Financial Crimes Enforcement Network: Anti-Money Laundering Program and Suspicious Activity Report Requirements for Non-Bank Residential Mortgage Lenders and Originators, 35830-35834 [E9-17117]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 138 / Tuesday, July 21, 2009 / Proposed Rules
Daneshmandi, International Branch, ANM–
116, Transport Airplane Directorate, FAA,
1601 Lind Avenue, SW., Renton, Washington
98057–3356; telephone (425) 227–1112; fax
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Issued in Renton, Washington, on July 13,
2009.
Ali Bahrami,
Manager, Transport Airplane Directorate,
Aircraft Certification Service.
[FR Doc. E9–17227 Filed 7–20–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
18 CFR Part 40
Docket No. RM08–13–000
Transmission Relay Loadability
Reliability Standard; Notice of
Extension of Time
July 13, 2009.
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS-1
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking:
extension of comment period.
SUMMARY: On May 21, 2009, the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission issued a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
proposing to approve Reliability
Standard PRC–023–1 (Transmission
Relay Loadability Reliability Standard)
developed by the North American
Electric Reliability Corporation. The
date for filing comments on the
Commission’s NOPR is being extended
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17:06 Jul 20, 2009
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at the request of the American Public
Power Association, Edison Electric
Institute, the Electric Power Supply
Association and the National Rural
Electric Cooperative Association.
DATES: Comments are due on or before
August 17, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons may
submit comments, identified by Docket
No. RM08–13–000, by any of the
following methods:
• Agency Web site: https://
www.ferc.gov: Documents created
electronically using word processing
software should be filed in native
applications or print-to-PDF format and
not in a scanned format.
• Mail/Hand Delivery: Commenters
unable to file comments electronically
must mail or hand deliver an original
and 14 copies of their comments to:
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
Secretary of the Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joshua Konecni (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–6291.
Michael Henry (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–8532.
Cynthia Pointer (Technical
Information), Office of Electric
Reliability, Division of Reliability
Standards, Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502–
6069.
Robert Snow (Technical Information),
Office of Electric Reliability, Division
of Reliability Standards, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–6716.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Transmission Relay Loadability
Reliability Standard; Notice of
Extension of Time
On July 9, 2009, the American Public
Power Association, Edison Electric
Institute, the Electric Power Supply
Association, and the National Rural
Electric Cooperative Association
(Movants), on behalf of their respective
member utilities, filed a motion for an
extension of time to file comments in
response to the Commission’s Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking issued May 21,
2009, in the above-referenced
proceeding. Transmission Relay
Loadability Reliability Standard, 127
FERC ¶ 61,175 (2009) (May 21 NOPR).
The motion states that because the
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Commission’s May 21 NOPR raises
many new technical and policy issues,
the Movants require additional time to
conduct member company consultations
and to prepare reasoned comments.
Upon consideration, notice is hereby
given that an extension of time for filing
comments on the May 21 NOPR is
granted to and including August 17,
2009.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–17235 Filed 7–20–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 103
RIN 1506–AB02
Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network: Anti-Money Laundering
Program and Suspicious Activity
Report Requirements for Non-Bank
Residential Mortgage Lenders and
Originators
AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network (FinCEN), Department of the
Treasury.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking.
SUMMARY: FinCEN is issuing this
advance notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANPRM) to solicit public comment on
a wide range of questions pertaining to
the possible application of anti-money
laundering (AML) program and
suspicious activity report (SAR)
regulations to a specific sub-set of loan
and finance companies: Non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and
originators. FinCEN seeks comment on:
An incremental approach to the
issuance of regulations for loan and
finance companies that would initially
affect only those persons engaged in
non-bank residential mortgage lending
or origination; how any such regulations
should define persons engaged in nonbank residential mortgage lending or
origination; the financial crime and
money laundering risks posed by such
persons; how AML programs for such
persons should be structured; whether
such persons should be covered by BSA
requirements other than the AML
program requirement, including SAR
reporting; and whether any such
persons should be exempted from AML
program or SAR reporting requirements.
DATES: Written comments on this
ANPRM must be received on or before
August 20, 2009.
ADDRESSES: FinCEN: You may submit
comments, identified by Regulatory
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 138 / Tuesday, July 21, 2009 / Proposed Rules
Identification Number (RIN) 1506–
AB02, by any of the following methods:
• Federal E-rulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Include 1506–AB02 in the submission.
Refer to Docket Number TREAS–
FinCen-2009–0002.
• Mail: FinCEN, P.O. Box 39, Vienna,
VA 22183. Include 1506–AB02 in the
body of the text.
Please submit comments by one method
only. All comments submitted in
response to this ANPRM will become a
matter of public record. Therefore, you
should submit only information that
you wish to make publicly available.
Inspection of comments: Comments
may be inspected, between 10 a.m. and
4 p.m., in the FinCEN reading room in
Vienna, VA. Persons wishing to inspect
the comments submitted must request
an appointment with the Disclosure
Officer by telephoning (703) 905–5034
(not a toll free call). In general, FinCEN
will make all comments publicly
available by posting them on https://
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
FinCEN: Regulatory Policy and
Programs Division, Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network, (800) 949–2732
and select option 6.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS-1
I. Background
The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) 1
authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury
(the Secretary) to issue regulations
requiring financial institutions to keep
records and file reports that the
Secretary determines ‘‘have a high
degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, or
regulatory investigations or proceedings,
or in the conduct of intelligence or
counterintelligence activities, including
analysis, to protect against international
terrorism.’’ 2 The authority of the
Secretary to administer the BSA has
been delegated to the Director of
FinCEN.3
Financial institutions are required to
establish AML programs that include, at
a minimum: (1) The development of
internal policies, procedures, and
controls; (2) the designation of a
compliance officer; (3) an ongoing
employee training program; and (4) an
1 ‘‘Bank Secrecy Act’’ is the name that has come
to be applied to the Currency and Foreign
Transactions Reporting Act (Titles I and II of Pub.
L. 91–508), its amendments, and the other statutes
referring to the subject matter of that Act. These
statutes are codified at 12 U.S.C. 1829b, 12 U.S.C.
1951–1959, 18 U.S.C. 1956, 18 U.S.C. 1957, 18
U.S.C. 1960, and 31 U.S.C. 5311–5314 and 5316–
5332, and notes thereto.
2 31 U.S.C. 5311.
