may be disclosed to any person
involved in the suspicious activity that
is the subject of the SAR.
Dated: February 27, 2009.
James H. Freis, Jr.,
Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network.
[FR Doc. E9–4695 Filed 3–6–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–02–P
E:\FR\FM\09MRP2.SGM
09MRP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 44 (Monday, March 9, 2009)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 10161-10164]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-4695]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 103
[Docket Number: TREAS-FinCen-2008-0022]
Interpretive Guidance--Sharing Suspicious Activity Reports by
Securities Broker-Dealers, Mutual Funds, Futures Commission Merchants,
and Introducing Brokers in Commodities With Certain U.S. Affiliates
AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, Department of the
Treasury.
ACTION: Proposed guidance.
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SUMMARY: The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (``FinCEN'') of the
Department of the Treasury, after consulting with staffs of the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'') and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (``CFTC''), is issuing for comment this proposed
interpretive guidance. Published elsewhere in this part of the Federal
Register are proposed rules clarifying the scope of the statutory
prohibition on the disclosure by a financial institution of a report of
a suspicious transaction set forth in the Bank Secrecy Act (``BSA'').
The proposed rules include a provision which states that the
prohibition does not apply when a securities broker-dealer, mutual
fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker in commodities
shares a suspicious activity report (``SAR''), or any information that
would reveal the existence of a SAR, within its corporate
organizational structure for purposes consistent with Title II of the
BSA, as determined by regulation or guidance. The proposed guidance
interprets this provision to permit a securities broker-dealer, mutual
fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker in commodities
to share a SAR with its affiliates that are also subject to SAR rules.
DATES: Written comments on the proposed guidance may be submitted on or
before June 8, 2009.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by docket number TREAS-
FinCen-2008-0022,\1\ by any of the following methods:
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\1\ This single docket number is shared by three related
documents (a notice of proposed rulemaking, and this and another
piece of proposed guidance related to that notice of proposed
rulemaking) published simultaneously by FinCEN in today's Federal
Register. Accordingly, commenters may submit comments related to any
of the proposals, or any combination of proposals, in a single
comment letter.
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Federal e-rulemaking portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: regcomments@fincen.treas.gov. Include docket
number TREAS-FinCen-2008-0022 in the subject line of the message.
Mail: FinCEN, P.O. Box 39, Vienna, VA 22183. Include
docket number TREAS-FinCen-2008-0022 in the body of the text.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Regulatory Policy and Programs
Division, FinCEN, (800) 949-2732.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
FinCEN, through its authority under the BSA as delegated by the
Secretary of the Treasury, may require financial institutions to keep
records and file reports that FinCEN determines have a high degree of
usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory investigations or
proceedings, or for intelligence or counterintelligence activities to
protect against international terrorism. Within this framework, FinCEN
may require financial institutions to file SARs and has issued rules
implementing that specific authority with respect to certain types of
financial institutions.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See 31 CFR 103.15 to 103.21.
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Sharing Within the Corporate Organizational Structure
In January 2006, FinCEN, after consulting with the staffs of the
Securities Exchange Commission (``SEC'') and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (``CFTC''), determined that, subject to certain
exceptions or qualifications, a securities broker-dealer, futures
commission merchant, or introducing broker in commodities may share a
SAR with its parent entities, both domestic and foreign.\3\ Moreover,
guidance issued by
[[Page 10162]]
FinCEN in consultation with the SEC in October 2006 stated that a U.S.
mutual fund may share a SAR with the investment adviser that controls
the fund, whether domestic or foreign, so that the investment adviser
could implement enterprise-wide risk management and compliance
functions over all of the mutual funds that it controls \4\ and improve
its identification and reporting of suspicious activity.\5\ FinCEN also
issued joint guidance with the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (``FRB''), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(``FDIC''), the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (``OCC''),
and the Office of Thrift Supervision (``OTS''), concluding that,
subject to certain exceptions or qualifications, a U.S. branch or
agency of a foreign bank may share a SAR with its head office outside
the United States, and a U.S. bank or savings association may disclose
a SAR to its controlling company, no matter where the entity or party
is located.\6\ Nothing in the proposed guidance for sharing with
affiliates supersedes any of the guidance mentioned in the preceding
paragraph, or the adopting release for the mutual fund SAR rule.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ ``Guidance on Sharing of Suspicious Activity Reports by
Securities Broker-Dealers, Futures Commission Merchants, and
Introducing Brokers in Commodities'' (January 20, 2006).
