Fair Hiring in Banking, 76702-76717 [2023-23509]
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76702
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 88, No. 214
Tuesday, November 7, 2023
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Parts 701, 741,746, 748, and
752
[NCUA–2023–0023]
RIN: 3133–AF55
Fair Hiring in Banking
National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The NCUA Board (Board)
proposes to incorporate its ‘‘Second
Chance’’ Interpretive Ruling and Policy
Statement 19–1 (IRPS 19–1) and the Fair
Hiring in Banking Act (FHBA) into its
regulations. The Federal Credit Union
Act prohibits, except with the Board’s
prior written consent, any person who
has been convicted of certain criminal
offenses involving dishonesty or breach
of trust (a covered offense), or who has
entered into a pretrial diversion or
similar program in connection with a
prosecution for such offense (program
entry), from participating in the conduct
of the affairs of an insured credit union.
DATES: Comments must be received by
January 8, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written
comments, identified by RIN 3133–
AF55, by any of the following methods
(Please send comments by one method
only):
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov. The docket
number for this proposed rule is NCUA–
2023–0023. Follow the instructions for
submitting comments. A plain language
summary of the proposed rule is also
available on the docket website.
• Mail: Address to Melane ConyersAusbrooks, Secretary of the Board,
National Credit Union Administration,
1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia
22314–3428.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mailing address.
Public inspection: You may view all
public comments on the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
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SUMMARY:
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www.regulations.gov, as submitted,
except for those we cannot post for
technical reasons. The NCUA will not
edit or remove any identifying or
contact information from the public
comments submitted. If you are unable
to access public comments on the
internet, you may contact the NCUA for
alternative access by calling (703) 518–
6540 or emailing OGCMail@ncua.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rachel Ackmann, Senior Staff Attorney,
Office of General Counsel, and Pamela
Yu, Special Counsel to the General
Counsel, Office of General Counsel, at
the above address or telephone (703)
518–6540.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 205(d) of the Federal Credit
Union Act (Section 205(d))
Prior to December 23, 2022, section
205(d)(1) of the Federal Credit Union
Act (FCU Act) provided that, except
with the prior written consent of the
Board, a person who has been convicted
of any criminal offense involving
dishonesty or breach of trust, or has
agreed to enter into a pretrial diversion
or similar program in connection with a
prosecution for such offense, may not:
• Become, or continue as, an
institution-affiliated party (IAP) with
respect to any insured credit union; or
• Otherwise participate, directly or
indirectly, in the conduct of the affairs
of any insured credit union.1
Section 205(d)(1)(B) further provides
that an insured credit union may not
allow any person described above to
participate in the conduct of the affairs
of the credit union without Board
consent. Section 205(d)(2) restricts the
Board from approving a consent
application related to a person
convicted of certain crimes enumerated
in Title 18 of the United States Code for
10 years, absent a motion by the Board
and approval by the sentencing court.
Finally, section 205(d)(3) states that
‘‘whoever knowingly violates’’ section
(d)(1)(A) or (d)(1)(B) commits a felony,
punishable by up to 5 years in prison or
a fine of up to $1,000,000 a day, or both.
Section 205(d) prohibitions have existed
in some form since 1970, and since then
federally insured credit unions have
been required to make a diligent inquiry
as to whether prospective employees or
1 12
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U.S.C. 1785(d)(1).
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IAPs 2 are subject to a section 205(d)
prohibition.3
In 2008, the Board adopted
Interpretive Rule and Policy Statement
08–1 (IRPS 08–1) to provide direction
and guidance to federally insured credit
unions and those persons who may be
affected by section 205(d).4 The Board
specifically sought comments as to
whether the format of the guidance as
an IRPS was appropriate or whether a
regulation would be more suitable.5 The
Board received some comments
supporting guidance in the form of an
IRPS and others supporting a regulation,
but ultimately chose to issue the
guidance through an IRPS.6
IRPS 08–1 outlined the actions
prohibited under the FCU Act and the
procedures for applying the Board’s
consent on a case-by-case basis.
Recognizing that certain offenses are so
minor and dated that they would not
presently pose a substantial risk to the
insured credit union, IRPS 08–1
excluded certain de minimis offenses
that met specified requirements and
juvenile offenses from the need to
2 The NCUA has made its administrative orders
against IAPs available in a searchable database on
the agency’s website. See https://ncua.gov/news/
enforcement-actions/administrative-orders.
3 73 FR 48399, 48401 (Aug. 19, 2008).
4 Id.
5 The Board had not previously adopted any
policies or regulations on section 205(d), as the
statute at that time imposed no guidance or
limitations on the information that the Board may
consider, and the Board received a limited number
of applications under section 205(d). However, due
to an increasing number of applications requesting
the Board’s consent under section 205(d), the Board
believed it was appropriate to issue guidance on the
topic.
6 Two commenters believed that a regulation was
the more appropriate format for the guidance. One
of the commenters who favored a regulation
thought a regulation provided greater protection to
a credit union that might be challenged by a
prospective employee. Another commenter believed
a regulation was preferable because it would help
reinforce a credit union’s right to appeal an adverse
decision and subject future changes to public notice
and comment. The Board concluded that the source
of the requirement stems from federal statute,
namely section 205(d). Therefore, the Board
believed that the need to comply with federal law,
as augmented by guidance in the form of an IRPS,
was sufficient to protect a credit union. The Board
believed that credit union officials should be able
to adequately understand and apply the guidance
styled as an IRPS and that the right to request a
hearing contained in the IRPS provided a credit
union a sufficient right to appeal a denial of consent
by the Board. Additionally, the Board noted that it
would not amend its IRPS without providing the
public notice and an opportunity to comment. For
all these reasons, the Board believed it appropriate
to issue the final guidance in the form of an IRPS.