3 See Treasury Order 180–01 (Sept. 26, 2002).
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independent audit function to test
programs.4 When prescribing minimum
standards for AML programs, FinCEN
must ‘‘consider the extent to which the
requirements imposed under [the AML
program requirement] are
commensurate with the size, location,
and activities of the financial
institutions to which such regulations
apply.’’ 5 Federally regulated depository
institutions are already required to have
AML programs.6 This ANPRM considers
imposing on companies performing
certain services with respect to
residential mortgages, analogous
requirements to those currently
applicable to depository institutions
performing those same services.
The BSA defines the term ‘‘financial
institution’’ to include, in part, ‘‘loan or
finance company’’ and ‘‘persons
involved in real estate closings and
settlements.’’ 7 On April 29, 2002, and
again on November 6, 2002, FinCEN
temporarily exempted both of these
categories of financial institutions,
among others, from the requirement to
establish an AML program.8 The
purpose of the temporary exemption
was to enable Treasury and FinCEN to
study the exempted categories of
institutions and to consider the extent to
which AML requirements should be
applied to them, taking into account
their specific characteristics and money
laundering vulnerabilities.
On April 10, 2003, FinCEN issued an
ANPRM regarding AML requirements
for persons involved in real estate
closings and settlements.9 The 2003
ANPRM noted that the BSA had no
definition of the term ‘‘persons involved
in real estate closings and settlements;’’
that FinCEN had not had occasion to
define the term in a regulation; and that
the legislative history of the term
provided no insight into how Congress
intended the term to be defined. The
2003 ANPRM also noted that real estate
transactions could involve multiple
persons, including: Real estate agents,
banks, mortgage banks, mortgage
brokers, title insurance companies,
appraisers, escrow agents, settlement
attorneys or agents, property inspectors
and other persons directly and
tangentially involved in property
financing, acquisition, settlement, and
occupation. The 2003 ANPRM further
U.S.C. 5318(h).
Law 107–56 section 352(c), 115 Stat.
§ 322, codified at 31 U.S.C. 5318 note. Public Law
107–56 is the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001.
6 See 31 CFR 103.120.
7 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(P), (U).
8 See 31 CFR 103.170; 67 FR 21113 (Apr. 29,
2002), as amended at 67 FR 67549 (Nov. 6, 2002)
and corrected at 67 FR 68935 (Nov. 14, 2002).
9 See 68 FR 17569 (Apr. 10, 2003).
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5 Public
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noted that the persons involved in real
estate transactions, and the nature of
their involvement, could vary with the
contemplated use of the real estate, the
nature of the rights to be acquired, or
how these rights were to be held, e.g.,
for residential, commercial, portfolio
investment, or development purposes.
Finally, the 2003 ANPRM expressed
FinCEN’s views as to guiding principles
that should be considered in defining
persons involved in real estate closings
and settlements. Any definitions or
terms that define the scope of the rule
should consider: (1) Those persons (i.e.,
individuals and business entities)
whose services rendered or products
offered in connection with a real estate
closing or settlement can be abused by
money launderers; (2) those persons
who are positioned to identify the
purpose and nature of the transaction;
(3) the importance of various
participants to successful completion of
the transaction, which may suggest that
they are well positioned to identify
suspicious conduct; (4) the degree to
which professionals may have very
different roles, in different transactions,
that may result in greater exposure to
money laundering; and (5) involvement
with the actual flow of funds used in the
transaction.10
FinCEN has not issued any additional
notices regarding persons involved in
real estate closings and settlements
since the 2003 ANPRM. This is
FinCEN’s first notice regarding loan and
finance companies. FinCEN has in the
interim continued its research and
analysis related to the categories of
financial institutions exempted in 2002.
In view of increasing concern among
regulators, law enforcement and
Congress over abusive and fraudulent
sales and financing practices in both the
primary and secondary residential
mortgage markets, FinCEN also has
undertaken a number of strategic,
outreach and law enforcement support
initiatives focused on residential
mortgage lending.
FinCEN is contemplating an
incremental approach to
implementation of AML regulations for
loan and finance companies that would
focus first on those business entities that
are engaged in residential mortgage
lending or origination and are not
currently subject to any AML program
requirement under the BSA or other
Federal law. These ‘‘non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and
originators’’ are primary providers of
mortgage finance—in most cases dealing
directly with the consumer—and are in
a unique position to assess and identify
10 See
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68 FR 17569, 17570 (Apr. 10, 2003).
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money laundering risks and fraud while
directly assisting consumers with their
financial needs and protecting them
from the abuses of financial crime.
FinCEN believes that new regulations
requiring non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators to adopt AML
programs and report suspicious
transactions would augment FinCEN’s
initiatives in this area. Among other
benefits, such regulations would
complement efforts underway by
mortgage companies to comply with the
nationwide licensing system and
registry under development since the
passage of the Secure and Fair
Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act
of 2008 (S.A.F.E. Act).11 As mortgage
companies implement systems and
procedures to comply with the S.A.F.E.
Act, there will be opportunities for them
to review and enhance their educational
and training programs to ensure that
employees are able to identify and
appropriately deal with fraud, money
laundering and other financial crimes.
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS-1
II. Issues for Comment
This ANPRM solicits comment on all
aspects of the potential impact of
applying BSA requirements to non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and
originators.
1. What Are the Money Laundering
Risks in the Non-Bank Residential
Mortgage Finance Sector?
As noted in the 2003 ANPRM, the
residential real estate sector may be
vulnerable at all stages of the money
laundering process. Money laundering
is a process by which funds with an
illicit origin are converted into funds
with a plausibly legitimate origin. There
are three general stages of money
laundering. The ‘‘placement’’ stage is
the stage at which funds from illegal
activity or funds intended to support
illegal activity are first introduced into
the financial system. Money laundering
‘‘layering’’ involves the distancing of
illegal funds from their criminal source
through the creation of complex layers
of financial transactions. ‘‘Integration’’
occurs when illegal funds are made to
appear to have been derived from a
legitimate source. Despite the relative
illiquidity of most real estate assets,
money launderers have used residential
mortgage transactions—fraudulently
and legitimately structured—to disguise
the proceeds of crime.
In recent years, a significant
percentage of SARs filed with FinCEN
have reported suspected fraud-for-profit
11 See Title V of Division A of the Housing and
Economic Recovery Act of 2008, Public Law 110–
289, 122 Stat. 2810 (2008), codified at 12 U.S.C.
5101, et seq.