\4\ ``Control'' for the purposes of the October 2006 Guidance is
defined in section 2(a)(9) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15
U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(9)) to mean ``the power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or policies of a company, unless such
power is solely the result of an official position with such
company.'' A mutual fund typically is organized and operated by an
investment adviser that controls the fund. By contrast, an
investment adviser that performs limited functions in managing a
mutual fund's securities portfolio (also known as a ``subadviser'')
would not typically control the fund and therefore would be outside
the scope of the guidance.
\5\ FIN-2006-G013, ``Frequently Asked Questions: Suspicious
Activity Reporting Requirements for Mutual Funds'' (October 4,
2006).
\6\ ``Interagency Guidance on Sharing Suspicious Activity
Reports with Head Offices and Controlling Companies'' (January 20,
2006).
\7\ Specifically, we note that in both the mutual fund SAR rule
adopting release (71 FR 26213) and the October 2006 guidance, FinCEN
acknowledged the role of transfer agents and other service providers
in the suspicious activity monitoring, detection, and reporting
obligations of mutual funds. These service providers may be
unaffiliated or affiliated with the mutual funds. The October 2006
guidance and adopting release clarified that a mutual fund may
contractually delegate its SAR functions to such an agent, although
the mutual fund remains responsible for assuring compliance with the
rule, and therefore must monitor actively the performance of its
reporting obligations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These guidance documents reflected a recognition by FinCEN, the
FDIC, the FRB, the OCC, the OTS, the SEC, and the CFTC (referred to
collectively in the proposed guidance as the ``Federal regulators'')
that a head office, controlling entity or party, or parent entity of a
depository institution, broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, and introducing broker in commodities, has oversight
responsibilities with respect to enterprise-wide risk management. These
responsibilities include a valid need to review compliance by U.S.-
based depository institutions, broker-dealers, mutual funds, futures
commission merchants, and introducing brokers with legal requirements
to identify and report suspicious activity.
The guidance documents regarding the sharing of SARs with head
offices, controlling companies or parties, and parent entities
(referred to here as the ``2006 Guidance'') expressly noted that the
sharing of a SAR with a non-U.S. entity raises concerns about the
ability of the foreign entity to protect the SAR in light of possible
requests for disclosure abroad that may be subject to foreign law. The
2006 Guidance also provides that the recipient may not disclose further
any SAR, or the fact that such a report has been filed; however, the
recipient may disclose without permission underlying information. The
2006 Guidance also stated that FinCEN and the other Federal regulators
were considering whether a financial institution may share a SAR with
other entities within the financial institution's corporate
organization located inside the United States and those located abroad,
and instructed financial institutions not to share SARs with such
entities until further guidance was issued.
Proposed Regulatory Changes
In proposed regulations issued today, FinCEN is proposing to revise
the regulations implementing the BSA regarding the confidentiality of a
SAR to clarify, among other things, the scope of the statutory
prohibition against the disclosure by a financial institution of a SAR.
These rules include a provision clarifying that the statutory
prohibition does not apply to sharing by a securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities, or any director, officer, employee, or agent thereof, of a
SAR, or any information that would reveal the existence of a SAR,
within the corporate organizational structure of a securities broker-
dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker
in commodities for purposes consistent with Title II of the BSA, as
determined by regulation or in guidance, provided that no person
involved in any reported suspicious transaction is notified that the
transaction has been reported.
