Rules Relating to Investigations, 45168-45174 [2011-19035]
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45168
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 145 / Thursday, July 28, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
PART 84—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE
REQUIREMENTS FOR GRANTS AND
AGREEMENTS WITH INSTITUTIONS
OF HIGHER EDUCATION, HOSPITALS,
AND OTHER NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS
The authority citation for part 84
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).
■
7. Revise § 84.13(b) to read as follows:
§ 84.13 Debarment and suspension; DrugFree Workplace.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Recipients and subrecipients shall
comply with the requirements of the
Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 (41
U.S.C. 701, et seq.), as set forth at 2 CFR
part 2429.
PART 1000—NATIVE AMERICAN
HOUSING ACTIVITIES
The authority citation for part 1000
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 25 U.S.C. 4101 et seq.; 42 U.S.C.
3535(d).
■
9. Revise § 1000.46 to read as follows:
§ 1000.46 Do drug-free workplace
requirements apply?
Yes. In addition to any tribal
requirements, the Drug-Free Workplace
Act of 1988 (41 U.S.C. 701, et seq.) and
HUD’s implementing regulations in 2
CFR part 2429 apply.
Dated: July 15, 2011.
Shaun Donovan,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011–19129 Filed 7–27–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1080
[Docket No. CFPB–2011–0007]
RIN 3170–AA03
(a) Background
(b) Section-by-Section Summary
(c) Procedural Requirements
Rules Relating to Investigations
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
ACTION: Interim final rule with request
for public comment.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Consumer
Financial Protection (‘‘CFPB’’ or
‘‘Bureau’’), pursuant to the Consumer
Financial Protection Act of 2010, is
adopting its Rules Relating to
Investigations in order to describe the
Bureau’s procedures for investigations
pursuant to section 1052 of the Act. The
Bureau invites interested members of
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SUMMARY:
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the public to submit written comments
to this interim final rule setting forth
those rules.
DATES: This interim final rule is
effective on July 28, 2011. Written
comments must be received on or before
September 26, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. CFPB–2011–
0007, by any of the following methods:
• Electronic: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail or Hand Delivery/Courier in
Lieu of Mail: Monica Jackson, Office of
the Executive Secretary, Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, 1801 L
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20036.
All submissions must include the
agency name and docket number or
Regulatory Information Number (RIN)
for this rulemaking. In general, all
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov. In addition,
comments will be available for public
inspection and copying at 1801 L Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20036, on official
business days between the hours of
10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern Time. You
can make an appointment to inspect the
documents by telephoning (202) 435–
7275.
All comments, including attachments
and other supporting materials, will
become part of the public record and
subject to public disclosure. Sensitive
personal information, such as account
numbers or social security numbers,
should not be included. Comments will
not be edited to remove any identifying
or contact information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Monica Jackson, Office of the Executive
Secretary, Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, 1801 L Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20036, (202) 435–7275.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
discussion contains the following
sections:
(a) Background
The Bureau is adopting Rules Relating
to Investigations (‘‘Rules’’) that
implement provisions of the Consumer
Financial Protection Act of 2010
(‘‘Act’’) 1 that relate to the Bureau’s
1 The Act is Title X of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act, as amended,
Public Law 111–203 (July 21, 2010), Title X, 12
U.S.C. 5481 et seq. Section 1066 of the Act grants
the Secretary of the Treasury interim authority to
perform certain functions of the CFPB. Pursuant to
that authority, Treasury publishes these Rules on
behalf of the CFPB.
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investigations. Specifically, these Rules
will govern investigations undertaken
pursuant to section 1052 of the Act, 12
U.S.C. 5562, which authorizes the
Bureau to investigate whether persons
have engaged in conduct that violates
any provision of Federal consumer
financial law.
In developing these Rules, the Bureau
considered the investigative procedures
of other law enforcement agencies.
Specifically, the Bureau reviewed the
procedures currently used by the
Federal Trade Commission (‘‘FTC’’), the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’), and the prudential regulators
for guidance. In light of the similarities
between section 1052 of the Act and
section 20 of the Federal Trade
Commission Act (‘‘FTC Act’’), 15 U.S.C.
41 et seq., the Bureau drew most heavily
from the FTC’s nonadjudicative
procedures in constructing the Rules.
The Rules describe a number of
Bureau policies and procedures that
apply in a nonadjudicative setting.
Among other things, these Rules set
forth (1) the Bureau’s authority to
conduct investigations, and (2) the
rights of persons from whom the Bureau
seeks to compel information in
investigations.
In particular, the Rules lay out the
Bureau’s authority to conduct
investigations before instituting judicial
or administrative adjudicatory
proceedings under Federal consumer
financial law. The Rules authorize the
Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement to issue civil investigative
demands for documentary material,
tangible things, written reports or
answers to questions, and oral
testimony, which may be enforced in
district court by either the General
Counsel or the Assistant Director of the
Division of Enforcement. The Rules also
detail the authority of the Bureau’s
investigators to conduct investigations
and hold investigational hearings
pursuant to civil investigative demands
for oral testimony.
Furthermore, the Rules set forth the
rights of persons from whom the Bureau
seeks to compel information in an
investigation. Specifically, the Rules
describe how such persons should be
notified of the purpose of the Bureau’s
investigation. The Rules detail the
procedures for filing a petition for an
order modifying or setting aside a civil
investigative demand, which will be
ruled upon by the Bureau Director. They
also describe the process for obtaining
copies of or access to documents or
testimony provided to the Bureau. In
addition, the Rules describe a person’s
right to counsel at investigational
hearings.
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Section 1080.7
Hearings
(b) Section-by-Section Summary
Section 1080.1
Scope
This section describes the scope of the
Rules. It makes clear that these Rules
only apply to investigations under
section 1052 of the Act.
Section 1080.2
Definitions
This section defines several terms
used throughout the Rules. Many of
these definitions also may be found in
section 1051 of the Act.
Section 1080.3
Controversies
Policy as to Private
This section states the Bureau’s policy
of pursuing investigations that are in the
public interest. Section 1080.3 is
consistent with the Bureau’s mission to
protect consumers by investigating
potential violations of Federal consumer
financial law.
Section 1080.4
By Whom Conducted
This section explains that Bureau
investigators are authorized to conduct
investigations pursuant to section 1052
of the Act.
Section 1080.5
Notification of Purpose
This section provides that a person
compelled to provide information to the
Bureau or testify in an investigational
hearing must be advised of the nature of
the conduct constituting the alleged
violation under investigation and the
applicable provisions of law. This
section implements the requirements for
civil investigative demands described in
section 1052(c)(2) of the Act.
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Section 1080.6
Demands
Civil Investigative
This section lays out the Bureau’s
procedures for issuing civil investigative
demands. It authorizes the Assistant
Director of the Division of Enforcement
to issue civil investigative demands for
documentary material, tangible things,
written reports or answers to questions,
and oral testimony. This section details
the information that must be included
in civil investigative demands and the
requirement that responses be made
under a sworn certificate. Section
1080.6 also authorizes the Assistant
Director of the Division of Enforcement
to negotiate and approve the terms of
compliance with civil investigative
demands and grant extensions for good
cause. Finally, this section describes the
procedures for seeking an order to
modify or set aside a civil investigative
demand, which will be ruled upon by
the Bureau Director.
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Investigational
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Section 1080.10 Noncompliance With
Civil Investigative Demands
This section describes the procedures
for investigational hearings initiated
pursuant to a civil investigative demand
for oral testimony. It also lays out the
roles and responsibilities of the Bureau
investigator conducting the
investigational hearing, which include
excluding unauthorized persons from
the hearing room and ensuring that the
investigational hearing is transcribed,
the witness is duly sworn, the transcript
is a true record of the testimony, and the
transcript is provided to the designated
custodian.
This section authorizes the Assistant
Director of the Division of Enforcement,
the General Counsel, or their delegees,
to initiate an action to enforce a civil
investigative demand in connection
with the failure or refusal of a person to
comply with, or to obey, a civil
investigative demand. In addition, they
are authorized to seek civil contempt or
other appropriate relief in cases where
a court order enforcing a civil
investigative demand has been violated.
Section 1080.8
Material
This section explains that an
enforcement action may be instituted in
federal or state court or through
administrative proceedings when
warranted by the facts disclosed by an
investigation. This section further
provides that the Bureau may refer
investigations to appropriate federal,
state, or foreign government agencies as
appropriate. It also authorizes the
Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement to close the investigation
when the facts of an investigation
indicate an enforcement action is not
necessary or warranted in the public
interest.
Withholding Requested
This section describes the procedures
that apply when persons withhold
material responsive to a civil
investigative demand. It requires that
they assert a privilege by the production
date and, if so directed in the civil
investigative demand, also submit a
detailed schedule of the items withheld.
Section 1080.8 also sets forth the
procedures for handling the disclosure
of privileged or protected information or
communications.
Section 1080.9
Investigations
Rights of Witnesses in
This section describes the rights of
persons compelled to submit
information or provide testimony in an
investigation. It details the procedures
for obtaining a copy of submitted
documents or a copy of or access to a
transcript of the person’s testimony.
This section also describes a witness’s
right to make changes to his or her
transcript and the rules for signing the
transcript.