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and fraud-for-housing schemes
involving real estate brokers, appraisers,
and other persons associated with real
estate finance and settlements.12
FinCEN studies also have shown the
connection between persons involved in
mortgage fraud and other suspected
financial crimes.13 The crime of money
laundering is defined, in part, with
respect to the proceeds of specific
unlawful, ‘‘predicate’’ activities. Both
mortgage fraud and the act of laundering
mortgage fraud proceeds are crimes
under Federal and State laws, and both
are destructive to consumers, individual
businesses and the financial system as
a whole.
FinCEN seeks comment on the
experience of the residential real estate
lending sector with money laundering
and fraud schemes, the existence of any
safeguards in the industry to guard
against these crimes, the impact that
compliance with AML program and
SAR reporting requirements may have
on business operations, and what
additional steps may be necessary to
protect the industry from abuse by
money launderers, including those who
finance terrorist activity.
2. Should FinCEN Pursue an
Incremental Approach to Regulation of
Loan and Finance Companies That
Focuses First on Persons Engaged in
Non-Bank Residential Mortgage Lending
or Origination?
As is the case with the term ‘‘persons
involved in real estate closings and
settlements,’’ the term ‘‘loan or finance
company’’ is not defined or discussed in
any FinCEN regulation, and there is no
legislative history on the term. The
term, however, could conceivably
extend to any business entity that makes
loans or finances purchases to or on
behalf of consumers and businesses. For
12 See Filing Trends in Mortgage Loan Fraud, Feb.
2009,
https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/nr/pdf/
20090225a.pdf; Mortgage Loan Fraud: an Update of
Trends Based upon Analysis of Suspicious Activity
Reports, Apr. 2008, &fnl;https://www.fincen.gov/
news_room/rp/files/
MortgageLoanFraudSARAssessment.pdf; Suspected
Money Laundering in the Residential Real Estate
Industry, Apr. 2008, https://www.fincen.gov/
news_room/rp/files/
MLR_Real_Estate_Industry_SAR_web.pdf; Money
Laundering in the Commercial Real Estate Industry;
Dec. 2006, https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/
reports/pdf/CREassessment.pdf; Mortgage Loan
Fraud: An Industry Assessment Based Upon
Suspicious Activity Report Analysis, Nov. 2006,
https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/reports/pdf/
mortgage_fraud112006.pdf.
13 See Mortgage Loan Fraud Connections with
Other Financial Crime: An Evaluation of Suspicious
Activity Reports Filed by Money Services
Businesses, Securities and Futures Firms, Insurance
Companies and Casinos, Mar. 2009, https://
www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/files/
mortgage_fraud.pdf.
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consumers, loan and finance companies
originate loans and leases to finance the
purchase of consumer goods such as
automobiles, furniture, and household
appliances. They also extend personal
loans and loans secured by real estate
mortgages, including home equity loans.
For businesses, they supply short- and
intermediate-term credit for such
purposes as the purchase of equipment
and motor vehicles and the financing of
inventories. In addition, specialized
wholesale loan and finance companies
provide liquidity that allows retail loan
and finance companies, as well as banks
and others, to service end users.14
There has been a ‘‘regulatory gap’’
between the BSA’s coverage of
depository institutions and non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and
originators. FinCEN is concerned that
this disparity in BSA regulatory
coverage may have made non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and
originators more vulnerable to financial
crime and money laundering than their
bank counterparts. FinCEN believes that
implementation of appropriate, riskbased AML programs by non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and
originators will strengthen their existing
compliance and anti-fraud programs, as
well as the training and licensing
programs that will be updated to
comply with the S.A.F.E. Act. Moreover,
a SAR reporting regulation likely would
reduce the vulnerability of this sector
and substantially expand FinCEN’s BSA
database, thereby giving our regulatory
and law enforcement partners a more
complete macro and micro (casespecific) picture of mortgage-related
financial crimes. In these and other
respects, non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators may assume an
increasingly crucial role in government
and industry efforts to protect
consumers, mortgage finance
businesses, and the United States
financial system from money laundering
and other financial crimes.
FinCEN is inclined to defer
regulations for commercial real estate
finance businesses and other types of
consumer and commercial finance
businesses until further research and
analysis can be conducted to enhance
our understanding of their business
operations and money laundering
vulnerabilities.
14 The North American Industry Classification
System classifies approximately 10 types of
mortgage finance-related businesses and professions
and over 60 other businesses, professions and
institutions (e.g., consumer and commercial finance
companies, pawnshops, auto finance, equipment
leasing, personal credit companies, industrial loan
companies and government sponsored enterprises)
as primarily engaged in consumer and commercial
lending and finance.
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hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS-1
FinCEN seeks general comment on
whether FinCEN should adopt this
incremental approach or some other
approach to implementation of AML
program and SAR regulations for loan
and finance companies.
3. How Should Persons Engaged in NonBank Residential Mortgage Lending or
Origination Be Defined?
Most real estate finance—both
residential and commercial—involves
complex transactions and multiple
parties whose roles are not always
readily discernable by the titles and
terms used to describe them in generally
accepted business practices or under
applicable licensing and registration
regimes. The primary mortgage market
in the United States is very fragmented,
and even simple real estate finance
transactions may involve one or more
parties that may originate, fund, broker,
purchase, transfer, service, securitize,
and insure the mortgage loan.
FinCEN believes that the views,
assumptions and guiding principles
noted in the 2003 ANPRM are equally
relevant to the development of AML
program and SAR reporting regulations
for non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators. AML
obligations should focus on those
persons (i.e., individuals and business
entities) that conduct the activities that
place them in the best position to
identify the nature of the transaction,
recognize suspicious activity and
prevent misuse of their services for
money laundering and other financial
crimes. This activities-based approach
focuses on the nature of the activity
conducted and its primary function in a
particular residential mortgage
transaction, rather than on the name or
title of the person. Moreover, FinCEN
believes that any regulations for nonbank residential mortgage lenders and
originators should strive to avoid, to the
greatest extent possible, requirements
that overlap or duplicate those of other
BSA rules.
FinCEN seeks comment on which
participants involved in non-bank
residential mortgage finance are in a
position where they can effectively
identify and guard against financial
crime and money laundering in the
transactions they conduct. Information
and comment may, among other things,
address both the extent to which various
participants have access to information
regarding the nature and purpose of the
transactions at issue and the importance
of the participants’ involvement to
successful completion of the
transactions. Comments are welcome
from those involved centrally in the
residential mortgage finance process
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(i.e., those who may act as an agent for
some or all of the parties and are
responsible for reviewing the form and
type of payment, as well as being aware
of the parties to the mortgage
transaction), and those who view their
involvement as more peripheral.