II. Proposed Guidance
This proposed guidance interprets the general statement in the
proposed SAR confidentiality rules \8\ that a securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities, or any director, officer, employee, or agent thereof, may
share a SAR, or information that reveals the existence of a SAR, within
its corporate organizational structure for purposes consistent with
Title II of the BSA. First, the proposed guidance acknowledges that the
2006 Guidance regarding securities broker-dealers, mutual funds,
futures commission merchants, and introducing brokers in commodities
continues to be applicable. It explains that sharing of a SAR or
information that reveals the existence of a SAR by a securities broker-
dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker
in commodities with its head office or its controlling company, whether
domestic or foreign, promotes compliance with the BSA by enabling the
head office or controlling company to discharge its oversight
responsibilities with respect to enterprise-wide risk management,
including oversight of the securities broker-dealer's, mutual fund's,
futures commission merchant's, and introducing broker in commodities'
compliance with applicable laws and regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The proposed guidance interprets a provision in the proposed
SAR regulations. The final guidance issued will be modified to
correspond to any changes made in the final SAR regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Next, the guidance explains that FinCEN also has concluded that the
proposed regulations may be interpreted to permit a securities broker-
dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, and introducing
broker in commodities that has filed a SAR to share the SAR, or any
information that would reveal the existence of the SAR, with an
affiliate \9\ that is subject to a SAR regulation.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ For the purposes of this proposed guidance, an ``affiliate''
is effectively defined as a company under common control with, or a
subsidiary of, the securities broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, or introducing broker in commodities.
``Affiliate'' does not include holding companies because sharing
with these entities is already addressed in the 2006 Guidance.
\10\ See 31 CFR 103.15 to 103.21. See also, 12 CFR 208.62 (FRB);
12 CFR 353.3 (FDIC); 12 CFR 748.1 (NCUA); 12 CFR 21.11 (OCC); and 12
CFR 563.180 (OTS).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FinCEN has concluded that such sharing within a corporate
organization is consistent with two important purposes of the BSA:
promoting efforts to detect and report money laundering and terrorist
financing by financial institutions that are subject to the BSA,
[[Page 10163]]
and ensuring the confidentiality of a SAR or any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR. The sharing by a securities broker-
dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker
in commodities of a SAR, or any information that would reveal the
existence of a SAR, can facilitate the identification of suspicious
transactions taking place through the securities broker-dealer's,
mutual fund's, futures commission merchant's, or introducing broker in
commodities' affiliates that are also subject to SAR reporting
requirements. Although the sharing of information underlying the filing
of a SAR has never been prohibited under the BSA, it is understood that
the sharing of a SAR itself pursuant to this proposed guidance may
entail greater efficiencies.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ For example, the sharing of a SAR eliminates the need to
create a separate summary document which, if shared, might
inadvertently reveal the existence of a SAR itself.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, the proposed SAR confidentiality rules provide that a
``SAR, and any information that would reveal the existence of a SAR,
are confidential.'' \12\ Accordingly, affiliates subject to a SAR rule
are prohibited from disclosing any SAR or information that a SAR was
filed, including both SARs they have filed, and any SARs they have
received that have been filed by others. In addition, because the
guidance applies only to the sharing of a SAR by the securities broker-
dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, and introducing
broker in commodities ``that has filed'' the SAR, the guidance includes
a statement clarifying that it is not permissible for an affiliate that
has received such a SAR to share that SAR, or any information that
would reveal the existence of that SAR with another affiliate, even if
that affiliate is an affiliate subject to a SAR rule. The guidance also
states that a broker-dealer in securities, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, and introducing broker in commodities, as part of
its internal controls, should have written confidentiality agreements
in place ensuring that its affiliates protect the confidentiality of
the SAR through appropriate internal controls. Given the above
restrictions, FinCEN is satisfied that the sharing permitted by this
guidance is consistent with the BSA objective to ensure that suspicious
activity reporting remains confidential.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking published elsewhere
in today's Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FinCEN has declined to permit sharing with affiliates that are not
subject to a SAR rule, whether domestic or foreign.\13\ At this time,
it is not apparent that such sharing would be consistent with the
purposes of the BSA, to promote efforts to detect and report money
laundering and terrorist financing by financial institutions that are
subject to rules implementing the BSA, and to ensure the
confidentiality of a SAR or any information that would reveal the
existence of a SAR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ FinCEN does not intend this guidance to permit the sharing
of SARs with affiliates where such sharing would subject the SARs to
the laws of a foreign jurisdiction, and elsewhere in this notice
seeks specific comment on whether as drafted, the guidance meets
that purpose based on present industry practices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, this proposed guidance is intended only to remove
unnecessary obstacles to detecting and reporting suspicious activity.
It should not be read to impose new BSA requirements or to suggest that
sharing with affiliates is compulsory.