Section 1080.9 lays out a person’s
right to counsel at an investigational
hearing and describes his or her
counsel’s right to advise the witness as
to any question posed for which an
objection may properly be made. It also
describes the witness’s or counsel’s
rights to object to questions or requests
that the witness is privileged to refuse
to answer. This section states that
counsel for the witness may not
otherwise object to questions or
interrupt the examination to make
statements on the record but may
request that the witness have an
opportunity to clarify any of his or her
answers. Finally, this section authorizes
the Bureau investigator to take all
necessary action during the course of
the hearing to avoid delay and to
prevent or restrain disorderly, dilatory,
obstructionist, or contumacious
conduct, or contemptuous language.
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Section 1080.11
Disposition
Section 1080.12 Orders Requiring
Witnesses To Testify or Provide Other
Information and Granting Immunity
This section authorizes the Assistant
Director of the Division of Enforcement
to request approval from the Attorney
General for the issuance of an order
requiring a witness to testify or provide
other information and granting
immunity under 18 U.S.C. 6004. It also
sets forth the Bureau’s right to review
the exercise of these functions, and
states that the Bureau will entertain an
appeal from an order requiring a witness
to testify or provide other information
only upon a showing that a substantial
question is involved, the determination
of which is essential to serve the
interests of justice. Finally, this section
describes the applicable rules and time
limits for such appeals.
Section 1080.13
Custodians
This section describes the procedures
for designating a custodian and deputy
custodian for material produced
pursuant to a civil investigative demand
in an investigation. It also states that
these materials are for the official use of
the Bureau, but, upon notice to the
custodian, must be made available for
examination during regular office hours
by the person who produced them.
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Section 1080.14 Confidential
Treatment of Demand Material and
Non-Public Nature of Investigations
Section 1080.14 explains that
documentary materials and tangible
things obtained by the Bureau pursuant
to a civil investigative demand are
subject to the requirements and
procedures relating to disclosure of
records and information in part 1070 of
this title. This section also states that
investigations generally are non-public.
A Bureau investigator may disclose the
existence of an investigation to the
extent necessary to advance the
investigation.
(c) Procedural Requirements
(1) Regulatory Requirements
The Rules relate solely to agency
procedure and practice and, thus, are
not subject to the notice and comment
requirements of the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.
Although the Rules are exempt from
these requirements, the Bureau invites
comment on them. Because no notice of
proposed rulemaking is required, the
requirements of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601(2) do not
apply.
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(2) Section 1022(b)(2) Provisions
The CFPB has conducted an analysis
of benefits, costs, and impacts 2 and
consulted with the prudential
regulators, the Department of Housing
and Urban Development, the Securities
and Exchange Commission, the
Department of Justice, and the Federal
Trade Commission, including with
respect to whether the Rules are
consistent with any relevant prudential,
market, and systemic objectives
administered by such agencies.3
The Bureau concludes that, on
balance, the Rules are beneficial to
consumers and covered persons alike.
The Rules do not impose any
obligations on consumers or have any
direct impact on their access to credit.
Conversely, they provide a clear,
2 Section 1022(b)(2)(A) addresses the
consideration of the potential benefits and costs of
regulation to consumers and industry, including the
potential reduction of access by consumers to
consumer financial products or services; the impact
of proposed rules on depository institutions and
credit unions with $10 billion or less in total assets
as described in Section 1026 of the Dodd-Frank Act;
and the impact on consumers in rural areas.
3 The President’s July 11, 2011, Executive Order
13579 entitled ‘‘Regulation and Independent
Regulatory Agencies,’’ asks the independent
agencies to follow the cost-saving, burden-reducing
principles in Executive Order 13563; harmonization
and simplification of rules; flexible approaches that
reduce costs; and scientific integrity. In the spirit
of Executive Order 13563, the CFPB has consulted
with the Office of Management and Budget
regarding this interim final rule.
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efficient mechanism for investigating
compliance with the Federal consumer
financial laws, which benefits
consumers because the Rules offer a
systematic process for protecting them
from unlawful behavior.
The Rules impose certain obligations
on covered persons who receive civil
investigative demands in Bureau
investigations. Specifically, as described
above, the Rules set forth the process for
complying with or objecting to civil
investigative demands for documentary
material, tangible things, written reports
or answers to questions, and oral
testimony. The obligations in the Rules
stem from express language in the Act.
As such, the Rules do not impose
additional burdens on covered persons
beyond those Congress imposed in the
Act. In fact, the Rules implement the
statutory requirements and provide
clear guidelines to recipients of civil
investigative demands, providing a level
of clarity and certainty that is beneficial
to those obligated under the Act to
comply with such demands. Moreover,
ensuring compliance with Federal
consumer financial law ultimately
benefits covered persons by ensuring
that scrupulous actors are not
competitively disadvantaged in the
marketplace.
Furthermore, because section 1052 of
the Act and the Rules are largely based
on section 20 of the FTC Act and its
corresponding regulations, they present
an existing, stable model of
investigatory procedures that should not
impose new compliance costs. The
entities subject to the Bureau’s
jurisdiction are accustomed to
complying with these or similar
procedures for responding to demands
for information or testimony from
regulators. Thus, they do not face a
significant cost of adjusting to a new
procedural landscape for investigations;
rather, they benefit from the Bureau’s
adoption of an existing model.
The Rules contemplate that the
Bureau will exercise its discretion to
modify demands or extend the time for
compliance for good cause. The Bureau
can assess the cost of compliance with
a civil investigative demand in a
particular circumstance and take
appropriate steps to mitigate any
unreasonable compliance burden, a
process providing flexibility that
benefits covered persons.
Further, the Rules have no unique
impact on insured depository
institutions or insured credit unions
with less than $10 billion in assets
described in section 1026(a) of the Act,
and do not have a unique impact on
rural consumers.
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List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1080
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Consumer
protection, Credit, Credit unions,
Federal Reserve System, Investigations,
Law enforcement, National banks,
Savings associations, Trade practices.
For the reasons set forth above, the
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection adds part 1080 to Chapter X
in Title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations to read as set forth below.
TITLE 12—BANKS AND BANKING
CHAPTER X—BUREAU OF CONSUMER
FINANCIAL PROTECTION
PART 1080—RULES RELATING TO
INVESTIGATIONS
Sec.
1080.1 Scope.
1080.2 Definitions.
1080.3 Policy as to private controversies.
1080.4 By whom conducted.
1080.5 Notification of purpose.
1080.6 Civil investigative demands.
1080.7 Investigational hearings.
1080.8 Withholding requested material.
1080.9 Rights of witnesses in investigations.
1080.10 Noncompliance with civil
investigative demands.
1080.11 Disposition.
1080.12 Orders requiring witnesses to
testify or provide other information and
granting immunity.
1080.13 Custodians.
1080.14 Confidential treatment of demand
material and non-public nature of
investigations.
Authority: Pub. L. 111–203, Title X.
§ 1080.1
Scope.
The rules of this part apply to Bureau
investigations conducted pursuant to
section 1052 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 5562.
§ 1080.2
Definitions.
For the purposes of this part, unless
explicitly stated to the contrary:
Act means the Consumer Financial
Protection Act of 2010, as amended,
Public Law 111–203 (July 21, 2010),
Title X, 12 U.S.C. 5481 et seq.
Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement means the head of the
Division of Enforcement or any Bureau
employee to whom the Assistant
Director of the Division of Enforcement
has delegated authority to act under this
part.
Bureau means the Bureau of
Consumer Financial Protection.
Bureau investigation means any
inquiry conducted by a Bureau
investigator for the purpose of
ascertaining whether any person is or
has been engaged in any conduct that is
a violation.
Bureau investigator means any
attorney or investigator employed by the
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Bureau who is charged with the duty of
enforcing or carrying into effect any
Federal consumer financial law.
Custodian means the custodian or any
deputy custodian designated by the
Bureau for the purpose of maintaining
custody of information produced
pursuant to this part.
Director means the Director of the
Bureau or a person authorized to
perform the functions of the Director in
accordance with the law.
Division of Enforcement means the
division of the Bureau responsible for
enforcement of Federal consumer
financial law.
Documentary material means the
original or any copy of any book,
document, record, report,
memorandum, paper, communication,
tabulation, chart, logs, electronic files,
or other data or data compilations stored
in any medium, including
electronically-stored information.
Electronically stored information (ESI)
means any information stored in any
electronic medium from which
information can be obtained either
directly or, if necessary, after translation
by the responding party into a
reasonably usable form.
General Counsel means the General
Counsel of the Bureau or any Bureau
employee to whom the General Counsel
has delegated authority to act under this
part.
Person means an individual,
partnership, company, corporation,
association (incorporated or
unincorporated), trust, estate,
cooperative organization, or other
entity.
Violation means any act or omission
that, if proved, would constitute a
violation of any provision of Federal
consumer financial law.
§ 1080.3
Policy as to private controversies.
The Bureau shall act only in the
public interest and will not initiate an
investigation or take other enforcement
action when the alleged violation is
merely a matter of private controversy
and does not tend to affect adversely the
public interest.
§ 1080.4
By whom conducted.