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request consent from the Board. In
effect, the IRPS gave automatic consent
for these offenses without requiring a
consent application or any notice.
In 2019, the Board rescinded IRPS 08–
1 and issued IRPS 19–1, a revised and
updated IRPS to reduce regulatory
burden (also known as the Second
Chance IRPS).7 IRPS 19–1 amended
IRPS 08–1 to expand the definition of de
minimis offenses to reduce the scope
and number of offenses that would
require submission of a consent
application to the Board. Specifically,
the IRPS did not require a consent
application for convictions involving
insufficient funds checks of moderate
aggregate value, small-dollar simple
theft, false identification, simple drug
possession, and isolated minor offenses
committed by covered persons as young
adults. The Board recognized that many
Americans faced hiring barriers due to
a criminal record, a great number of
whom are not violent or career
criminals, but rather people who made
poor choices early in life who have
since paid their debt to society. The
Board found that offering second
chances to those who are truly penitent
was consistent with our nation’s shared
values of forgiveness and redemption. In
keeping with this spirit of clemency, the
Board expanded career opportunities for
those who had demonstrated remorse
and responsibility for past indiscretions
and who wished to set forth on a path
to productive living.
On December 23, 2022, Congress
passed the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023
(NDAA), which amended section
205(d).8 The NDAA included the
FHBA—which became immediately
effective on December 23, 2022. The
FHBA amends section 205(d) to expand
employment opportunities for those
with a previous minor or older criminal
offense, among other provisions.
Generally, the amendments codify a
number of elements already contained
in the NCUA’s current policy regarding
section 205(d) but also extend greater
relief than what is currently available to
certain individuals with prior
convictions seeking employment with
an insured credit union, particularly
individuals with older convictions,
expunged convictions, or prior
convictions for a misdemeanor, any
drug-related possession offense, or
certain designated ‘‘lesser offenses.’’
The FHBA also clarifies several
definitions and the procedures for
processing a consent application. The
specific provisions of the FHBA are
discussed in detail later in this
preamble.
Section 19 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act
Section 19 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (FDI Act) (section 19)
contains a prohibition provision similar
to section 205(d) of the FCU Act.9
Before 2020, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) provided
the public with guidance relating to
section 19 and the FDIC’s application
thereof through a Statement of Policy
similar to the NCUA’s IRPS 19–1.10
Similar to the NCUA’s IRPS, the FDIC’s
Statement of Policy, among other things,
instituted a set of criteria to provide for
blanket approval of certain low-risk
crimes and for persons convicted of
such de minimis crimes to forgo filing
a section 19 consent application.
In 2020, the FDIC revised and
incorporated its then existing Statement
of Policy into its regulations to, among
other purposes, provide for greater
transparency as to its section 19
application, provide greater certainty as
to the FDIC’s application process, and to
assist both insured depository
institutions and individuals who may be
affected by section 19 with
understanding its impact and
potentially seek relief from its
provisions.11
In December 2022, the FHBA made
amendments to section 19 that are
comparable to the amendments made in
section 205(d). The FDIC proposed to
implement these changes through a
notice-and-comment rulemaking in
October 2023.
Coordination With the FDIC
In the past, the NCUA has drawn
extensively on the FDIC’s guidance
related to section 19 due to the FDIC’s
greater experience processing section 19
consent applications. Further, in the
Board’s view it is beneficial to both
insured financial institutions and
covered individuals for the NCUA’s
section 205(d) related requirements to
be consistent, to the extent possible,
with the FDIC’s section 19
requirements. Consistent guidelines
between the two agencies with respect
to these parallel statutory provisions
help streamline the consent application
process, particularly for those
individuals seeking consent from both
the NCUA and the FDIC to allow for
potential employment at federally
insured financial institutions. The
9 12
U.S.C. 1829(a).
84 FR 68353 (Dec. 16, 2019).
11 Id.; 85 FR 51312 (Aug. 20, 2020) (FDIC 2020
final rule).
10 See
7 84
FR 65907 (Dec. 2, 2019).
Law 117–263 (Dec. 23, 2022).
8 Public
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FHBA formalizes the expectation that
the agencies implement these
comparable statutory provisions
similarly and requires the NCUA and
the FDIC to consult and coordinate to
promote consistent procedures, where
appropriate.12 The Board finds that
adopting similar definitions,
terminology, and procedures in all
aspects of this proposed rule will
promote consistent implementation of
consent applications because even those
provisions that fall outside the scope of
consent applications are likely to affect
how the agency administers those
applications. Staffs of the NCUA and the
FDIC have consulted and coordinated
on this proposed rulemaking as directed
by the FHBA.
Additionally, in developing this
proposed rule, NCUA staff has
consulted with staffs at the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve Board
and the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency.
II. The Proposed Rule
Section-by-Section Analysis
The Board is now issuing a proposed
rule to codify IRPS 19–1, along with
significant changes that are consistent
with the FHBA amendments to section
205(d) and the FDIC’s comparable
implementing regulations.13 The
proposed rule would address, among
other topics, the individuals and types
of offenses covered by section 205(d), as
well as the NCUA’s procedures for
reviewing a consent application. The
proposed rule would add new part 752
to Chapter VII of Title 12 of the U.S.
Code of Federal Regulations. A sectionby-section analysis of the proposed rule
follows.
1. Section 752.1—What is section 205(d)
of the FCU Act?
This section sets out the scope of
proposed new part 752. Paragraph (a)
would generally describe the
requirements of section 205(d).
Paragraph (b) would set out insured
credit unions’ obligations under section
205(d), including that insured credit
unions would be required to make a
reasonable inquiry regarding an
applicant’s history to ensure that a
12 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(I), and 12 U.S.C.
1829(f)(9).