III. Request for Comment
FinCEN invites comments on all aspects of the proposed guidance.
FinCEN solicits comment on whether this proposed guidance would achieve
the intended effect of promoting compliance with the BSA. We also
request comment on whether the proposed guidance will be beneficial,
whether it raises any ambiguities, and whether it will result in any
negative consequences. In addition, we specifically invite comment on
the following:
Whether the definition of ``affiliate'' is appropriate?
Whether the scope of the guidance should be expanded to
permit sharing with other affiliates within the United States.
Commenters suggesting that the scope of the guidance be expanded should
address how additional sharing would be consistent with the purposes of
Title II of the BSA;
Whether the scope of the guidance clearly limits sharing
with affiliates to only those affiliates within the United States based
on the application of FinCEN's SAR rules or whether further
clarification is needed to ensure that SARs are shared only in a
domestic context;
Whether the scope of the guidance should be expanded to
permit sharing with other affiliates outside of the United States.
Commenters suggesting that the scope of the guidance be expanded should
address how additional sharing outside the U.S. would be consistent
with the purposes of Title II of the BSA. In particular, commenters
should explain how a foreign affiliate might protect a SAR in light of
a possible request for disclosure abroad that may be subject to foreign
law;
Whether similar provisions to allow sharing with certain
affiliates should be permitted among all financial institutions subject
to a SAR rule; and
Whether financial institutions, other than depository
institutions, securities broker-dealers, mutual funds, futures
commission merchants, or introducing broker in commodities, subject to
a SAR rule should be permitted to share a SAR, or any information that
would reveal the existence of a SAR, with parent entities and/or
affiliates; and
Whether and how a securities broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures
commission merchant, and introducing broker in commodities can store
and provide access to SARs in an electronic system in a way that
prevents the SARs from being subject to disclosure laws or obligations
of foreign jurisdictions.
Proposed Interpretive Guidance \14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ For purposes of the guidance text below, all citations to
Title 31 SAR regulations are references to the amended regulations
we anticipate promulgating as discussed in the above section,
Proposed Regulatory Changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sharing Suspicious Activity Reports by Securities Broker-Dealers,
Mutual Funds, Futures Commission Merchants, and Introducing Brokers in
Commodities With Certain U.S. Affiliates \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For purposes of this guidance, ``affiliate'' of a person
means any company under common control with, or controlled by, such
person. ``Control'' of a company means the power to exercise a
controlling influence over the management or policies of a company
whether through ownership of securities, by contract, or otherwise.
Any person who owns beneficially, either directly or through one or
more controlled companies, more than 25 percent of the voting
securities of any company is presumed to control the company. Any
person who does not own more than 25 percent of the voting
securities of any company will be presumed not to control the
company.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (``FinCEN''), after
consulting with staff of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(``SEC'') and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (``CFTC''), is
issuing this guidance to confirm that under the Bank Secrecy Act
(``BSA'') and its implementing regulations, securities broker-dealers,
mutual funds, futures commission merchants, and introducing brokers in
commodities that have filed a Suspicious Activity Report (``SAR'') may
share the SAR, or any information that would reveal the existence of
the SAR, with certain affiliates. This guidance does not address the
applicability of any other Federal or state laws.
[[Page 10164]]
The BSA prohibits the filer of a SAR from notifying any person
involved in a suspicious transaction that the activity has been
reported.\2\ Regulations issued by FinCEN \3\ construe this
confidentiality provision as generally prohibiting a securities broker-
dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker
in commodities from disclosing a SAR, or any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See 31 U.S.C. 5318(g)(2).