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Bureau investigations are conducted
by Bureau investigators designated and
duly authorized under section 1052 of
the Act, 12 U.S.C. 5562, to conduct such
investigations.
§ 1080.5
Notification of purpose.
Any person compelled to furnish
documentary material, tangible things,
written reports or answers to questions,
oral testimony, or any combination of
such material, answers, or testimony to
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the Bureau shall be advised of the
nature of the conduct constituting the
alleged violation that is under
investigation and the provisions of law
applicable to such violation.
§ 1080.6
Civil investigative demands.
(a) In general. In accordance with
section 1052(c) of the Act, the Assistant
Director of the Division of Enforcement
may issue a civil investigative demand
in any Bureau investigation directing
the person named therein to produce
documentary material for inspection
and copying or reproduction in the form
or medium requested by the Bureau; to
submit tangible things; to provide a
written report or answers to questions;
to appear before a designated
representative at a designated time and
place to testify about documentary
material, tangible things, or other
information; and to furnish any
combination of such material, things,
answers, or testimony.
(1) Documentary material.
(i) Civil investigative demands for the
production of documentary material
shall describe each class of material to
be produced with such definiteness and
certainty as to permit such material to
be fairly identified, prescribe a return
date or dates that will provide a
reasonable period of time within which
the material so demanded may be
assembled and made available for
inspection and copying or reproduction,
and identify the custodian to whom
such material shall be made available.
Documentary material for which a civil
investigative demand has been issued
shall be made available as prescribed in
the civil investigative demand.
(ii) Production of documentary
material in response to a civil
investigative demand shall be made
under a sworn certificate, in such form
as the demand designates, by the person
to whom the demand is directed or, if
not a natural person, by any person
having knowledge of the facts and
circumstances relating to such
production, to the effect that all of the
documentary material required by the
demand and in the possession, custody,
or control of the person to whom the
demand is directed has been produced
and made available to the custodian.
(2) Tangible things.
(i) Civil investigative demands for
tangible things shall describe each class
of tangible things to be produced with
such definiteness and certainty as to
permit such things to be fairly
identified, prescribe a return date or
dates which will provide a reasonable
period of time within which the things
so demanded may be assembled and
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submitted, and identify the custodian to
whom such things shall be submitted.
(ii) Submissions of tangible things in
response to a civil investigative demand
shall be made under a sworn certificate,
in such form as the demand designates,
by the person to whom the demand is
directed or, if not a natural person, by
any person having knowledge of the
facts and circumstances relating to such
production, to the effect that all of the
tangible things required by the demand
and in the possession, custody, or
control of the person to whom the
demand is directed have been submitted
to the custodian.
(3) Written reports or answers to
questions.
(i) Civil investigative demands for
written reports or answers to questions
shall propound with definiteness and
certainty the reports to be produced or
the questions to be answered, prescribe
a date or dates at which time written
reports or answers to questions shall be
submitted, and identify the custodian to
whom such reports or answers shall be
submitted.
(ii) Each reporting requirement or
question in a civil investigative demand
shall be answered separately and fully
in writing under oath. Responses to a
civil investigative demand for a written
report or answers to questions shall be
made under a sworn certificate, in such
form as the demand designates, by the
person to whom the demand is directed
or, if not a natural person, by any person
responsible for answering each
reporting requirement or question, to
the effect that all of the information
required by the demand and in the
possession, custody, control, or
knowledge of the person to whom the
demand is directed has been submitted
to the custodian.
(4) Oral testimony.
(i) Civil investigative demands for the
giving of oral testimony shall prescribe
a date, time, and place at which oral
testimony shall be commenced, and
identify a Bureau investigator who shall
conduct the investigation and the
custodian to whom the transcript of
such investigation shall be submitted.
Oral testimony in response to a civil
investigative demand shall be taken in
accordance with the procedures for
investigational hearings prescribed by
§§ 1080.7 and 1080.9 of this part.
(ii) Where a civil investigative
demand requires oral testimony from an
entity, the civil investigative demand
shall describe with reasonable
particularity the matters for examination
and the entity must designate one or
more officers, directors, or managing
agents, or designate other persons who
consent to testify on its behalf. Unless
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a single individual is designated by the
entity, the entity must designate the
matters on which each designee will
testify. The individuals designated must
testify about information known or
reasonably available to the entity and
their testimony shall be binding on the
entity.
(b) Manner and form of production of
ESI. When a civil investigative demand
requires the production of ESI, it shall
be produced in accordance with the
instructions provided by the Bureau
regarding the manner and form of
production. Absent any instructions as
to the form for producing ESI, ESI must
be produced in the form in which it is
ordinarily maintained or in a reasonably
usable form.
(c) Compliance. The Assistant
Director of the Division of Enforcement
is authorized to negotiate and approve
the terms of satisfactory compliance
with civil investigative demands and,
for good cause shown, may extend the
time prescribed for compliance.
(d) Petition for order modifying or
setting aside demand—in general. Any
petition for an order modifying or
setting aside a civil investigative
demand shall be filed with the
Executive Secretary of the Bureau with
a copy to the Assistant Director of the
Division of Enforcement within twenty
(20) days after service of the civil
investigative demand, or, if the return
date is less than twenty (20) days after
service, prior to the return date. Such
petition shall set forth all assertions of
privilege or other factual and legal
objections to the civil investigative
demand, including all appropriate
arguments, affidavits, and other
supporting documentation. The attorney
who objects to a demand must sign any
objections.
(1) Statement. Each petition shall be
accompanied by a signed statement
representing that counsel for the
petitioner has conferred with counsel
for the Bureau in a good-faith effort to
resolve by agreement the issues raised
by the petition and has been unable to
reach such an agreement. If some of the
matters in controversy have been
resolved by agreement, the statement
shall specify the matters so resolved and
the matters remaining unresolved. The
statement shall recite the date, time, and
place of each such conference between
counsel, and the names of all parties
participating in each such conference.
(2) Extensions of time. The Assistant
Director of the Division of Enforcement
is authorized to rule upon requests for
extensions of time within which to file
such petitions. Requests for extension of
time are disfavored.
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(3) Disposition. The Director has the
authority to rule upon a petition for an
order modifying or setting aside a civil
investigative demand.
(e) Stay of compliance period. The
timely filing of a petition for an order
modifying or setting aside a civil
investigative demand shall stay the time
permitted for compliance with the
portion challenged. If the petition is
denied in whole or in part, the ruling
will specify a new return date.
(f) Public disclosure. All such
petitions and the responses thereto are
part of the public records of the Bureau
unless the Bureau determines otherwise
for good cause shown.
§ 1080.7
Investigational hearings.
(a) Investigational hearings, as
distinguished from hearings in
adjudicative proceedings, may be
conducted pursuant to a civil
investigative demand for the giving of
oral testimony in the course of any
Bureau investigation, including
inquiries initiated for the purpose of
determining whether or not a
respondent is complying with an order
of the Bureau.
(b) Investigational hearings shall be
conducted by any Bureau investigator
for the purpose of hearing the testimony
of witnesses and receiving documentary
material, tangible things, or other
information relating to any subject
under investigation. Such hearings shall
be under oath or affirmation and
stenographically reported, and a
transcript thereof shall be made a part
of the record of the investigation. The
Bureau investigator conducting the
investigational hearing also may direct
that the testimony be recorded by audio,
audiovisual, or other means, in which
case the recording shall be made a part
of the record of the investigation as
well.
(c) In investigational hearings, the
Bureau investigators shall exclude from
the hearing room all persons except the
person being examined, his or her
counsel, the officer before whom the
testimony is to be taken, any
investigator or representative of an
agency with which the Bureau is
engaged in a joint investigation, and any
individual transcribing or recording
such testimony. At the discretion of the
Bureau investigator, and with the
consent of the person being examined,
persons other than those listed in this
paragraph may be present in the hearing
room. The Bureau investigator shall
certify or direct the individual
transcribing the testimony to certify on
the transcript that the witness was duly
sworn and that the transcript is a true
record of the testimony given by the
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witness. A copy of the transcript shall
be forwarded promptly by the Bureau
investigator to the custodian designated
in § 1080.13.
§ 1080.8
Withholding requested material.
(a) Any person withholding material
responsive to a civil investigative
demand or any other request for
production of material shall assert a
claim of privilege not later than the date
set for the production of material. Such
person shall, if so directed in the civil
investigative demand or other request
for production, submit, together with
such claim, a schedule of the items
withheld which states, as to each such
item, the type, specific subject matter,
and date of the item; the names,
addresses, positions, and organizations
of all authors and recipients of the item;
and the specific grounds for claiming
that the item is privileged. The person
who submits the schedule and the
attorney stating the grounds for a claim
that any item is privileged must sign it.
(b) A person withholding material
solely for reasons described in this
subsection shall comply with the
requirements of this subsection in lieu
of filing a petition for an order
modifying or setting aside a civil
investigative demand pursuant to
§ 1080.6(d).