13 The NCUA is issuing a proposed rule to codify
its policy regarding section 205(d) consent
applications due to the FDIC’s recent codification
of its similar section 19 Statement of Policy. The
NCUA believes codifying IRPS 19–1 will provide
for greater transparency as to its application,
provide greater certainty as to the NCUA’s
application process, and help both credit unions
and individuals who may be affected by section
205(d) to understand its impact and potentially seek
relief from its provisions.
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person who is subject to the prohibition
provision of section 205(d) is not hired
or permitted to participate in the
conduct of credit unions’ affairs without
the written consent of the NCUA.
Paragraph (b) also would set out that
insured credit unions would be
permitted to make conditional offers of
employment to prospective applicants.
Paragraph (c) would address the need
for a consent application and establishes
the standard for an application’s
approval. The NCUA would evaluate a
consent application to determine if a
person is fit to participate in the
conduct of the affairs of an insured
credit union without posing a risk to its
safety and soundness or impairing
public confidence in that credit union.
The burden is upon the applicant to
establish that the application warrants
approval. Section 752.1 includes no
substantive changes as compared to
IRPS 19–1.
2. Section 752.2—Who is covered by
section 205(d)?
This section identifies who is covered
by section 205(d). Paragraph (a) would
state that IAPs, as defined by 12 U.S.C.
1786(r), would be covered. Similar to
IRPS 19–1, volunteer and de facto
employees would be deemed covered
under section 205(d) as well.
Whether other persons who are not
IAPs, such as certain independent
contractors, are covered depends upon
their degree of influence or control over
the management or affairs of an insured
credit union. Those who exercise major
policymaking functions of an insured
credit union are deemed to be covered
by section 205(d). The proposed rule
includes less detail than IRPS 19–1
regarding how the NCUA would
determine whether a person participates
in the conduct of the affairs of an
insured credit union. For example, the
proposed rule would not state that the
NCUA would analyze each individual’s
conduct on a case-by-case basis and
make a determination or that agency
and court decisions will provide the
guide as to what standards will be
applied. The Board does not intend any
substantive changes by these omissions.
Instead, the proposed rule includes
more streamlined language regarding
persons who participate in the conduct
of the affairs of an insured credit union,
consistent with the FDIC’s comparable
part 303. The NCUA intends to publish
guidance that further clarifies its intent
about other persons who are not IAPs.
The guidance would include language
similar to IRPS 19–1.
The proposed rule would also state
directors and officers of affiliates, or
joint ventures of an insured credit
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union, would be covered if they
participate in the conduct of affairs of
the insured credit union or are in a
position to influence or control the
management or affairs of the insured
credit union. IRPS 19–1 does not
specifically state these persons would
be covered if they participate in the
conduct of affairs of the insured credit
union; however, this is not a policy
change because these persons would
have been covered under the IRPS if
they participated in the conduct of
affairs of the credit union.
Paragraph (b) would define the term
‘‘person’’ for the purposes of section
205(d) as an individual only and not a
legal entity.
3. Section 752.3—Which offenses
qualify as ‘‘Covered Offenses’’ under
section 205(d)?
This section addresses what
constitutes a covered offense under
section 205(d).14 Paragraph (a) would
state that a conviction or program entry
must have been for a criminal offense
involving dishonesty or breach of trust.
The paragraph would define criminal
offenses involving dishonesty and
breach of trust. The FHBA defines
‘‘criminal offense involving dishonesty’’
as ‘‘an offense under which an
individual, directly or indirectly, cheats
or defrauds or wrongfully takes property
belonging to another in violation of a
criminal statute.’’ The FHBA further
provides that the term includes an
offense that federal, state, or local law
defines as dishonest or for which
dishonesty is an element of the offense.
However, the term does not include a
misdemeanor criminal offense
committed more than 1 year before the
date on which an individual files a
consent application, excluding any
period of incarceration, or an offense
involving the possession of controlled
substances.
The FHBA does not define breach of
trust. Under the proposed rule, breach
of trust would mean a wrongful act, use,
misappropriation, or omission with
respect to any property or fund that has
been committed to a person in a
fiduciary or official capacity, or the
misuse of one’s official or fiduciary
position to engage in a wrongful act,
14 The Board notes that the approach to criminal
offenses mandated by the statute and rulemaking
would not have an impact on other processes
related to criminal convictions. For example, the
NCUA may consider a more expansive scope of
convictions related to controlled substances under
section 212 of the Federal Credit Union Act in
disapproving directors, committee members, and
senior executive officers of troubled or newly
chartered insured credit unions. See 12 CFR 701.14
for the NCUA’s implementation of this provision,
also addressed elsewhere in this proposed rule.
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use, misappropriation, or omission. This
definition is identical to the definition
in IRPS 19–1.
As discussed previously, the FHBA
excludes from the scope of such
offenses ‘‘an offense involving the
possession of controlled substances.’’
The Board interprets this phrase
concerning controlled substances to
exclude from the scope of the
prohibition, at a minimum, criminal
offenses involving the simple
possession of controlled substances and
possession with intent to distribute a
controlled substance. This exclusion
may also apply to other drug-related
offenses depending on the statutory
elements of the offenses or court
determinations that the statutory
provisions of the offenses involve
dishonesty or breach of trust, as noted
in paragraph (b) of proposed § 752.3.
The Board notes that in processing other
applications, such as change in official
or senior executive officer in credit
unions that are newly chartered or are
in troubled condition, the NCUA may
still consider excluded offenses as
appropriate. For example, an offense
that is not covered under section 205(d)
may bear on an individual’s
competence, experience, character, or
integrity under 12 U.S.C. 1790a and 12
CFR 701.14.
Potential applicants may contact their
appropriate NCUA Regional Office or
the Office of National Examinations and
Supervision (ONES) if they have
questions about whether their offenses
are covered under section 205(d).