Various definitions in the S.A.F.E. Act
may be a useful reference for comments
related to the development of regulatory
definitions that would affect the scope
of any proposed regulations for nonbank residential mortgage lenders and
originators. FinCEN seeks comment
specifically on whether FinCEN should
adopt a definition of ‘‘non-bank
mortgage lender or originator’’ that
would be similar to the definition of
‘‘loan originator’’ in the S.A.F.E. Act.15
The term ‘‘loan originator’’ in the
S.A.F.E. Act means individuals who
take applications for residential
mortgage loan transactions, including
employees of mortgage bankers and
brokers, as well as loan officers of banks
and their subsidiaries. The S.A.F.E. Act
also provides a broad definition of
‘‘residential mortgage loan’’ that may be
a useful reference for comments: ‘‘any
loan primarily for personal, family, or
household use that is secured by a
mortgage, deed of trust, or other
equivalent consensual security interest
on a dwelling (as defined in section
103(v) of the Truth in Lending Act) or
residential real estate upon which is
constructed or intended to be
constructed a dwelling * * *.’’ 16 As
noted, the focus of this ANPRM is nonbank residential mortgage lenders and
originators who are primary providers of
mortgage finance and are in the best
position to prevent and detect money
laundering, fraud and other financial
crimes. FinCEN seeks comment on
whether any regulations promulgated by
FinCEN should cover the same persons
as those covered by the S.A.F.E. Act, or
a broader or narrower range of persons.
4. How Should the Anti-Money
Laundering Requirements for Persons
Engaged in Non-Bank Residential
Mortgage Lending or Origination Be
Structured?
In applying the BSA to persons
engaged in non-bank residential
mortgage lending and origination,
FinCEN must consider the extent to
which the standards for AML programs
are commensurate with the size,
location, and activities of such persons.
FinCEN recognizes that while large
businesses are engaged in mortgage
finance, businesses in this industry also
include smaller companies or sole
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16 12
U.S.C. 5102(3).
U.S.C. 5102(8).
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35833
proprietors. FinCEN thus seeks
comment on any particular concerns
smaller businesses may have regarding
the implementation of an AML program.
FinCEN believes that AML programs
will complement the anti-fraud and
general compliance programs that nonbank residential mortgage lenders and
originators have established to comply
with other Federal and State laws and
protect their own business operations.
Many non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators may be able to
integrate risk-based AML reporting
programs into existing enterprise-wide
anti-fraud and compliance programs in
a symbiotic manner that utilizes
economies of scale and enhances the
effectiveness of a business’s compliance
measures. FinCEN therefore seeks
comment on what types of programs
and practices that persons engaged in
non-bank residential mortgage lending
or origination have in place to prevent
mortgage fraud and other illegal
activities, and the applicability of such
programs to the development of AML
programs.
5. Should FinCEN Require Persons
Engaged in Non-Bank Residential
Mortgage Lending or Origination To File
SARs or Comply With Any Other BSA
Requirements?
As FinCEN emphasized in its recent
report on mortgage loan fraud trends,
SARs provide a valuable tool for
regulatory agencies and law
enforcement seeking to isolate specific
instances of potential criminal activity
for further investigation, and to identify
emerging money laundering and
terrorism financing trends.17 The due
diligence necessary for financial
institutions to detect and report known
or suspected suspicious activity greatly
reduces vulnerability to the abuses of
money laundering and terrorist
financing.
FinCEN has promulgated SAR
reporting regulations for a number of
financial institutions that have AML
program requirements, including
mutual funds, insurance companies,
futures commission merchants and
introducing brokers in commodities,
banks, brokers or dealers in securities,
money services businesses, and
casinos.18 FinCEN anticipates that any
SAR regulation proposal applicable to
persons engaged in non-bank residential
mortgage lending or origination would
have similar reporting standards,
thresholds and procedures as those set
17 Filing Trends in Mortgage Loan Fraud, Feb.
2009, page 1, https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/nr/
pdf/20090225a.pdf.
18 See 31 CFR 103.15–103.21.
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 138 / Tuesday, July 21, 2009 / Proposed Rules
hsrobinson on PROD1PC76 with PROPOSALS-1
forth in SAR regulations for other
industries.
In addition to any proposed SAR
reporting regulations for non-bank
residential mortgage lenders or
originators, FinCEN also may propose to
require these businesses to file currency
transaction reports (rather than Form
8300) or retain certain records,
including those related to large
transmittals of funds.19 These changes
could be accomplished through
amendments to the definitions
regulation, 31 CFR 103.11 (specifically,
to the definition of ‘‘financial
institution’’), and the exemptions
regulation, 31 CFR 103.170 (specifically,
to the temporary exemption from the
AML program requirement); or they
could be accomplished by issuing new
regulations. FinCEN also recognizes that
persons engaged in residential mortgage
lending or origination may already have
programs and practices in place to meet
existing legal obligations or protect the
business from fraud and other illegal
activities. FinCEN requests comment on
any aspect of possible new regulatory
requirements, including any factors
FinCEN should consider in structuring
new requirements, exceptions, and
differences from established regulations.
Useful information would include any
available estimates of volumes of
transactions that might be subject to
particular reporting or recordkeeping
requirements.
6. Should Any Persons or Transactions
Be Exempted From Coverage of AML or
SAR Regulations?
FinCEN also solicits comment
regarding whether there should be
regulatory exemptions for any category
of persons engaged in non-bank
residential mortgage lending or
origination, or any category of
transactions conducted by such persons.
Comments regarding possible
exemptions should be designed to
enable FinCEN to evaluate whether the
risk of money laundering through a
category of persons or transactions is
sufficiently small that a proposed rule
could be crafted that would exempt the
categories, while also providing
adequate protection for the industry
from the risks of money laundering. The
question of exemption is specifically
directed to professionals and those
persons who are primarily engaged in a
business related to residential mortgage
lending or origination.