(c) Disclosure of privileged or
protected information or
communications produced pursuant to a
civil investigative demand shall be
handled as follows:
(1) The disclosure of privileged or
protected information or
communications shall not operate as a
waiver if:
(i) The disclosure was inadvertent;
(ii) The holder of the privilege or
protection took reasonable steps to
prevent disclosure; and
(iii) The holder promptly took
reasonable steps to rectify the error,
including notifying a Bureau
investigator of the claim and the basis
for it.
(2) After being notified, the Bureau
investigator must promptly return,
sequester, or destroy the specified
information and any copies; must not
use or disclose the information until the
claim is resolved; must take reasonable
steps to retrieve the information if he or
she disclosed it before being notified;
and, if appropriate, may sequester such
material until such time as a hearing
officer or court rules on the merits of the
claim of privilege or protection. The
producing party must preserve the
information until the claim is resolved.
(3) The disclosure of privileged or
protected information or
communications shall waive the
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privilege or protection as to undisclosed
information or communications only if:
(i) The waiver is intentional;
(ii) The disclosed and undisclosed
information or communications concern
the same subject matter; and
(iii) They ought in fairness to be
considered together.
rmajette on DSK89S0YB1PROD with RULES
§ 1080.9 Rights of witnesses in
investigations.
(a) Any person compelled to submit
documentary material, tangible things,
or written reports or answers to
questions to the Bureau, or to testify in
an investigational hearing, shall be
entitled to retain a copy or, on payment
of lawfully prescribed costs, request a
copy of the materials, things, reports, or
written answers submitted, or a
transcript of his or her testimony. The
Bureau, however, may for good cause
deny such a request and limit the
witness to inspection of the official
transcript of the testimony. Upon
completion of transcription of the
testimony of the witness, the witness
shall be offered an opportunity to read
the transcript of his or her testimony.
Any changes in form or substance that
the witness desires to make shall be
entered and identified upon the
transcript by the Bureau investigator
with a statement of the reasons given by
the witness for making such changes.
The transcript shall then be signed by
the witness unless the witness cannot be
found, is ill, waives in writing his or her
right to signature, or refuses to sign. If
the transcript is not signed by the
witness within thirty (30) days of being
afforded a reasonable opportunity to
review it, the Bureau investigator, or the
individual transcribing the testimony
acting at the Bureau investigator’s
direction, shall sign the transcript and
state on the record the fact of the
waiver, illness, absence of the witness,
or the refusal to sign, together with any
reasons given for the failure to sign.
(b) Any witness compelled to appear
in person at an investigational hearing
may be accompanied, represented, and
advised by counsel as follows:
(1) Counsel for a witness may advise
the witness, in confidence and upon the
initiative of either counsel or the
witness, with respect to any question
asked of the witness for which an
objection pursuant to paragraph (b) (2)
of this section may properly be made. If
the witness refuses to answer a
question, counsel may briefly state on
the record if he or she has advised the
witness not to answer the question and
the legal grounds for such refusal.
(2) Where it is claimed that a witness
is privileged to refuse to answer a
question or to produce other evidence,
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the witness or counsel for the witness
shall object on the record to the
question or requirement and may state
briefly and precisely the ground
therefor. The witness and his or her
counsel shall not otherwise object to or
refuse to answer any question, and they
shall not otherwise interrupt the oral
examination.
(3) Any objections made under the
rules in this part will be treated as
continuing objections and preserved
throughout the further course of the
hearing without the necessity for
repeating them as to any similar line of
inquiry. Cumulative objections are
unnecessary. Repetition of the grounds
for any objection will not be allowed.
(4) Counsel for a witness may not, for
any purpose or to any extent not
allowed by paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of
this section, interrupt the examination
of the witness by making any objections
or statements on the record. Petitions
challenging the Bureau’s authority to
conduct the investigation or the
sufficiency or legality of the civil
investigative demand shall be addressed
to the Bureau in advance of the hearing.
Copies of such petitions may be filed as
part of the record of the investigation
with the Bureau investigator conducting
the investigational hearing, but no
arguments in support thereof will be
allowed at the hearing.
(5) Following completion of the
examination of a witness, counsel for
the witness may, on the record, request
that the Bureau investigator conducting
the investigational hearing permit the
witness to clarify any of his or her
answers. The grant or denial of such
request shall be within the sole
discretion of the Bureau investigator
conducting the hearing.
(6) The Bureau investigator
conducting the hearing shall take all
necessary action to regulate the course
of the hearing to avoid delay and to
prevent or restrain disorderly, dilatory,
obstructionist, or contumacious
conduct, or contemptuous language.
Such Bureau investigator shall, for
reasons stated on the record,
immediately report to the Bureau any
instances where an attorney has
allegedly refused to comply with his or
her obligations under the rules in this
part, or has allegedly engaged in
disorderly, dilatory, obstructionist, or
contumacious conduct, or
contemptuous language in the course of
the hearing. The Bureau will thereupon
take such further action, if any, as the
circumstances warrant, including
suspension or disbarment of the
attorney from further practice before the
Bureau or exclusion from further
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45173
participation in the particular
investigation.
§ 1080.10 Noncompliance with civil
investigative demands.
(a) In cases of failure to comply in
whole or in part with Bureau civil
investigative demands, appropriate
action may be initiated by the Bureau,
including actions for enforcement.
(b) The Assistant Director of the
Division of Enforcement and the
General Counsel are authorized to:
(1) Institute, on behalf of the Bureau,
an enforcement proceeding in the
district court of the United States for
any judicial district in which a person
resides, is found, or transacts business,
in connection with the failure or refusal
of such person to comply with, or to
obey, a civil investigative demand in
whole or in part if the return date or any
extension thereof has passed; and
(2) Seek civil contempt or other
appropriate relief in cases where a court
order enforcing a civil investigative
demand has been violated.
§ 1080.11
Disposition.
(a) When the facts disclosed by an
investigation indicate that an
enforcement action is warranted, further
proceedings may be instituted in federal
or state court or pursuant to the
Bureau’s administrative adjudicatory
process. Where appropriate, the Bureau
also may refer investigations to
appropriate federal, state, or foreign
governmental agencies.
(b) When the facts disclosed by an
investigation indicate that an
enforcement action is not necessary or
would not be in the public interest, the
investigational file will be closed. The
matter may be further investigated, at
any time, if circumstances so warrant.
(c) The Assistant Director of the
Division of Enforcement is authorized to
close Bureau investigations.
§ 1080.12 Orders requiring witnesses to
testify or provide other information and
granting immunity.
(a) The Assistant Director of the
Division of Enforcement is hereby
authorized to request approval from the
Attorney General of the United States
for the issuance of an order requiring a
witness to testify or provide other
information granting immunity under
18 U.S.C. 6004.
(b) The Bureau retains the right to
review the exercise of any of the
functions delegated under paragraph (a)
of this section. Appeals to the Bureau
from an order requiring a witness to
testify or provide other information will
be entertained by the Bureau only upon
a showing that a substantial question is
involved, the determination of which is
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essential to serve the interests of justice.
Such appeals shall be made on the
record and shall be in the form of a brief
not to exceed fifteen (15) pages in length
and shall be filed within five (5) days
after notice of the complained of action.
The appeal shall not operate to suspend
the hearing unless otherwise
determined by the Bureau investigator
conducting the hearing or ordered by
the Bureau.
§ 1080.13
Custodians.
(a) The Bureau shall designate a
custodian and one or more deputy
custodians for material to be delivered
pursuant to a civil investigative demand
in an investigation. The custodian shall
have the powers and duties prescribed
by section 1052 of the Act, 12 U.S.C.
5562. Deputy custodians may perform
all of the duties assigned to custodians.
(b) Material produced pursuant to a
civil investigative demand, while in the
custody of the custodian, shall be for the
official use of the Bureau in accordance
with the Act; but such material shall
upon reasonable notice to the custodian
be made available for examination by
the person who produced such material,
or his or her duly authorized
representative, during regular office
hours established for the Bureau.
§ 1080.14 Confidential treatment of
demand material and non-public nature of
investigations.
(a) Documentary materials and
tangible things the Bureau receives
pursuant to a civil investigative demand
are subject to the requirements and
procedures relating to the disclosure of
records and information set forth in part
1070 of this chapter.
(b) Bureau investigations generally are
non-public. Bureau investigators may
disclose the existence of an
investigation to potential witnesses or
third parties to the extent necessary to
advance the investigation.
Dated: July 22, 2011.
Sam Valverde,
Deputy Executive Secretary, Department of
the Treasury.
[FR Doc. 2011–19035 Filed 7–25–11; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4810–25–P
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
rmajette on DSK89S0YB1PROD with RULES
12 CFR Part 1082
[Docket No. CFPB–2011–0005]
RIN 3170–AA02
State Official Notification Rules
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
AGENCY:
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15:58 Jul 27, 2011
Jkt 223001
Interim final rule with request
for public comment.
ACTION:
Section 1042(c) of the
Consumer Financial Protection Act of
2010 (‘‘Act’’), requires the Bureau of
Consumer Financial Protection (‘‘CFPB’’
or ‘‘Bureau’’) to prescribe rules
establishing procedures that govern the
process, described in section 1042(b) of
the Act, by which state officials notify
the CFPB of actions or proceedings
undertaken pursuant to the authority
granted in section 1042(a) to enforce the
Act or regulations prescribed
thereunder. This interim final rule with
a request for public comment sets forth
those rules.