This language marks a shift from IRPS
19–1, which requires consent
applications for certain simple
misdemeanor drug possession offenses.
Under IRPS 19–1, a consent application
for a simple misdemeanor drug
possession offense is required except if
the conviction or program entry was
classified as a misdemeanor at the time
of conviction or program entry, the
person had no other conviction or
program entry described in section
205(d), and it had been 5 years since the
conviction or program entry (or 30
months in the case of a person 21 years
or younger at the time of the conviction
or program entry), and the conviction
did not involve the illegal distribution
(including an intent to distribute), sale,
trafficking, or manufacture of a
controlled substance or other related
offense. The Board believes that the
proposed revision is consistent with the
text and purposes of the FHBA, would
align the Board’s interpretation of
section 205(d) as to offenses involving
controlled substances more closely with
other federal banking regulators, and
would continue to recognize that a drug-
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related offense could potentially involve
dishonesty or breach of trust.15 The
Board also notes that this proposed
provision would not affect its ability to
consider drug-related offenses as they
pertain to the suitability of an
individual under other statutory
provisions, including section 212 of the
FCU Act.16
Paragraph (b) would require that, to
determine if the criminal offense is one
of dishonesty or breach of trust, the
NCUA would look to the statutory
elements of the criminal offense or to
court decisions in the relevant
jurisdiction that have interpreted these
statutory elements. This policy is
similar to IRPS 19–1.
Paragraph (c) would include new
language reflecting the FHBA’s
exclusion of certain older offenses from
the scope of section 205(d).17 The FHBA
provides that individuals are not subject
to a prohibition under section 205(d) if
they committed a covered offense and it
has been 7 years or more since the
offense occurred; or if the individual
was incarcerated with respect to the
offense, it has been 5 years or more
since the individual was released from
incarceration; or the individual
committed the offense when they were
21 years of age or younger, and it has
been more than 30 months since the
sentencing occurred.18
The Board considers the phrases
‘‘offense committed’’—noted
previously—and ‘‘offense occurred’’ to
be substantially similar. Accordingly,
the Board interprets the term ‘‘offense
occurred’’ to mean the ‘‘last date of the
underlying misconduct.’’ In instances
with multiple offenses, ‘‘offense
occurred’’ means the last date of any of
the underlying offenses.
Paragraph (c) would track the FHBA’s
language concerning offenses committed
by individuals 21 years of age or
younger. The FHBA states that, for
individuals who committed an offense
when the individual was 21 years of age
or younger, section 205(d) shall not
apply to the offense if it has been more
than 30 months since the sentencing
occurred.19 The Board interprets
‘‘sentencing occurred’’ to mean the date
on which a court imposed the sentence,
not the date on which all conditions of
sentencing were completed. Moreover,
paragraph (c) notes that its exclusions—
15 See House Rpt. No. 117–314 (May 10, 2022),
available at https://www.congress.gov/
congressional-report/117th-congress/house-report/
314/1.
16 12 U.S.C. 1790a.
17 See 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(A).
18 Note that these exceptions do not apply to the
offenses described under 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2).
19 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(A)(ii).
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which are derived from the FHBA—do
not apply to the enumerated offenses
described under 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2).
The FHBA also excludes designated
lesser offenses, including the use of fake
identification, shoplifting, trespass, fare
evasion, driving with an expired license
or tag (and such other low-risk offenses
as the NCUA may designate), if 1 year
or more has passed since the applicable
conviction or program entry. Paragraph
(d) would exclude these ‘‘designated
lesser offenses’’ to reflect the revised
statutory language.
Paragraph (e) would add language that
reflects the FDIC’s long-held position
that individuals who are convicted of or
enter into a pretrial diversion program
for a criminal offense involving
dishonesty or breach of trust in foreign
jurisdictions are subject to section 19,
unless the offense is otherwise excluded
by 12 CFR 303, subpart L, as stated in
the FDIC’s parallel proposed rule. The
Board has not previously had a position
on foreign offenses; however, given the
congressional mandate to consult and
coordinate to promote consistent
implementation on consent application
procedures where appropriate, the
Board is proposing to adopt the FDIC’s
interpretation. Under the proposed rule,
for example, if an insured credit union
has operations outside the United
States, the credit union could conduct a
reasonable, documented inquiry to
verify an applicant’s history by
inquiring about potential covered
offenses that may have occurred in that
foreign country (or countries) in which
the credit union conducts operations, as
well as the United States. As another
example of such an inquiry, if an
insured credit union plans to hire
someone in the United States who is
from a foreign country, the credit union
could inquire about potential covered
offenses that may have occurred in the
United States and in that foreign
country.
4. Section 752.4—What constitutes a
conviction under section 205(d)?
Paragraph (a) would state that there
must have been a conviction of record
for section 205(d) to apply, and that
section 205(d) would not apply to
arrests, pending cases not brought to
trial (unless the person has a program
entry as set out in § 752.5), or any
conviction reversed on appeal unless
the reversal was for the purpose of resentencing. The Board notes, however,
that covered offenses that have been
pardoned—and which are not otherwise
excluded by § 752.8—would still require
a consent application. Paragraph (a) is
substantively similar to IRPS 19–1.
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Paragraph (b) would clarify that,
absent a program entry, when an
individual is charged with a covered
offense but is subsequently convicted of
an offense that is not a covered offense,
that conviction is not subject to section
205(d). IRPS 19–1 does not have this
clarification; however, it is included in
the FDIC’s current part 303. The
NCUA’s provision would merely clarify
that the conviction, not the originally
charged offense, is relevant under
section 205(d).
Paragraph (c) would exclude covered
offenses that have been expunged or
sealed by a court of competent
jurisdiction or by operation of law.
Under IRPS 19–1, a conviction that has
been completely expunged is not
considered a conviction of record and
does not require a consent application.