III. Conclusion
With this ANPRM, FinCEN is seeking
input on how FinCEN should
19 See
31 CFR 103.22, 103.30 and 103.33.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
17:06 Jul 20, 2009
Jkt 217001
implement the requirements of the BSA
with respect to non-bank residential
mortgage lenders and originators. We
also seek input on: (1) Estimates and
financial projections on the likely costs
of complying with AML program and
SAR reporting regulations by specific
types of non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators; (2) the impact
of any such regulatory requirements on
industry profitability, growth and
business practices; (3) the impact of
these requirements on consumers
seeking to obtain residential mortgages;
(4) the effectiveness of examining for
and enforcing compliance with these
requirements; and (5) the advisability of
establishing some minimum transaction
threshold value or annual volume
threshold below which some or all of
these requirements would not apply. We
also solicit comment on the impact to
law enforcement and regulatory
agencies. FinCEN welcomes comments
on all aspects of the ANPRM, and we
encourage all interested parties to
provide their views.
IV. Executive Order 12866
This advance notice of proposed
rulemaking is not a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866. Therefore, a Regulatory
Assessment is not required.
William F. Baity,
Acting Director, Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network.
[FR Doc. E9–17117 Filed 7–20–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 100
[Docket No. USCG–2009–0395]
RIN 1625–AA08
Special Local Regulation, Swim Across
the Sound, Long Island Sound, Port
Jefferson, NY to Captain’s Cove
Seaport, Bridgeport, CT
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard proposes to
establish a permanent special local
regulation on the navigable waters of
Long Island Sound between Port
Jefferson, NY and Captain’s Cove
Seaport, Bridgeport, CT for the annual
Swim Across the Sound event. This
special local regulation is necessary to
provide for the swimmers’ safety on the
navigable waters of Long Island Sound.
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Under this proposed regulation, persons
and vessels are prohibited from entering
the regulated area during this annual
event unless entry is authorized by the
Captain of the Port Long Island Sound
or by designated on-scene patrol
personnel.
DATES: Comments and related material
must be received by the Coast Guard on
or before August 20, 2009.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by docket number USCG–
2009–0395 using any one of the
following methods:
(1) Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov.
(2) Fax: 202–493–2251.
(3) Mail: Docket Management Facility
(M–30), U.S. Department of
Transportation, West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590–
0001.
(4) Hand delivery: Same as mail
address above, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays. The telephone number
is 202–366–9329.
To avoid duplication, please use only
one of these four methods. See the
‘‘Public Participation and Request for
Comments’’ portion of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below for instructions on submitting
comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions on this proposed
rule, call or e-mail: Chief Petty Officer
Christie Dixon, Prevention Department,
USCG Sector Long Island Sound at
203–468–4459, e-mail
christie.m.dixon@uscg.mil. If you have
questions on viewing or submitting
material to the docket, call Renee V.
Wright, Program Manager, Docket
Operations, telephone 202–366–9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Participation and Request for
Comments
We encourage you to participate in
this rulemaking by submitting
comments and related materials. All
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov and will include
any personal information you have
provided.
Submitting Comments
If you submit a comment, please
include the docket number for this
rulemaking (USCG–2009–0395),
indicate the specific section of this
document to which each comment
applies, and provide a reason for each
suggestion or recommendation. You
may submit your comments and
E:\FR\FM\21JYP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 138 (Tuesday, July 21, 2009)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 35830-35834]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-17117]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 103
RIN 1506-AB02
Financial Crimes Enforcement Network: Anti-Money Laundering
Program and Suspicious Activity Report Requirements for Non-Bank
Residential Mortgage Lenders and Originators
AGENCY: Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), Department of
the Treasury.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: FinCEN is issuing this advance notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANPRM) to solicit public comment on a wide range of questions
pertaining to the possible application of anti-money laundering (AML)
program and suspicious activity report (SAR) regulations to a specific
sub-set of loan and finance companies: Non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators. FinCEN seeks comment on: An incremental
approach to the issuance of regulations for loan and finance companies
that would initially affect only those persons engaged in non-bank
residential mortgage lending or origination; how any such regulations
should define persons engaged in non-bank residential mortgage lending
or origination; the financial crime and money laundering risks posed by
such persons; how AML programs for such persons should be structured;
whether such persons should be covered by BSA requirements other than
the AML program requirement, including SAR reporting; and whether any
such persons should be exempted from AML program or SAR reporting
requirements.
DATES: Written comments on this ANPRM must be received on or before
August 20, 2009.
ADDRESSES: FinCEN: You may submit comments, identified by Regulatory
[[Page 35831]]
Identification Number (RIN) 1506-AB02, by any of the following methods:
Federal E-rulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments. Include 1506-AB02 in
the submission. Refer to Docket Number TREAS-FinCen-2009-0002.
Mail: FinCEN, P.O. Box 39, Vienna, VA 22183. Include 1506-
AB02 in the body of the text.
Please submit comments by one method only. All comments submitted in
response to this ANPRM will become a matter of public record.
Therefore, you should submit only information that you wish to make
publicly available.
Inspection of comments: Comments may be inspected, between 10 a.m.
and 4 p.m., in the FinCEN reading room in Vienna, VA. Persons wishing
to inspect the comments submitted must request an appointment with the
Disclosure Officer by telephoning (703) 905-5034 (not a toll free
call). In general, FinCEN will make all comments publicly available by
posting them on https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: FinCEN: Regulatory Policy and Programs
Division, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, (800) 949-2732 and
select option 6.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) \1\ authorizes the Secretary of the
Treasury (the Secretary) to issue regulations requiring financial
institutions to keep records and file reports that the Secretary
determines ``have a high degree of usefulness in criminal, tax, or
regulatory investigations or proceedings, or in the conduct of
intelligence or counterintelligence activities, including analysis, to
protect against international terrorism.'' \2\ The authority of the
Secretary to administer the BSA has been delegated to the Director of
FinCEN.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ ``Bank Secrecy Act'' is the name that has come to be applied
to the Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act (Titles I and
II of Pub. L. 91-508), its amendments, and the other statutes
referring to the subject matter of that Act. These statutes are
codified at 12 U.S.C. 1829b, 12 U.S.C. 1951-1959, 18 U.S.C. 1956, 18
U.S.C. 1957, 18 U.S.C. 1960, and 31 U.S.C. 5311-5314 and 5316-5332,
and notes thereto.
\2\ 31 U.S.C. 5311.