DATES: This interim final rule is
effective on July 28, 2011. Written
comments are invited and must be
received on or before September 26,
2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. CFPB–2011–
0005, by any of the following methods:
• Electronic: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail or Hand Delivery/Courier in
Lieu of Mail: Monica Jackson, Office of
the Executive Secretary, Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, 1801 L
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20036.
All submissions must include the
agency name and docket number or
Regulatory Information Number (RIN)
for this rulemaking. In general, all
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov. In addition,
comments will be available for public
inspection and copying at 1801 L Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20036, on official
business days between the hours of
10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern Time. You
can make an appointment to inspect the
documents by telephoning (202) 435–
7275.
All comments, including attachments
and other supporting materials, will
become part of the public record and
subject to public disclosure. Sensitive
personal information, such as account
numbers or social security numbers,
should not be included. Comments will
not be edited to remove any identifying
or contact information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Monica Jackson, Office of the Executive
Secretary, Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, 1801 L Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20036, (202) 435–7275.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The CFPB
issues these State Official Notification
Rules (‘‘Rules’’), pursuant to sections
1042(b) and (c) of the Consumer
Financial Protection Act of 2010
SUMMARY:
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Fmt 4700
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(‘‘Act’’),1 12 U.S.C. 5552(b), (c). These
Rules are promulgated as an interim
final rule with a request for comment.
The CFPB invites interested members of
the public to submit written comments
addressing the issues raised herein.
A. Background
These Rules will govern the process
by which state officials notify the CFPB
of actions or proceedings undertaken
under section 1042(a) of the Act, 12
U.S.C. 5552(a), to enforce the Act, or
regulations prescribed thereunder.
The Rules implement a procedure for
the timing and content of the notice
required to be given to the CFPB, set
forth the responsibilities of CFPB
employees and others who receive the
notice, and specify the rights of the
CFPB to participate in an action brought
by a state official. In drafting these
Rules, the CFPB endeavored to create a
process that would both provide the
CFPB and the relevant prudential
regulators with timely notice of pending
actions and account for the investigation
and litigation needs of state law
enforcement agencies. In keeping with
this approach, the Rules provide for a
default notice period of at least 10 days,
with exceptions for emergencies and
other extenuating circumstances, and
require substantive notice that is both
straightforward and comprehensive. The
Rules further make clear that the CFPB
can participate as appropriate in an
action brought by state officials under
the Act or a regulation prescribed
thereunder, provide for confidential
treatment of information disclosed to
the CFPB and prudential regulators
under these Rules, and establish that
provision of notice shall not constitute
a waiver of any applicable privilege. In
addition, the Rules specify that the
notice provisions do not create any
procedural or substantive rights for
parties in litigation against the United
States or against a state which brings an
action under the Act or a regulation
prescribed thereunder.
B. Section Summary
The Rules are set forth in a single
section, with several paragraphs, each of
which is addressed below.
Section 1082.1(a) Notice Requirement
This paragraph sets out the timing
and process for the provision of notice
1 The Act is Title X of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act, as amended,
Public Law 111–203 (July 21, 2010), Title X, 12
U.S.C. 5481 et seq. Section 1066 of the Act grants
the Secretary of the Treasury interim authority to
perform certain functions of the CFPB. Pursuant to
that authority, Treasury publishes these Rules on
behalf of the CFPB.
E:\FR\FM\28JYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 145 (Thursday, July 28, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 45168-45174]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-19035]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1080
[Docket No. CFPB-2011-0007]
RIN 3170-AA03
Rules Relating to Investigations
AGENCY: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
ACTION: Interim final rule with request for public comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (``CFPB'' or
``Bureau''), pursuant to the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010,
is adopting its Rules Relating to Investigations in order to describe
the Bureau's procedures for investigations pursuant to section 1052 of
the Act. The Bureau invites interested members of the public to submit
written comments to this interim final rule setting forth those rules.
DATES: This interim final rule is effective on July 28, 2011. Written
comments must be received on or before September 26, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. CFPB-2011-
0007, by any of the following methods:
Electronic: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Mail or Hand Delivery/Courier in Lieu of Mail: Monica
Jackson, Office of the Executive Secretary, Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, 1801 L Street, NW., Washington, DC 20036.
All submissions must include the agency name and docket number or
Regulatory Information Number (RIN) for this rulemaking. In general,
all comments received will be posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov. In addition, comments will be available for public
inspection and copying at 1801 L Street, NW., Washington, DC 20036, on
official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern
Time. You can make an appointment to inspect the documents by
telephoning (202) 435-7275.
All comments, including attachments and other supporting materials,
will become part of the public record and subject to public disclosure.
Sensitive personal information, such as account numbers or social
security numbers, should not be included. Comments will not be edited
to remove any identifying or contact information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Monica Jackson, Office of the
Executive Secretary, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, 1801 L
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20036, (202) 435-7275.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This discussion contains the following
sections:
(a) Background
(b) Section-by-Section Summary
(c) Procedural Requirements
(a) Background
The Bureau is adopting Rules Relating to Investigations (``Rules'')
that implement provisions of the Consumer Financial Protection Act of
2010 (``Act'') \1\ that relate to the Bureau's investigations.
Specifically, these Rules will govern investigations undertaken
pursuant to section 1052 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 5562, which authorizes
the Bureau to investigate whether persons have engaged in conduct that
violates any provision of Federal consumer financial law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Act is Title X of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, as amended, Public Law 111-203 (July 21,
2010), Title X, 12 U.S.C. 5481 et seq. Section 1066 of the Act
grants the Secretary of the Treasury interim authority to perform
certain functions of the CFPB. Pursuant to that authority, Treasury
publishes these Rules on behalf of the CFPB.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In developing these Rules, the Bureau considered the investigative
procedures of other law enforcement agencies. Specifically, the Bureau
reviewed the procedures currently used by the Federal Trade Commission
(``FTC''), the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC''), and the
prudential regulators for guidance. In light of the similarities
between section 1052 of the Act and section 20 of the Federal Trade
Commission Act (``FTC Act''), 15 U.S.C. 41 et seq., the Bureau drew
most heavily from the FTC's nonadjudicative procedures in constructing
the Rules.
The Rules describe a number of Bureau policies and procedures that
apply in a nonadjudicative setting. Among other things, these Rules set
forth (1) the Bureau's authority to conduct investigations, and (2) the
rights of persons from whom the Bureau seeks to compel information in
investigations.
In particular, the Rules lay out the Bureau's authority to conduct
investigations before instituting judicial or administrative
adjudicatory proceedings under Federal consumer financial law. The
Rules authorize the Assistant Director of the Division of Enforcement
to issue civil investigative demands for documentary material, tangible
things, written reports or answers to questions, and oral testimony,
which may be enforced in district court by either the General Counsel
or the Assistant Director of the Division of Enforcement. The Rules
also detail the authority of the Bureau's investigators to conduct
investigations and hold investigational hearings pursuant to civil
investigative demands for oral testimony.
Furthermore, the Rules set forth the rights of persons from whom
the Bureau seeks to compel information in an investigation.
Specifically, the Rules describe how such persons should be notified of
the purpose of the Bureau's investigation. The Rules detail the
procedures for filing a petition for an order modifying or setting
aside a civil investigative demand, which will be ruled upon by the
Bureau Director. They also describe the process for obtaining copies of
or access to documents or testimony provided to the Bureau. In
addition, the Rules describe a person's right to counsel at
investigational hearings.
[[Page 45169]]
(b) Section-by-Section Summary
Section 1080.1 Scope
This section describes the scope of the Rules. It makes clear that
these Rules only apply to investigations under section 1052 of the Act.
Section 1080.2 Definitions
This section defines several terms used throughout the Rules. Many
of these definitions also may be found in section 1051 of the Act.
Section 1080.3 Policy as to Private Controversies
This section states the Bureau's policy of pursuing investigations
that are in the public interest. Section 1080.3 is consistent with the
Bureau's mission to protect consumers by investigating potential
violations of Federal consumer financial law.
Section 1080.4 By Whom Conducted
This section explains that Bureau investigators are authorized to
conduct investigations pursuant to section 1052 of the Act.
Section 1080.5 Notification of Purpose
This section provides that a person compelled to provide
information to the Bureau or testify in an investigational hearing must
be advised of the nature of the conduct constituting the alleged
violation under investigation and the applicable provisions of law.
This section implements the requirements for civil investigative
demands described in section 1052(c)(2) of the Act.
Section 1080.6 Civil Investigative Demands
This section lays out the Bureau's procedures for issuing civil
investigative demands. It authorizes the Assistant Director of the
Division of Enforcement to issue civil investigative demands for
documentary material, tangible things, written reports or answers to
questions, and oral testimony. This section details the information
that must be included in civil investigative demands and the
requirement that responses be made under a sworn certificate. Section
1080.6 also authorizes the Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement to negotiate and approve the terms of compliance with civil
investigative demands and grant extensions for good cause. Finally,
this section describes the procedures for seeking an order to modify or
set aside a civil investigative demand, which will be ruled upon by the
Bureau Director.