However, IRPS 19–1 further noted that
where an order of expungement has
been issued and is intended to be a
complete expungement, the jurisdiction
cannot allow the conviction or program
entry to be used for any subsequent
purpose including, but not limited to,
an evaluation of a person’s fitness or
character. Also, the failure to destroy or
seal the records will not prevent the
expungement from being considered
complete for the purposes of section
205(d). This caveat to the general
premise that an expunged conviction is
not considered a conviction of record is
not included in the FDIC’s current part
303.
The FHBA provides a two-pronged
test to determine whether a covered
offense should be considered expunged,
dismissed, or sealed and therefore
excluded from the scope of section
205(d). First, there must be an ‘‘order of
expungement, sealing, or dismissal that
has been issued in regard to the
conviction in connection with such
offense’’; second, it must be ‘‘intended
by the language in the order itself, or in
the legislative provisions under which
the order was issued, that the conviction
shall be destroyed or sealed from the
individual’s state, tribal, or federal
record, even if exceptions allow the
conviction to be considered for certain
character and fitness evaluation
purposes.’’ 20
The FHBA does not address
expungements, sealings, or dismissals
by operation of law, and the Board has
sought to provide a more
comprehensive framework as to such
records. The Board has added language
to the second (intent) proposed prong of
the expungement framework to
encompass the language in the
expungement order itself, the legislative
20 12
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provisions under which the order was
issued, and other legislative provisions.
The Board believes that the additional
language is consistent with the purposes
of the statute and congressional intent to
provide relief to individuals with older
or minor offenses.
Paragraph (d) would exclude
‘‘youthful offender’’ judgments for
minors from the scope of section 205(d).
The proposed rule would clarify that it
encompasses the term ‘‘youthful
offender’’ and similar terms, because
paragraph (d) may apply even if a court
does not specifically use the term
‘‘youthful offender’’ in an adjudication.
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5. Section 752.5—What constitutes a
pretrial diversion or similar program
under section 205(d)?
Paragraph (a) would define what
constitutes a pretrial diversion or
similar program (a program entry). A
pretrial diversion or similar program
means a program characterized by a
suspension or eventual dismissal or
reversal of charges or criminal
prosecution upon agreement by the
accused to restitution, drug or alcohol
rehabilitation, anger management, or
community service. The FHBA
establishes this definition.
Paragraph (b) would clarify that when
a covered offense either is reduced by a
program entry to an offense that would
otherwise not be covered by section
205(d) or is dismissed upon successful
completion of a program entry, the
offense remains a covered offense for
purposes of section 205(d). The covered
offense will require a consent
application unless it is de minimis as
provided by § 752.8. This language is
new as compared to IRPS 19–1 and
comes from the FDIC’s part 303.
Paragraph (c) would state that
expungements or sealings of program
entry records will be treated the same as
expungements or sealings of
convictions. This language is new as
compared to IRPS 19–1 and comes from
the FDIC’s part 303.
6. Section 752.6—What are the types of
consent applications that can be filed?
The FHBA codifies procedures for
consent applications filed with the
NCUA. Specifically, the proposed rule
would provide that the NCUA will
accept applications from an individual
or an insured credit union applying on
behalf of an individual. The Board notes
the FHBA uses the terms ‘‘national
office’’ and ‘‘regional office,’’ which are
inconsistent with the NCUA’s
organization.21 The Board is
21 See 12 CFR 790.2. The NCUA is composed of
the Board with a Central Office; Field Offices,
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contemplating addressing those
technical inconsistencies in the final
rule.
Paragraph (b) would provide that an
individual consent application or a
credit union-sponsored consent
application may be filed separately or
contemporaneously with the
appropriate NCUA Regional Office or
ONES.
7. Section 752.7—When must a consent
application be filed?
This section states that a consent
application is not required for covered
offenses that are considered de minimis
under this part or where another
exception under the part applies. A
consent application would not be
considered by the NCUA until all
sentencing requirements associated with
a conviction have been met or all
requirements of the program entry have
been completed. The Board proposes to
include this revised language to accord
with several of the FHBA’s exclusions
from section 205(d) that are not tied to
the completion of sentencing
requirements.
Furthermore, the FHBA requires the
NCUA to ‘‘make all forms and
instructions related to consent
applications available to the public,
including on [its] website.’’ 22 These
forms and instructions ‘‘shall provide a
sample cover letter and a
comprehensive list of items that may
accompany the consent application,
including clear guidance on evidence
that may support a finding of
rehabilitation.’’ 23 While the proposed
rule would not codify these
requirements, the agency will comply
with the statutory mandate to make
appropriate forms and instructions
available to the public. The proposed
rule would provide generally that the
NCUA’s consent application forms as
well as additional information
concerning section 205(d) can be
accessed at the NCUA’s Regional Offices
or on the NCUA’s website.
8. Section 752.8—De Minimis Offenses
IRPS 19–1 includes several offenses
that would be otherwise covered under
section 205(d), but do not require a
consent application because they are
considered de minimis. For these de
minimis offenses, a person is deemed
automatically approved to serve in an
insured credit union, and no consent
application is required.
consisting of 3 Regional Offices and ONES; the
Asset Management and Assistance Center; the
Community Development Revolving Loan Program;
and the NCUA Central Liquidity Facility.
22 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(E)(i).
23 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(E)(ii).
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IRPS 19–1 updated the general criteria
for the de minimis offenses to better
align with developments in criminal
reform and sentencing guidelines. The
FHBA largely codified the conditions
included in IRPS 19–1; however, in
several cases the FHBA expanded upon
the relief included in IRPS 19–1. The
proposed rule generally would retain
the de minimis factors included in IRPS
19–1 but would amend the factors to
reflect the FHBA.