\3\ See Treasury Order 180-01 (Sept. 26, 2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Financial institutions are required to establish AML programs that
include, at a minimum: (1) The development of internal policies,
procedures, and controls; (2) the designation of a compliance officer;
(3) an ongoing employee training program; and (4) an independent audit
function to test programs.\4\ When prescribing minimum standards for
AML programs, FinCEN must ``consider the extent to which the
requirements imposed under [the AML program requirement] are
commensurate with the size, location, and activities of the financial
institutions to which such regulations apply.'' \5\ Federally regulated
depository institutions are already required to have AML programs.\6\
This ANPRM considers imposing on companies performing certain services
with respect to residential mortgages, analogous requirements to those
currently applicable to depository institutions performing those same
services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 31 U.S.C. 5318(h).
\5\ Public Law 107-56 section 352(c), 115 Stat. Sec. 322,
codified at 31 U.S.C. 5318 note. Public Law 107-56 is the USA
PATRIOT Act of 2001.
\6\ See 31 CFR 103.120.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The BSA defines the term ``financial institution'' to include, in
part, ``loan or finance company'' and ``persons involved in real estate
closings and settlements.'' \7\ On April 29, 2002, and again on
November 6, 2002, FinCEN temporarily exempted both of these categories
of financial institutions, among others, from the requirement to
establish an AML program.\8\ The purpose of the temporary exemption was
to enable Treasury and FinCEN to study the exempted categories of
institutions and to consider the extent to which AML requirements
should be applied to them, taking into account their specific
characteristics and money laundering vulnerabilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 31 U.S.C. 5312(a)(2)(P), (U).
\8\ See 31 CFR 103.170; 67 FR 21113 (Apr. 29, 2002), as amended
at 67 FR 67549 (Nov. 6, 2002) and corrected at 67 FR 68935 (Nov. 14,
2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On April 10, 2003, FinCEN issued an ANPRM regarding AML
requirements for persons involved in real estate closings and
settlements.\9\ The 2003 ANPRM noted that the BSA had no definition of
the term ``persons involved in real estate closings and settlements;''
that FinCEN had not had occasion to define the term in a regulation;
and that the legislative history of the term provided no insight into
how Congress intended the term to be defined. The 2003 ANPRM also noted
that real estate transactions could involve multiple persons,
including: Real estate agents, banks, mortgage banks, mortgage brokers,
title insurance companies, appraisers, escrow agents, settlement
attorneys or agents, property inspectors and other persons directly and
tangentially involved in property financing, acquisition, settlement,
and occupation. The 2003 ANPRM further noted that the persons involved
in real estate transactions, and the nature of their involvement, could
vary with the contemplated use of the real estate, the nature of the
rights to be acquired, or how these rights were to be held, e.g., for
residential, commercial, portfolio investment, or development purposes.
Finally, the 2003 ANPRM expressed FinCEN's views as to guiding
principles that should be considered in defining persons involved in
real estate closings and settlements. Any definitions or terms that
define the scope of the rule should consider: (1) Those persons (i.e.,
individuals and business entities) whose services rendered or products
offered in connection with a real estate closing or settlement can be
abused by money launderers; (2) those persons who are positioned to
identify the purpose and nature of the transaction; (3) the importance
of various participants to successful completion of the transaction,
which may suggest that they are well positioned to identify suspicious
conduct; (4) the degree to which professionals may have very different
roles, in different transactions, that may result in greater exposure
to money laundering; and (5) involvement with the actual flow of funds
used in the transaction.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See 68 FR 17569 (Apr. 10, 2003).
\10\ See 68 FR 17569, 17570 (Apr. 10, 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FinCEN has not issued any additional notices regarding persons
involved in real estate closings and settlements since the 2003 ANPRM.
This is FinCEN's first notice regarding loan and finance companies.
FinCEN has in the interim continued its research and analysis related
to the categories of financial institutions exempted in 2002.
In view of increasing concern among regulators, law enforcement and
Congress over abusive and fraudulent sales and financing practices in
both the primary and secondary residential mortgage markets, FinCEN
also has undertaken a number of strategic, outreach and law enforcement
support initiatives focused on residential mortgage lending.
FinCEN is contemplating an incremental approach to implementation
of AML regulations for loan and finance companies that would focus
first on those business entities that are engaged in residential
mortgage lending or origination and are not currently subject to any
AML program requirement under the BSA or other Federal law. These
``non-bank residential mortgage lenders and originators'' are primary
providers of mortgage finance--in most cases dealing directly with the
consumer--and are in a unique position to assess and identify
[[Page 35832]]
money laundering risks and fraud while directly assisting consumers
with their financial needs and protecting them from the abuses of
financial crime. FinCEN believes that new regulations requiring non-
bank residential mortgage lenders and originators to adopt AML programs
and report suspicious transactions would augment FinCEN's initiatives
in this area. Among other benefits, such regulations would complement
efforts underway by mortgage companies to comply with the nationwide
licensing system and registry under development since the passage of
the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act of 2008
(S.A.F.E. Act).\11\ As mortgage companies implement systems and
procedures to comply with the S.A.F.E. Act, there will be opportunities
for them to review and enhance their educational and training programs
to ensure that employees are able to identify and appropriately deal
with fraud, money laundering and other financial crimes.
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\11\ See Title V of Division A of the Housing and Economic
Recovery Act of 2008, Public Law 110-289, 122 Stat. 2810 (2008),
codified at 12 U.S.C. 5101, et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Issues for Comment
This ANPRM solicits comment on all aspects of the potential impact
of applying BSA requirements to non-bank residential mortgage lenders
and originators.
1. What Are the Money Laundering Risks in the Non-Bank Residential
Mortgage Finance Sector?
As noted in the 2003 ANPRM, the residential real estate sector may
be vulnerable at all stages of the money laundering process. Money
laundering is a process by which funds with an illicit origin are
converted into funds with a plausibly legitimate origin. There are
three general stages of money laundering. The ``placement'' stage is
the stage at which funds from illegal activity or funds intended to
support illegal activity are first introduced into the financial
system. Money laundering ``layering'' involves the distancing of
illegal funds from their criminal source through the creation of
complex layers of financial transactions. ``Integration'' occurs when
illegal funds are made to appear to have been derived from a legitimate
source. Despite the relative illiquidity of most real estate assets,
money launderers have used residential mortgage transactions--
fraudulently and legitimately structured--to disguise the proceeds of
crime.