\3\ See 31 CFR 103.15(d), 103.17(e), and 103.19(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, the regulations make clear that, provided no person
involved in the transaction is notified that the transaction has been
reported, the prohibition does not include disclosures to (1) FinCEN;
(2) any Federal, State, or local law enforcement agency; (3) any
Federal or state regulatory agency that examines the securities broker-
dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker
in commodities for compliance with the BSA; or (4) a self-regulatory
organization for the purpose of examining the filing financial
institution for compliance with its SAR reporting requirements. The
regulations also provide that the prohibition does not apply to: (i)
The disclosure of the underlying facts, transactions, and documents
upon which a SAR is based, including, but not limited to, disclosures
related to filing a joint SAR and in connection with certain employment
references or termination notices; and (ii) the sharing of a SAR, or
any information that would reveal the existence of a SAR, within the
corporate organizational structure of a securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities for purposes consistent with Title II of the BSA, as
determined by regulation or in guidance.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking published elsewhere in
today's Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In previously issued guidance (``January 2006 Guidance''), FinCEN,
in consultation with the staffs of the SEC and the CFTC, determined
that a securities broker-dealer, futures commission merchant, or
introducing broker in commodities may share a SAR with its parent
entity (whether domestic or foreign).\5\ In October 2006, FinCEN
additionally published guidance stating that a mutual fund may share
SARs with an investment adviser that controls the fund, whether
domestic or foreign.\6\ These guidance documents continue to be
applicable and comport with the SAR regulations referenced above.\7\
The sharing of a SAR or, more broadly, any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR, with a parent entity or investment
adviser that controls a mutual fund (including a foreign parent entity
or foreign investment adviser) promotes compliance with the applicable
requirements of the BSA by enabling the parent entity or investment
adviser that controls a mutual fund to discharge its oversight
responsibilities with respect to enterprise-wide risk management and
compliance with applicable laws and regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ ``Guidance on Sharing of Suspicious Activity Reports by
Securities Broker-Dealers, Futures Commission Merchants, and
Introducing Brokers in Commodities'' (January 20, 2006).
\6\ ``Frequently Asked Questions: Suspicious Activity Reporting
Requirements for Mutual Funds'' (October 4, 2006).
\7\ See supra note 4.
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The January 2006 Guidance deferred taking a position on whether a
securities broker-dealer, futures commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities is permitted to share a SAR with affiliates and
directed institutions not to share with such affiliates. FinCEN, in
consultation with SEC and CFTC staff, has now concluded that a
securities broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or
introducing broker in commodities that has filed a SAR may share the
SAR, or any information that would reveal the existence of the SAR,
with an affiliate, provided the affiliate is subject to a SAR
regulation \8\ issued by FinCEN, the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the National
Credit Union Administration, the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, or the Office of Thrift Supervision. The sharing of SARs with
such affiliates facilitates their compliance with the identification of
suspicious transactions taking place through the securities broker-
dealer's, mutual fund's, futures commission merchant's, or introducing
broker in commodities' affiliates that are subject to a SAR rule.
Therefore, such sharing within the corporate organizational structure
of a securities broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures commission
merchant, or introducing broker in commodities is consistent with the
purposes of Title II of the BSA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See 31 CFR 103.15 to 103.21. See also, 12 CFR 21.11 (Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency); 12 CFR 208.62, 211.5(k),
211.24(f), 225.4(f) (Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System); 12 CFR 353.3 (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation); 12
CFR 563.180 (Office of Thrift Supervision); 12 CFR 748.1(c)
(National Credit Union Administration).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is not consistent with the purposes of Title II of the BSA for
an affiliate that has received a SAR from a securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities to share that SAR, or any information that would reveal the
existence of that SAR with an affiliate of its own, even if that
affiliate is subject to a SAR rule.
As is the case with sharing SARs with parent entities, there may be
circumstances under which a securities broker-dealer, mutual fund,
futures commission merchant, or introducing broker in commodities, its
affiliate, or both entities would be liable for direct or indirect
disclosure by the affiliate of a SAR or any information that would
reveal the existence of a SAR. Therefore, the securities broker-dealer,
mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing broker in
commodities, as part of its internal controls, should have written
confidentiality agreements in place ensuring that its affiliates
protect the confidentiality of the SAR through appropriate internal
controls.
Consistent with the BSA and the implementing regulations issued by
FinCEN, a SAR, or any information that would reveal the existence of a
SAR, must not be disclosed, even under this guidance, if the securities
broker-dealer, mutual fund, futures commission merchant, or introducing
broker in commodities has reason to believe it may be disclosed to any
person involved in the suspicious activity that is the subject of the
SAR.
Dated: February 27, 2009.
James H. Freis, Jr.,
Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
[FR Doc. E9-4695 Filed 3-6-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-02-P