Section 1080.7 Investigational Hearings
This section describes the procedures for investigational hearings
initiated pursuant to a civil investigative demand for oral testimony.
It also lays out the roles and responsibilities of the Bureau
investigator conducting the investigational hearing, which include
excluding unauthorized persons from the hearing room and ensuring that
the investigational hearing is transcribed, the witness is duly sworn,
the transcript is a true record of the testimony, and the transcript is
provided to the designated custodian.
Section 1080.8 Withholding Requested Material
This section describes the procedures that apply when persons
withhold material responsive to a civil investigative demand. It
requires that they assert a privilege by the production date and, if so
directed in the civil investigative demand, also submit a detailed
schedule of the items withheld. Section 1080.8 also sets forth the
procedures for handling the disclosure of privileged or protected
information or communications.
Section 1080.9 Rights of Witnesses in Investigations
This section describes the rights of persons compelled to submit
information or provide testimony in an investigation. It details the
procedures for obtaining a copy of submitted documents or a copy of or
access to a transcript of the person's testimony. This section also
describes a witness's right to make changes to his or her transcript
and the rules for signing the transcript.
Section 1080.9 lays out a person's right to counsel at an
investigational hearing and describes his or her counsel's right to
advise the witness as to any question posed for which an objection may
properly be made. It also describes the witness's or counsel's rights
to object to questions or requests that the witness is privileged to
refuse to answer. This section states that counsel for the witness may
not otherwise object to questions or interrupt the examination to make
statements on the record but may request that the witness have an
opportunity to clarify any of his or her answers. Finally, this section
authorizes the Bureau investigator to take all necessary action during
the course of the hearing to avoid delay and to prevent or restrain
disorderly, dilatory, obstructionist, or contumacious conduct, or
contemptuous language.
Section 1080.10 Noncompliance With Civil Investigative Demands
This section authorizes the Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement, the General Counsel, or their delegees, to initiate an
action to enforce a civil investigative demand in connection with the
failure or refusal of a person to comply with, or to obey, a civil
investigative demand. In addition, they are authorized to seek civil
contempt or other appropriate relief in cases where a court order
enforcing a civil investigative demand has been violated.
Section 1080.11 Disposition
This section explains that an enforcement action may be instituted
in federal or state court or through administrative proceedings when
warranted by the facts disclosed by an investigation. This section
further provides that the Bureau may refer investigations to
appropriate federal, state, or foreign government agencies as
appropriate. It also authorizes the Assistant Director of the Division
of Enforcement to close the investigation when the facts of an
investigation indicate an enforcement action is not necessary or
warranted in the public interest.
Section 1080.12 Orders Requiring Witnesses To Testify or Provide Other
Information and Granting Immunity
This section authorizes the Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement to request approval from the Attorney General for the
issuance of an order requiring a witness to testify or provide other
information and granting immunity under 18 U.S.C. 6004. It also sets
forth the Bureau's right to review the exercise of these functions, and
states that the Bureau will entertain an appeal from an order requiring
a witness to testify or provide other information only upon a showing
that a substantial question is involved, the determination of which is
essential to serve the interests of justice. Finally, this section
describes the applicable rules and time limits for such appeals.
Section 1080.13 Custodians
This section describes the procedures for designating a custodian
and deputy custodian for material produced pursuant to a civil
investigative demand in an investigation. It also states that these
materials are for the official use of the Bureau, but, upon notice to
the custodian, must be made available for examination during regular
office hours by the person who produced them.
[[Page 45170]]
Section 1080.14 Confidential Treatment of Demand Material and Non-
Public Nature of Investigations
Section 1080.14 explains that documentary materials and tangible
things obtained by the Bureau pursuant to a civil investigative demand
are subject to the requirements and procedures relating to disclosure
of records and information in part 1070 of this title. This section
also states that investigations generally are non-public. A Bureau
investigator may disclose the existence of an investigation to the
extent necessary to advance the investigation.
(c) Procedural Requirements
(1) Regulatory Requirements
The Rules relate solely to agency procedure and practice and, thus,
are not subject to the notice and comment requirements of the
Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq. Although the Rules
are exempt from these requirements, the Bureau invites comment on them.
Because no notice of proposed rulemaking is required, the requirements
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601(2) do not apply.
(2) Section 1022(b)(2) Provisions
The CFPB has conducted an analysis of benefits, costs, and impacts
\2\ and consulted with the prudential regulators, the Department of
Housing and Urban Development, the Securities and Exchange Commission,
the Department of Justice, and the Federal Trade Commission, including
with respect to whether the Rules are consistent with any relevant
prudential, market, and systemic objectives administered by such
agencies.\3\
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\2\ Section 1022(b)(2)(A) addresses the consideration of the
potential benefits and costs of regulation to consumers and
industry, including the potential reduction of access by consumers
to consumer financial products or services; the impact of proposed
rules on depository institutions and credit unions with $10 billion
or less in total assets as described in Section 1026 of the Dodd-
Frank Act; and the impact on consumers in rural areas.
\3\ The President's July 11, 2011, Executive Order 13579
entitled ``Regulation and Independent Regulatory Agencies,'' asks
the independent agencies to follow the cost-saving, burden-reducing
principles in Executive Order 13563; harmonization and
simplification of rules; flexible approaches that reduce costs; and
scientific integrity. In the spirit of Executive Order 13563, the
CFPB has consulted with the Office of Management and Budget
regarding this interim final rule.
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The Bureau concludes that, on balance, the Rules are beneficial to
consumers and covered persons alike. The Rules do not impose any
obligations on consumers or have any direct impact on their access to
credit. Conversely, they provide a clear, efficient mechanism for
investigating compliance with the Federal consumer financial laws,
which benefits consumers because the Rules offer a systematic process
for protecting them from unlawful behavior.
The Rules impose certain obligations on covered persons who receive
civil investigative demands in Bureau investigations. Specifically, as
described above, the Rules set forth the process for complying with or
objecting to civil investigative demands for documentary material,
tangible things, written reports or answers to questions, and oral
testimony. The obligations in the Rules stem from express language in
the Act. As such, the Rules do not impose additional burdens on covered
persons beyond those Congress imposed in the Act. In fact, the Rules
implement the statutory requirements and provide clear guidelines to
recipients of civil investigative demands, providing a level of clarity
and certainty that is beneficial to those obligated under the Act to
comply with such demands. Moreover, ensuring compliance with Federal
consumer financial law ultimately benefits covered persons by ensuring
that scrupulous actors are not competitively disadvantaged in the
marketplace.
Furthermore, because section 1052 of the Act and the Rules are
largely based on section 20 of the FTC Act and its corresponding
regulations, they present an existing, stable model of investigatory
procedures that should not impose new compliance costs. The entities
subject to the Bureau's jurisdiction are accustomed to complying with
these or similar procedures for responding to demands for information
or testimony from regulators. Thus, they do not face a significant cost
of adjusting to a new procedural landscape for investigations; rather,
they benefit from the Bureau's adoption of an existing model.
The Rules contemplate that the Bureau will exercise its discretion
to modify demands or extend the time for compliance for good cause. The
Bureau can assess the cost of compliance with a civil investigative
demand in a particular circumstance and take appropriate steps to
mitigate any unreasonable compliance burden, a process providing
flexibility that benefits covered persons.
Further, the Rules have no unique impact on insured depository
institutions or insured credit unions with less than $10 billion in
assets described in section 1026(a) of the Act, and do not have a
unique impact on rural consumers.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1080
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, Banking, Consumer
protection, Credit, Credit unions, Federal Reserve System,
Investigations, Law enforcement, National banks, Savings associations,
Trade practices.
For the reasons set forth above, the Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection adds part 1080 to Chapter X in Title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations to read as set forth below.
TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
CHAPTER X--BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION
PART 1080--RULES RELATING TO INVESTIGATIONS
Sec.
1080.1 Scope.
1080.2 Definitions.
1080.3 Policy as to private controversies.
1080.4 By whom conducted.
1080.5 Notification of purpose.
1080.6 Civil investigative demands.
1080.7 Investigational hearings.
1080.8 Withholding requested material.
1080.9 Rights of witnesses in investigations.
1080.10 Noncompliance with civil investigative demands.
1080.11 Disposition.
1080.12 Orders requiring witnesses to testify or provide other
information and granting immunity.
1080.13 Custodians.
1080.14 Confidential treatment of demand material and non-public
nature of investigations.
Authority: Pub. L. 111-203, Title X.
Sec. 1080.1 Scope.
The rules of this part apply to Bureau investigations conducted
pursuant to section 1052 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 5562.
Sec. 1080.2 Definitions.
For the purposes of this part, unless explicitly stated to the
contrary:
Act means the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010, as
amended, Public Law 111-203 (July 21, 2010), Title X, 12 U.S.C. 5481 et
seq.
Assistant Director of the Division of Enforcement means the head of
the Division of Enforcement or any Bureau employee to whom the
Assistant Director of the Division of Enforcement has delegated
authority to act under this part.
Bureau means the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
Bureau investigation means any inquiry conducted by a Bureau
investigator for the purpose of ascertaining whether any person is or
has been engaged in any conduct that is a violation.