In recent years, a significant percentage of SARs filed with FinCEN
have reported suspected fraud-for-profit and fraud-for-housing schemes
involving real estate brokers, appraisers, and other persons associated
with real estate finance and settlements.\12\ FinCEN studies also have
shown the connection between persons involved in mortgage fraud and
other suspected financial crimes.\13\ The crime of money laundering is
defined, in part, with respect to the proceeds of specific unlawful,
``predicate'' activities. Both mortgage fraud and the act of laundering
mortgage fraud proceeds are crimes under Federal and State laws, and
both are destructive to consumers, individual businesses and the
financial system as a whole.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See Filing Trends in Mortgage Loan Fraud, Feb. 2009, https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/nr/pdf/20090225a.pdf; Mortgage Loan
Fraud: an Update of Trends Based upon Analysis of Suspicious
Activity Reports, Apr. 2008, &fnl;https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/files/MortgageLoanFraudSARAssessment.pdf; Suspected Money
Laundering in the Residential Real Estate Industry, Apr. 2008,
https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/files/MLR_Real_Estate_Industry_SAR_web.pdf; Money Laundering in the Commercial Real
Estate Industry; Dec. 2006, https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/reports/pdf/CREassessment.pdf; Mortgage Loan Fraud: An Industry
Assessment Based Upon Suspicious Activity Report Analysis, Nov.
2006, https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/reports/pdf/mortgage_fraud112006.pdf.
\13\ See Mortgage Loan Fraud Connections with Other Financial
Crime: An Evaluation of Suspicious Activity Reports Filed by Money
Services Businesses, Securities and Futures Firms, Insurance
Companies and Casinos, Mar. 2009, https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/rp/files/mortgage_fraud.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FinCEN seeks comment on the experience of the residential real
estate lending sector with money laundering and fraud schemes, the
existence of any safeguards in the industry to guard against these
crimes, the impact that compliance with AML program and SAR reporting
requirements may have on business operations, and what additional steps
may be necessary to protect the industry from abuse by money
launderers, including those who finance terrorist activity.
2. Should FinCEN Pursue an Incremental Approach to Regulation of Loan
and Finance Companies That Focuses First on Persons Engaged in Non-Bank
Residential Mortgage Lending or Origination?
As is the case with the term ``persons involved in real estate
closings and settlements,'' the term ``loan or finance company'' is not
defined or discussed in any FinCEN regulation, and there is no
legislative history on the term. The term, however, could conceivably
extend to any business entity that makes loans or finances purchases to
or on behalf of consumers and businesses. For consumers, loan and
finance companies originate loans and leases to finance the purchase of
consumer goods such as automobiles, furniture, and household
appliances. They also extend personal loans and loans secured by real
estate mortgages, including home equity loans. For businesses, they
supply short- and intermediate-term credit for such purposes as the
purchase of equipment and motor vehicles and the financing of
inventories. In addition, specialized wholesale loan and finance
companies provide liquidity that allows retail loan and finance
companies, as well as banks and others, to service end users.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ The North American Industry Classification System
classifies approximately 10 types of mortgage finance-related
businesses and professions and over 60 other businesses, professions
and institutions (e.g., consumer and commercial finance companies,
pawnshops, auto finance, equipment leasing, personal credit
companies, industrial loan companies and government sponsored
enterprises) as primarily engaged in consumer and commercial lending
and finance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
There has been a ``regulatory gap'' between the BSA's coverage of
depository institutions and non-bank residential mortgage lenders and
originators. FinCEN is concerned that this disparity in BSA regulatory
coverage may have made non-bank residential mortgage lenders and
originators more vulnerable to financial crime and money laundering
than their bank counterparts. FinCEN believes that implementation of
appropriate, risk-based AML programs by non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators will strengthen their existing compliance and
anti-fraud programs, as well as the training and licensing programs
that will be updated to comply with the S.A.F.E. Act. Moreover, a SAR
reporting regulation likely would reduce the vulnerability of this
sector and substantially expand FinCEN's BSA database, thereby giving
our regulatory and law enforcement partners a more complete macro and
micro (case-specific) picture of mortgage-related financial crimes. In
these and other respects, non-bank residential mortgage lenders and
originators may assume an increasingly crucial role in government and
industry efforts to protect consumers, mortgage finance businesses, and
the United States financial system from money laundering and other
financial crimes.
FinCEN is inclined to defer regulations for commercial real estate
finance businesses and other types of consumer and commercial finance
businesses until further research and analysis can be conducted to
enhance our understanding of their business operations and money
laundering vulnerabilities.
[[Page 35833]]
FinCEN seeks general comment on whether FinCEN should adopt this
incremental approach or some other approach to implementation of AML
program and SAR regulations for loan and finance companies.
3. How Should Persons Engaged in Non-Bank Residential Mortgage Lending
or Origination Be Defined?
Most real estate finance--both residential and commercial--involves
complex transactions and multiple parties whose roles are not always
readily discernable by the titles and terms used to describe them in
generally accepted business practices or under applicable licensing and
registration regimes. The primary mortgage market in the United States
is very fragmented, and even simple real estate finance transactions
may involve one or more parties that may originate, fund, broker,
purchase, transfer, service, securitize, and insure the mortgage loan.
FinCEN believes that the views, assumptions and guiding principles
noted in the 2003 ANPRM are equally relevant to the development of AML
program and SAR reporting regulations for non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators. AML obligations should focus on those persons
(i.e., individuals and business entities) that conduct the activities
that place them in the best position to identify the nature of the
transaction, recognize suspicious activity and prevent misuse of their
services for money laundering and other financial crimes. This
activities-based approach focuses on the nature of the activity
conducted and its primary function in a particular residential mortgage
transaction, rather than on the name or title of the person. Moreover,
FinCEN believes that any regulations for non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators should strive to avoid, to the greatest extent
possible, requirements that overlap or duplicate those of other BSA
rules.
FinCEN seeks comment on which participants involved in non-bank
residential mortgage finance are in a position where they can
effectively identify and guard against financial crime and money
laundering in the transactions they conduct. Information and comment
may, among other things, address both the extent to which various
participants have access to information regarding the nature and
purpose of the transactions at issue and the importance of the
participants' involvement to successful completion of the transactions.
Comments are welcome from those involved centrally in the residential
mortgage finance process (i.e., those who may act as an agent for some
or all of the parties and are responsible for reviewing the form and
type of payment, as well as being aware of the parties to the mortgage
transaction), and those who view their involvement as more peripheral.