Paragraph (a)(1) would state an
individual who has been convicted of 2
or fewer covered offenses need not file
if the individual could have been
sentenced to a term of confinement in
a correctional facility of 3 years or less
and/or a fine of $2,500 or less, and the
individual actually served 3 days or less
of jail time for each, provided that all of
the sentencing requirements associated
with the conviction have been
completed, each conviction or program
entry was entered at least 3 years prior
to the date of a consent application
(assuming there are 2 convictions or
program entries for a covered offense),
and each covered offense was not
committed against an insured
depository institution or insured credit
union. Jail time would be calculated
based on the time an individual spent
incarcerated as a punishment or a
sanction—not as pretrial detention—and
would not include probation or parole
where an individual was restricted to a
particular jurisdiction or was required
to report occasionally to an individual
or a specific location. Jail time would
include confinement to a psychiatric
treatment center in lieu of a jail, prison,
or house of correction on mental
competency grounds. The definition is
not intended to include any of the
following: persons who are restricted to
a substance-abuse treatment program
facility for part or all of the day; and
persons who are ordered to attend
outpatient psychiatric treatment.
A consent application would also not
be required if there are 2 convictions or
program entries for a covered offense,
and the actions that resulted in both
convictions or program entries all
occurred when the individual was 21
years of age or younger and the
convictions or program entries were
entered at least 18 months prior to the
date of a consent application.
A consent application would also not
be required under the proposed rule if
an individual has convictions or
program entries of record based on the
writing of ‘‘bad’’ or insufficient funds
checks and the following conditions
apply: (i) the aggregate total face value
of all ‘‘bad’’ or insufficient funds checks
cited across all the convictions or
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program entries for ‘‘bad’’ or insufficient
funds checks is $2,000 or less; (ii) no
insured depository institution or
insured credit union was a payee on any
of the ‘‘bad’’ or insufficient funds
checks that were the basis of the
convictions or program entries; and (iii)
the individual has no more than 1 other
de minimis offense.
The FHBA and the proposed rule
would also not require a consent
application for convictions or program
entries for small-dollar, simple theft.
Under the proposed rule, convictions or
program entries based on the simple
theft of goods, services, or currency (or
other monetary instrument) would be
considered de minimis offenses if the
following conditions apply: (i) the value
of the currency, goods, or services taken
is $1,000 or less; (ii) the theft was not
committed against an insured
depository institution or insured credit
union; (iii) the individual has no more
than 1 other de minimis offense under
this section; and (iv) if there are 2 de
minimis offenses under this section,
each conviction or program entry was
entered at least 3 years prior to the date
a consent application would otherwise
be required, or at least 18 months prior
to the date a consent application would
otherwise be required if the actions that
resulted in the conviction or program
entry all occurred when the individual
was 21 years of age or younger. This
exception excludes burglary, forgery,
robbery, identity theft, and fraud.
Paragraph (c) would provide that
individuals must be covered by a
fidelity bond to the same extent as
others in similar positions. This policy
is consistent with IRPS 19–1.24
Paragraph (d) would state that any
conviction or program entry for specific
criminal offenses under Title 18 set out
in 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2) cannot qualify
for a de minimis exemption.
Finally, the Board notes that the
FHBA includes ‘‘designated lesser
offenses’’ in addition to de minimis
offenses. Designated lesser offenses,
including use of fake identification,
shoplifting, trespass, fare evasion, or
driving with an expired license or tag,
are low-risk offenses statutorily
excluded from the scope of section
205(d).
9. § 752.9—How To File a Consent
Application
This section would provide that
consent applications filed by a credit
union should be filed with the NCUA’s
Regional Office where the credit union’s
home office is located (or with ONES for
24 See 12 CFR 713 (Fidelity bond and insurance
coverage for federally insured credit unions).
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credit unions that office supervises),
and consent applications filed by an
individual should be filed with the
NCUA’s Regional Office where the
person lives. States covered by each
NCUA Regional Office are listed in 12
CFR 790.2.
When the proposed rule is finalized,
the Board will revise delegations of
authority related to consent
applications. Under the revised
delegations, Regional Directors and the
ONES Director will have authority to act
on both individual and credit unionsponsored applications. Currently, the
Regional Directors and the ONES
Director only have delegated authority
to act on credit union-sponsored
applications, and the Board has retained
the authority to approve/disapprove
individual applications.
10. Section 752.10—How a Consent
Application Is Evaluated
Paragraph (a) would set out the factors
the NCUA would assess to determine
the level of risk the applicant poses to
an insured credit union and whether the
NCUA would consent to the person’s
participation in a credit union’s affairs.
The paragraph reflects new statutory
requirements related to the NCUA’s
review process, including the
requirement that the NCUA primarily
rely on the criminal history record of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation in
its review and provide such record to
the applicant to review for accuracy.25
The Board interprets the term ‘‘criminal
history record’’ to mean ‘‘identity
history summary checks,’’ which are
commonly known as ‘‘rap sheets.’’
Under paragraph (a)—and in accordance
with the FHBA—the NCUA, in
reviewing a consent application, would
provide ‘‘such record’’ to the individual
to review for accuracy.26 The NCUA
would not provide it to the credit union,
but only to the individual. In evaluating
the risk posed by the person’s
participation, the Board has proposed 8
considerations that it would evaluate.
These considerations are substantively
similar to factors under IRPS 19–1.
Paragraph (b) would state that the
NCUA would not require an applicant
to provide certified copies of criminal
history records unless the NCUA
determines that there is a clear and
compelling justification to require
additional information to verify the
accuracy of the criminal history record
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Paragraph (c) would state that the
determining factors in assessing a
consent application would be whether
25 See
12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(F).
26 Id.
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the person has demonstrated their
fitness to participate in the conduct of
the affairs of an insured credit union,
and whether the affiliation, or
participation by the person in the
conduct of the affairs of the credit
union, may constitute a threat to the
safety and soundness of the credit union
or the interests of its members or
threaten to impair public confidence in
the credit union.