Bureau investigator means any attorney or investigator employed by
the
[[Page 45171]]
Bureau who is charged with the duty of enforcing or carrying into
effect any Federal consumer financial law.
Custodian means the custodian or any deputy custodian designated by
the Bureau for the purpose of maintaining custody of information
produced pursuant to this part.
Director means the Director of the Bureau or a person authorized to
perform the functions of the Director in accordance with the law.
Division of Enforcement means the division of the Bureau
responsible for enforcement of Federal consumer financial law.
Documentary material means the original or any copy of any book,
document, record, report, memorandum, paper, communication, tabulation,
chart, logs, electronic files, or other data or data compilations
stored in any medium, including electronically-stored information.
Electronically stored information (ESI) means any information
stored in any electronic medium from which information can be obtained
either directly or, if necessary, after translation by the responding
party into a reasonably usable form.
General Counsel means the General Counsel of the Bureau or any
Bureau employee to whom the General Counsel has delegated authority to
act under this part.
Person means an individual, partnership, company, corporation,
association (incorporated or unincorporated), trust, estate,
cooperative organization, or other entity.
Violation means any act or omission that, if proved, would
constitute a violation of any provision of Federal consumer financial
law.
Sec. 1080.3 Policy as to private controversies.
The Bureau shall act only in the public interest and will not
initiate an investigation or take other enforcement action when the
alleged violation is merely a matter of private controversy and does
not tend to affect adversely the public interest.
Sec. 1080.4 By whom conducted.
Bureau investigations are conducted by Bureau investigators
designated and duly authorized under section 1052 of the Act, 12 U.S.C.
5562, to conduct such investigations.
Sec. 1080.5 Notification of purpose.
Any person compelled to furnish documentary material, tangible
things, written reports or answers to questions, oral testimony, or any
combination of such material, answers, or testimony to the Bureau shall
be advised of the nature of the conduct constituting the alleged
violation that is under investigation and the provisions of law
applicable to such violation.
Sec. 1080.6 Civil investigative demands.
(a) In general. In accordance with section 1052(c) of the Act, the
Assistant Director of the Division of Enforcement may issue a civil
investigative demand in any Bureau investigation directing the person
named therein to produce documentary material for inspection and
copying or reproduction in the form or medium requested by the Bureau;
to submit tangible things; to provide a written report or answers to
questions; to appear before a designated representative at a designated
time and place to testify about documentary material, tangible things,
or other information; and to furnish any combination of such material,
things, answers, or testimony.
(1) Documentary material.
(i) Civil investigative demands for the production of documentary
material shall describe each class of material to be produced with such
definiteness and certainty as to permit such material to be fairly
identified, prescribe a return date or dates that will provide a
reasonable period of time within which the material so demanded may be
assembled and made available for inspection and copying or
reproduction, and identify the custodian to whom such material shall be
made available. Documentary material for which a civil investigative
demand has been issued shall be made available as prescribed in the
civil investigative demand.
(ii) Production of documentary material in response to a civil
investigative demand shall be made under a sworn certificate, in such
form as the demand designates, by the person to whom the demand is
directed or, if not a natural person, by any person having knowledge of
the facts and circumstances relating to such production, to the effect
that all of the documentary material required by the demand and in the
possession, custody, or control of the person to whom the demand is
directed has been produced and made available to the custodian.
(2) Tangible things.
(i) Civil investigative demands for tangible things shall describe
each class of tangible things to be produced with such definiteness and
certainty as to permit such things to be fairly identified, prescribe a
return date or dates which will provide a reasonable period of time
within which the things so demanded may be assembled and submitted, and
identify the custodian to whom such things shall be submitted.
(ii) Submissions of tangible things in response to a civil
investigative demand shall be made under a sworn certificate, in such
form as the demand designates, by the person to whom the demand is
directed or, if not a natural person, by any person having knowledge of
the facts and circumstances relating to such production, to the effect
that all of the tangible things required by the demand and in the
possession, custody, or control of the person to whom the demand is
directed have been submitted to the custodian.
(3) Written reports or answers to questions.
(i) Civil investigative demands for written reports or answers to
questions shall propound with definiteness and certainty the reports to
be produced or the questions to be answered, prescribe a date or dates
at which time written reports or answers to questions shall be
submitted, and identify the custodian to whom such reports or answers
shall be submitted.
(ii) Each reporting requirement or question in a civil
investigative demand shall be answered separately and fully in writing
under oath. Responses to a civil investigative demand for a written
report or answers to questions shall be made under a sworn certificate,
in such form as the demand designates, by the person to whom the demand
is directed or, if not a natural person, by any person responsible for
answering each reporting requirement or question, to the effect that
all of the information required by the demand and in the possession,
custody, control, or knowledge of the person to whom the demand is
directed has been submitted to the custodian.
(4) Oral testimony.
(i) Civil investigative demands for the giving of oral testimony
shall prescribe a date, time, and place at which oral testimony shall
be commenced, and identify a Bureau investigator who shall conduct the
investigation and the custodian to whom the transcript of such
investigation shall be submitted. Oral testimony in response to a civil
investigative demand shall be taken in accordance with the procedures
for investigational hearings prescribed by Sec. Sec. 1080.7 and 1080.9
of this part.
(ii) Where a civil investigative demand requires oral testimony
from an entity, the civil investigative demand shall describe with
reasonable particularity the matters for examination and the entity
must designate one or more officers, directors, or managing agents, or
designate other persons who consent to testify on its behalf. Unless
[[Page 45172]]
a single individual is designated by the entity, the entity must
designate the matters on which each designee will testify. The
individuals designated must testify about information known or
reasonably available to the entity and their testimony shall be binding
on the entity.
(b) Manner and form of production of ESI. When a civil
investigative demand requires the production of ESI, it shall be
produced in accordance with the instructions provided by the Bureau
regarding the manner and form of production. Absent any instructions as
to the form for producing ESI, ESI must be produced in the form in
which it is ordinarily maintained or in a reasonably usable form.
(c) Compliance. The Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement is authorized to negotiate and approve the terms of
satisfactory compliance with civil investigative demands and, for good
cause shown, may extend the time prescribed for compliance.
(d) Petition for order modifying or setting aside demand--in
general. Any petition for an order modifying or setting aside a civil
investigative demand shall be filed with the Executive Secretary of the
Bureau with a copy to the Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement within twenty (20) days after service of the civil
investigative demand, or, if the return date is less than twenty (20)
days after service, prior to the return date. Such petition shall set
forth all assertions of privilege or other factual and legal objections
to the civil investigative demand, including all appropriate arguments,
affidavits, and other supporting documentation. The attorney who
objects to a demand must sign any objections.
(1) Statement. Each petition shall be accompanied by a signed
statement representing that counsel for the petitioner has conferred
with counsel for the Bureau in a good-faith effort to resolve by
agreement the issues raised by the petition and has been unable to
reach such an agreement. If some of the matters in controversy have
been resolved by agreement, the statement shall specify the matters so
resolved and the matters remaining unresolved. The statement shall
recite the date, time, and place of each such conference between
counsel, and the names of all parties participating in each such
conference.
(2) Extensions of time. The Assistant Director of the Division of
Enforcement is authorized to rule upon requests for extensions of time
within which to file such petitions. Requests for extension of time are
disfavored.
(3) Disposition. The Director has the authority to rule upon a
petition for an order modifying or setting aside a civil investigative
demand.
(e) Stay of compliance period. The timely filing of a petition for
an order modifying or setting aside a civil investigative demand shall
stay the time permitted for compliance with the portion challenged. If
the petition is denied in whole or in part, the ruling will specify a
new return date.
(f) Public disclosure. All such petitions and the responses thereto
are part of the public records of the Bureau unless the Bureau
determines otherwise for good cause shown.
Sec. 1080.7 Investigational hearings.
(a) Investigational hearings, as distinguished from hearings in
adjudicative proceedings, may be conducted pursuant to a civil
investigative demand for the giving of oral testimony in the course of
any Bureau investigation, including inquiries initiated for the purpose
of determining whether or not a respondent is complying with an order
of the Bureau.
(b) Investigational hearings shall be conducted by any Bureau
investigator for the purpose of hearing the testimony of witnesses and
receiving documentary material, tangible things, or other information
relating to any subject under investigation. Such hearings shall be
under oath or affirmation and stenographically reported, and a
transcript thereof shall be made a part of the record of the
investigation. The Bureau investigator conducting the investigational
hearing also may direct that the testimony be recorded by audio,
audiovisual, or other means, in which case the recording shall be made
a part of the record of the investigation as well.
(c) In investigational hearings, the Bureau investigators shall
exclude from the hearing room all persons except the person being
examined, his or her counsel, the officer before whom the testimony is
to be taken, any investigator or representative of an agency with which
the Bureau is engaged in a joint investigation, and any individual
transcribing or recording such testimony. At the discretion of the
Bureau investigator, and with the consent of the person being examined,
persons other than those listed in this paragraph may be present in the
hearing room. The Bureau investigator shall certify or direct the
individual transcribing the testimony to certify on the transcript that
the witness was duly sworn and that the transcript is a true record of
the testimony given by the witness. A copy of the transcript shall be
forwarded promptly by the Bureau investigator to the custodian
designated in Sec. 1080.13.