Various definitions in the S.A.F.E. Act may be a useful reference
for comments related to the development of regulatory definitions that
would affect the scope of any proposed regulations for non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and originators. FinCEN seeks comment
specifically on whether FinCEN should adopt a definition of ``non-bank
mortgage lender or originator'' that would be similar to the definition
of ``loan originator'' in the S.A.F.E. Act.\15\ The term ``loan
originator'' in the S.A.F.E. Act means individuals who take
applications for residential mortgage loan transactions, including
employees of mortgage bankers and brokers, as well as loan officers of
banks and their subsidiaries. The S.A.F.E. Act also provides a broad
definition of ``residential mortgage loan'' that may be a useful
reference for comments: ``any loan primarily for personal, family, or
household use that is secured by a mortgage, deed of trust, or other
equivalent consensual security interest on a dwelling (as defined in
section 103(v) of the Truth in Lending Act) or residential real estate
upon which is constructed or intended to be constructed a dwelling * *
*.'' \16\ As noted, the focus of this ANPRM is non-bank residential
mortgage lenders and originators who are primary providers of mortgage
finance and are in the best position to prevent and detect money
laundering, fraud and other financial crimes. FinCEN seeks comment on
whether any regulations promulgated by FinCEN should cover the same
persons as those covered by the S.A.F.E. Act, or a broader or narrower
range of persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ 12 U.S.C. 5102(3).
\16\ 12 U.S.C. 5102(8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. How Should the Anti-Money Laundering Requirements for Persons
Engaged in Non-Bank Residential Mortgage Lending or Origination Be
Structured?
In applying the BSA to persons engaged in non-bank residential
mortgage lending and origination, FinCEN must consider the extent to
which the standards for AML programs are commensurate with the size,
location, and activities of such persons. FinCEN recognizes that while
large businesses are engaged in mortgage finance, businesses in this
industry also include smaller companies or sole proprietors. FinCEN
thus seeks comment on any particular concerns smaller businesses may
have regarding the implementation of an AML program.
FinCEN believes that AML programs will complement the anti-fraud
and general compliance programs that non-bank residential mortgage
lenders and originators have established to comply with other Federal
and State laws and protect their own business operations. Many non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and originators may be able to integrate
risk-based AML reporting programs into existing enterprise-wide anti-
fraud and compliance programs in a symbiotic manner that utilizes
economies of scale and enhances the effectiveness of a business's
compliance measures. FinCEN therefore seeks comment on what types of
programs and practices that persons engaged in non-bank residential
mortgage lending or origination have in place to prevent mortgage fraud
and other illegal activities, and the applicability of such programs to
the development of AML programs.
5. Should FinCEN Require Persons Engaged in Non-Bank Residential
Mortgage Lending or Origination To File SARs or Comply With Any Other
BSA Requirements?
As FinCEN emphasized in its recent report on mortgage loan fraud
trends, SARs provide a valuable tool for regulatory agencies and law
enforcement seeking to isolate specific instances of potential criminal
activity for further investigation, and to identify emerging money
laundering and terrorism financing trends.\17\ The due diligence
necessary for financial institutions to detect and report known or
suspected suspicious activity greatly reduces vulnerability to the
abuses of money laundering and terrorist financing.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Filing Trends in Mortgage Loan Fraud, Feb. 2009, page 1,
https://www.fincen.gov/news_room/nr/pdf/20090225a.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FinCEN has promulgated SAR reporting regulations for a number of
financial institutions that have AML program requirements, including
mutual funds, insurance companies, futures commission merchants and
introducing brokers in commodities, banks, brokers or dealers in
securities, money services businesses, and casinos.\18\ FinCEN
anticipates that any SAR regulation proposal applicable to persons
engaged in non-bank residential mortgage lending or origination would
have similar reporting standards, thresholds and procedures as those
set
[[Page 35834]]
forth in SAR regulations for other industries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ See 31 CFR 103.15-103.21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to any proposed SAR reporting regulations for non-bank
residential mortgage lenders or originators, FinCEN also may propose to
require these businesses to file currency transaction reports (rather
than Form 8300) or retain certain records, including those related to
large transmittals of funds.\19\ These changes could be accomplished
through amendments to the definitions regulation, 31 CFR 103.11
(specifically, to the definition of ``financial institution''), and the
exemptions regulation, 31 CFR 103.170 (specifically, to the temporary
exemption from the AML program requirement); or they could be
accomplished by issuing new regulations. FinCEN also recognizes that
persons engaged in residential mortgage lending or origination may
already have programs and practices in place to meet existing legal
obligations or protect the business from fraud and other illegal
activities. FinCEN requests comment on any aspect of possible new
regulatory requirements, including any factors FinCEN should consider
in structuring new requirements, exceptions, and differences from
established regulations. Useful information would include any available
estimates of volumes of transactions that might be subject to
particular reporting or recordkeeping requirements.
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\19\ See 31 CFR 103.22, 103.30 and 103.33.
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6. Should Any Persons or Transactions Be Exempted From Coverage of AML
or SAR Regulations?
FinCEN also solicits comment regarding whether there should be
regulatory exemptions for any category of persons engaged in non-bank
residential mortgage lending or origination, or any category of
transactions conducted by such persons. Comments regarding possible
exemptions should be designed to enable FinCEN to evaluate whether the
risk of money laundering through a category of persons or transactions
is sufficiently small that a proposed rule could be crafted that would
exempt the categories, while also providing adequate protection for the
industry from the risks of money laundering. The question of exemption
is specifically directed to professionals and those persons who are
primarily engaged in a business related to residential mortgage lending
or origination.
III. Conclusion
With this ANPRM, FinCEN is seeking input on how FinCEN should
implement the requirements of the BSA with respect to non-bank
residential mortgage lenders and originators. We also seek input on:
(1) Estimates and financial projections on the likely costs of
complying with AML program and SAR reporting regulations by specific
types of non-bank residential mortgage lenders and originators; (2) the
impact of any such regulatory requirements on industry profitability,
growth and business practices; (3) the impact of these requirements on
consumers seeking to obtain residential mortgages; (4) the
effectiveness of examining for and enforcing compliance with these
requirements; and (5) the advisability of establishing some minimum
transaction threshold value or annual volume threshold below which some
or all of these requirements would not apply. We also solicit comment
on the impact to law enforcement and regulatory agencies. FinCEN
welcomes comments on all aspects of the ANPRM, and we encourage all
interested parties to provide their views.
IV. Executive Order 12866
This advance notice of proposed rulemaking is not a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order 12866. Therefore, a Regulatory
Assessment is not required.
William F. Baity,
Acting Director, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
[FR Doc. E9-17117 Filed 7-20-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-02-P