Paragraph (d) would set forth the
considerations the NCUA would
evaluate in conducting an
individualized assessment. The
proposed rule also clarifies how the
NCUA will evaluate evidence of
rehabilitation and other evidence, as
required by the FHBA.27
Paragraph (e) would provide that the
question of whether a person, who was
convicted of a crime or who agreed to
a program entry, was guilty of that crime
shall not be at issue in a proceeding
under this subpart or under 12 CFR part
746, subpart B.
Paragraph (f) would provide that the
NCUA will also apply the
considerations in paragraph (d) to
determine whether the interests of
justice are served in seeking an
exception in the appropriate court when
a consent application is made prior to
10 years after the final conviction or
agreement to program entry for certain
federal offenses.28
Paragraph (g) would provide that all
approvals and orders will be subject to
the condition that the person be covered
by a fidelity bond to the same extent as
others in similar positions.
Paragraph (h) would provide that
when deemed appropriate by the
NCUA, credit union-sponsored consent
applications are intended to allow the
individual to work for the same
employer and across positions. NCUA
consent would be required for any
proposed significant changes in the
individual’s security-related duties or
responsibilities, such as promotion to an
officer or other positions that the
employer determines will require higher
security-screening credentials.
Paragraph (i) would provide that
when a person who has received
approval under section 205(d)
subsequently seeks to participate in the
conduct of the affairs of another insured
credit union, another consent
application must be submitted.
27 While the statute uses the terms
‘‘rehabilitation’’ and ‘‘mitigating’’ as separate
categories of evidence, the terms appear to be
substantially similar in the context of section 205
consent applications, and the use of both terms in
these regulations may create confusion. Therefore,
the proposed rule uses the term rehabilitation, not
mitigating.
28 See 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2)(A).
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11. Section 752.11—What will the
NCUA do if the consent application is
denied?
Paragraph (a) would provide that the
NCUA would provide a written denial
that would summarize or cite the
relevant factors from the proposed
§ 752.10. Paragraph (b) would provide
that the applicant can file a written
request for reconsideration or appeal
under the process contained in 12 CFR
part 746, subpart B. That subpart
includes uniform procedures by which
petitioners may appeal initial agency
determinations to the Board.
Under part 746, subpart B, prior to
submitting an appeal to the Board, the
petitioner may make a written request to
the appropriate Regional Office or, if
appropriate, ONES, to reconsider an
initial agency determination within 30
calendar days of the date of that
determination. Within 60 calendar days
of the date of an initial agency
determination or, as applicable, a
determination by the Regional Office or,
if appropriate, ONES, on any request for
reconsideration, a petitioner may file an
appeal seeking review of the
determination by the Board. Under part
746, subpart B, a petitioner may also
request an oral hearing before the Board.
These procedures meet the statutory
requirement for ‘‘national office review’’
of any consent application that is
denied by a Regional Office, if the
individual requests a review by the
Board.29 This option is also
substantially similar to the FDIC’s
current parts 303 and 308, except that
under those regulations, an oral hearing
is conducted unless the applicant or the
insured depository institution waives it
in writing and instead makes a written
submission.30
NCUA Practice on Section 205(d)
In general, the proposed rule would
mirror the FDIC’s part 303 with
minimal, non-substantive changes.
Additionally, while there were a few
differences between the FDIC’s part 303
and IRPS 19–1 before the FHBA, such
as some details on de minimis offenses,
expungements, and treatment of drugrelated offenses, the enactment of the
FBHA resolved most discrepancies
between the two agencies’ rules and
created a more uniform standard.
However, there are a few areas in which
IRPS 19–1 provided additional context
and discussion on its policy and
procedures related to section 205(d)
compared to part 303. In general, the
additional information does not provide
any substantive difference from part 303
29 12
30 12
U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(D).
CFR 308.158(d).
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and instead provides additional
clarifying information.
The Board has chosen to omit much
of the clarifying information in the
proposed rule to ensure its uniformity
with part 303; however, the Board also
believes credit unions generally have
less experience with section 205(d) than
insured depository institutions and are
typically smaller in size with fewer
resources, so additional guidance would
help insured credit unions to discharge
their responsibilities under section
205(d). Therefore, in finalizing and
implementing this rule, the NCUA will
prepare guidance that provides insured
credit unions additional information
about section 205(d). The guidance will
include portions of IRPS 19–1 that were
not incorporated into the proposed rule.
For example, IRPS 19–1 provides that
when the credit union learns that a
prospective employee has a prior
conviction or entered into a pretrial
diversion program for a covered offense,
the credit union should document in its
files that a consent application is not
required because the covered offense is
considered de minimis and meets all of
the criteria for the exception, or—if the
credit union is willing to sponsor the
prospective employee’s consent
application—submit an application
requesting the Board’s consent. The
credit union could also extend a
conditional offer of employment and
notify the prospective employee that it
is contingent upon a satisfactory
background check to determine whether
the individual is prohibited under
section 205(d). The Board intends no
change of position regarding these
policies even though they are not
included in the proposed rule.
IRPS 19–1 also states that persons
who will occupy clerical, maintenance,
service, or purely administrative
positions generally can be approved
without an extensive review. A more
detailed analysis, however, would be
performed in the case of persons who
will be in a position to influence or
control the management or affairs of the
insured credit union. The proposed rule
would not include a similar delineation
between how the NCUA intends to
approve consent applications for
different types of positions. The Board
continues to believe that applications
for clerical, maintenance, service, or
purely administrative positions do not
require the same review as applications
for other positions that have access to
more of the day-to-day financial
operations of a credit union. The NCUA
will address this issue in future
guidance.