Sec. 1080.8 Withholding requested material.
(a) Any person withholding material responsive to a civil
investigative demand or any other request for production of material
shall assert a claim of privilege not later than the date set for the
production of material. Such person shall, if so directed in the civil
investigative demand or other request for production, submit, together
with such claim, a schedule of the items withheld which states, as to
each such item, the type, specific subject matter, and date of the
item; the names, addresses, positions, and organizations of all authors
and recipients of the item; and the specific grounds for claiming that
the item is privileged. The person who submits the schedule and the
attorney stating the grounds for a claim that any item is privileged
must sign it.
(b) A person withholding material solely for reasons described in
this subsection shall comply with the requirements of this subsection
in lieu of filing a petition for an order modifying or setting aside a
civil investigative demand pursuant to Sec. 1080.6(d).
(c) Disclosure of privileged or protected information or
communications produced pursuant to a civil investigative demand shall
be handled as follows:
(1) The disclosure of privileged or protected information or
communications shall not operate as a waiver if:
(i) The disclosure was inadvertent;
(ii) The holder of the privilege or protection took reasonable
steps to prevent disclosure; and
(iii) The holder promptly took reasonable steps to rectify the
error, including notifying a Bureau investigator of the claim and the
basis for it.
(2) After being notified, the Bureau investigator must promptly
return, sequester, or destroy the specified information and any copies;
must not use or disclose the information until the claim is resolved;
must take reasonable steps to retrieve the information if he or she
disclosed it before being notified; and, if appropriate, may sequester
such material until such time as a hearing officer or court rules on
the merits of the claim of privilege or protection. The producing party
must preserve the information until the claim is resolved.
(3) The disclosure of privileged or protected information or
communications shall waive the
[[Page 45173]]
privilege or protection as to undisclosed information or communications
only if:
(i) The waiver is intentional;
(ii) The disclosed and undisclosed information or communications
concern the same subject matter; and
(iii) They ought in fairness to be considered together.
Sec. 1080.9 Rights of witnesses in investigations.
(a) Any person compelled to submit documentary material, tangible
things, or written reports or answers to questions to the Bureau, or to
testify in an investigational hearing, shall be entitled to retain a
copy or, on payment of lawfully prescribed costs, request a copy of the
materials, things, reports, or written answers submitted, or a
transcript of his or her testimony. The Bureau, however, may for good
cause deny such a request and limit the witness to inspection of the
official transcript of the testimony. Upon completion of transcription
of the testimony of the witness, the witness shall be offered an
opportunity to read the transcript of his or her testimony. Any changes
in form or substance that the witness desires to make shall be entered
and identified upon the transcript by the Bureau investigator with a
statement of the reasons given by the witness for making such changes.
The transcript shall then be signed by the witness unless the witness
cannot be found, is ill, waives in writing his or her right to
signature, or refuses to sign. If the transcript is not signed by the
witness within thirty (30) days of being afforded a reasonable
opportunity to review it, the Bureau investigator, or the individual
transcribing the testimony acting at the Bureau investigator's
direction, shall sign the transcript and state on the record the fact
of the waiver, illness, absence of the witness, or the refusal to sign,
together with any reasons given for the failure to sign.
(b) Any witness compelled to appear in person at an investigational
hearing may be accompanied, represented, and advised by counsel as
follows:
(1) Counsel for a witness may advise the witness, in confidence and
upon the initiative of either counsel or the witness, with respect to
any question asked of the witness for which an objection pursuant to
paragraph (b) (2) of this section may properly be made. If the witness
refuses to answer a question, counsel may briefly state on the record
if he or she has advised the witness not to answer the question and the
legal grounds for such refusal.
(2) Where it is claimed that a witness is privileged to refuse to
answer a question or to produce other evidence, the witness or counsel
for the witness shall object on the record to the question or
requirement and may state briefly and precisely the ground therefor.
The witness and his or her counsel shall not otherwise object to or
refuse to answer any question, and they shall not otherwise interrupt
the oral examination.
(3) Any objections made under the rules in this part will be
treated as continuing objections and preserved throughout the further
course of the hearing without the necessity for repeating them as to
any similar line of inquiry. Cumulative objections are unnecessary.
Repetition of the grounds for any objection will not be allowed.
(4) Counsel for a witness may not, for any purpose or to any extent
not allowed by paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section, interrupt the
examination of the witness by making any objections or statements on
the record. Petitions challenging the Bureau's authority to conduct the
investigation or the sufficiency or legality of the civil investigative
demand shall be addressed to the Bureau in advance of the hearing.
Copies of such petitions may be filed as part of the record of the
investigation with the Bureau investigator conducting the
investigational hearing, but no arguments in support thereof will be
allowed at the hearing.
(5) Following completion of the examination of a witness, counsel
for the witness may, on the record, request that the Bureau
investigator conducting the investigational hearing permit the witness
to clarify any of his or her answers. The grant or denial of such
request shall be within the sole discretion of the Bureau investigator
conducting the hearing.
(6) The Bureau investigator conducting the hearing shall take all
necessary action to regulate the course of the hearing to avoid delay
and to prevent or restrain disorderly, dilatory, obstructionist, or
contumacious conduct, or contemptuous language. Such Bureau
investigator shall, for reasons stated on the record, immediately
report to the Bureau any instances where an attorney has allegedly
refused to comply with his or her obligations under the rules in this
part, or has allegedly engaged in disorderly, dilatory, obstructionist,
or contumacious conduct, or contemptuous language in the course of the
hearing. The Bureau will thereupon take such further action, if any, as
the circumstances warrant, including suspension or disbarment of the
attorney from further practice before the Bureau or exclusion from
further participation in the particular investigation.
Sec. 1080.10 Noncompliance with civil investigative demands.
(a) In cases of failure to comply in whole or in part with Bureau
civil investigative demands, appropriate action may be initiated by the
Bureau, including actions for enforcement.
(b) The Assistant Director of the Division of Enforcement and the
General Counsel are authorized to:
(1) Institute, on behalf of the Bureau, an enforcement proceeding
in the district court of the United States for any judicial district in
which a person resides, is found, or transacts business, in connection
with the failure or refusal of such person to comply with, or to obey,
a civil investigative demand in whole or in part if the return date or
any extension thereof has passed; and
(2) Seek civil contempt or other appropriate relief in cases where
a court order enforcing a civil investigative demand has been violated.
Sec. 1080.11 Disposition.
(a) When the facts disclosed by an investigation indicate that an
enforcement action is warranted, further proceedings may be instituted
in federal or state court or pursuant to the Bureau's administrative
adjudicatory process. Where appropriate, the Bureau also may refer
investigations to appropriate federal, state, or foreign governmental
agencies.
(b) When the facts disclosed by an investigation indicate that an
enforcement action is not necessary or would not be in the public
interest, the investigational file will be closed. The matter may be
further investigated, at any time, if circumstances so warrant.
(c) The Assistant Director of the Division of Enforcement is
authorized to close Bureau investigations.
Sec. 1080.12 Orders requiring witnesses to testify or provide other
information and granting immunity.
(a) The Assistant Director of the Division of Enforcement is hereby
authorized to request approval from the Attorney General of the United
States for the issuance of an order requiring a witness to testify or
provide other information granting immunity under 18 U.S.C. 6004.
(b) The Bureau retains the right to review the exercise of any of
the functions delegated under paragraph (a) of this section. Appeals to
the Bureau from an order requiring a witness to testify or provide
other information will be entertained by the Bureau only upon a showing
that a substantial question is involved, the determination of which is
[[Page 45174]]
essential to serve the interests of justice. Such appeals shall be made
on the record and shall be in the form of a brief not to exceed fifteen
(15) pages in length and shall be filed within five (5) days after
notice of the complained of action. The appeal shall not operate to
suspend the hearing unless otherwise determined by the Bureau
investigator conducting the hearing or ordered by the Bureau.
Sec. 1080.13 Custodians.
(a) The Bureau shall designate a custodian and one or more deputy
custodians for material to be delivered pursuant to a civil
investigative demand in an investigation. The custodian shall have the
powers and duties prescribed by section 1052 of the Act, 12 U.S.C.
5562. Deputy custodians may perform all of the duties assigned to
custodians.
(b) Material produced pursuant to a civil investigative demand,
while in the custody of the custodian, shall be for the official use of
the Bureau in accordance with the Act; but such material shall upon
reasonable notice to the custodian be made available for examination by
the person who produced such material, or his or her duly authorized
representative, during regular office hours established for the Bureau.
Sec. 1080.14 Confidential treatment of demand material and non-public
nature of investigations.
(a) Documentary materials and tangible things the Bureau receives
pursuant to a civil investigative demand are subject to the
requirements and procedures relating to the disclosure of records and
information set forth in part 1070 of this chapter.
(b) Bureau investigations generally are non-public. Bureau
investigators may disclose the existence of an investigation to
potential witnesses or third parties to the extent necessary to advance
the investigation.
Dated: July 22, 2011.
Sam Valverde,
Deputy Executive Secretary, Department of the Treasury.
[FR Doc. 2011-19035 Filed 7-25-11; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4810-25-P