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Waiting Time for a Subsequent Consent
Application if a Consent Application Is
Denied
The FDIC’s current part 303 states that
an applicant will need to wait one year
from the date of the denial or decision
of the FDIC Board, or its designee,
before resubmitting a consent
application. The Board is not proposing
to include similar language for several
reasons. First, the NCUA does not
receive a significant volume of section
205(d) consent applications and does
not believe allowing credit unions or
individuals to resubmit consent
applications at any time would present
a burden on the agency and its
resources. Second, the NCUA would not
want to unfairly delay an individual
from seeking employment if the consent
application was denied for a reason that
could be immediately addressed by the
applicant. For example, if the consent
application was denied due to
insufficient support showing
rehabilitation, the individual could
immediately refile with additional
evidence, such as employment history,
letters of recommendation,
documentation of participation in
substance-abuse programs or job
preparation and educational programs,
or other relevant evidence.
Other Conforming Amendments
Both the standard FCU Bylaws in
appendix A of part 701 and the criteria
for determining the insurability of a
credit union in 12 CFR 741.3(c)
reference section 205(d). In general,
both sections prohibit a person who has
been convicted of any criminal offense
involving dishonesty or breach of trust
from serving at an insured credit union,
except with the written consent of the
Board. The Board believes these
references are incomplete because not
all convictions of criminal offenses
involving dishonesty or breach of trust
now serve as the valid basis for a section
205(d) prohibition. Therefore, the
proposed rule would replace the current
reference to ‘‘any crime involving
dishonesty or a breach of trust’’ to refer
to the specific crimes covered under
section 205(d). Referring directly to the
FCU Act would also automatically
incorporate future statutory changes to
section 205(d). The Board may make
other similar conforming amendments
in finalizing this proposed rule if it
identifies other provisions that should
be clarified simply to reflect the changes
that the FHBA made to the statutory
prohibitions.
Additionally, as required by the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, appendix B to
part 748 (Appendix B) contains
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guidance on creating an effective
incident response plan in the event of
unauthorized access to member
information and the requirements of the
notices distributed to the affected
members.31 Appendix B states that
credit unions should also conduct
background checks of employees to
ensure that the credit union does not
violate 12 U.S.C. 1785(d). The proposed
rule would require a background check
in § 752.1(b), which is consistent with
current expectations, as discussed in the
introductory portion of this preamble.32
Therefore, the proposed rule would
amend this footnote to state that insured
credit unions must also conduct
background checks of employees.
Proposed Amendments to § 701.14 on
Change in Official or Senior Executive
Officer in Credit Unions That Are Newly
Chartered or Are in Troubled Condition
In addition to the prohibition on
certain individuals participating in the
conduct of the affairs of a credit union
included in section 205(d), the FCU Act
also sets forth conditions under which
certain insured credit unions must
notify the NCUA in writing of any
proposed changes in its board of
directors, committee members, or senior
executive staff (section 212).33 The
Board implements section 212 through
§ 701.14 of its rules.34 Section 701.14
requires generally that insured credit
unions that are newly chartered or
troubled file notice with the NCUA
before adding, replacing, or changing
the duties of a board or committee
member or a senior executive officer.
The Board has not substantively
amended § 701.14 since 2012 when the
Board revised the definition of troubled
condition.35 The proposed rule would
make minor amendments to § 701.14
and would clarify when a notice is
required, how the NCUA would process
the notice, and what information must
be included in the NCUA’s notice of
disapproval to the applicant.
First, the proposed rule would clarify
when notice is required. Currently,
§ 701.14 specifies that notice is required
whenever there is ‘‘any addition or
replacement of a member of the board
of directors or committee member or the
employment or change in
responsibilities of an individual to a
position of senior executive officer.’’
31 12
CFR 748, App. B.
Board notes that insured credit unions may
extend a conditional offer of employment
contingent on the completion of a background
check satisfactory to the credit union to determine
if the applicant is barred under section 205(d).
33 12 U.S.C. 1790a.
34 12 CFR 701.14.
35 77 FR 45285 (July 31, 2012).
32 The
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NCUA staff has received questions on
whether notice is required when a
member of the board or a committee
moves to another position, such as
when an existing board member
switches to the board chair position. For
clarity, the proposed rule would specify
that a credit union must provide notice
when adding or replacing any member
of its board of directors or committees,
employing any person as a senior
executive officer of the credit union, or
changing the responsibilities of a board
member, committee member, or a senior
executive officer so that the person
would assume a different position. The
Board solicits comment on whether this
proposed change provides clarity or
increases burden on credit unions.
Second, the proposed rule would
increase the amount of time the NCUA
has to initially review a notice.
Currently, in § 701.14(c)(3)(iii), the
NCUA has 10 calendar days after
receiving the notice to inform the credit
union that the notice is complete or that
additional information is needed. The
10-day notification requirement is not
specified in the statute, and NCUA staff
has found the 10-day timeframe difficult
to meet, as additional information to
analyze the request may be required.
The Board does not believe that the
additional 5 calendar days would
unduly delay the start or change in
position of board members, committee
members, or senior executive officers.
However, the Board solicits comments
on whether insured credit unions
believe this change would pose any
significant operational burden, in
addition to the general solicitation for
comments included in this proposed
rule.
The proposed rule would also specify
that Regional Director and ONES
Director communications under
§ 701.14 may be done through email.
This is not a substantive change but
rather a clarification of existing
practices and common use of electronic
communications in time-sensitive
matters.
Finally, the proposed rule would
explicitly state that the notice of
disapproval will identify the reason(s)
for the denial. On occasion, when
appealing such a denial, the NCUA has
received complaints that applicants
were not provided sufficient
information in the notice of disapproval
about the reason for the decision.
Appellants have expressed frustrations
that they could not adequately support
their appeal without sufficient
information on the rationale for the
NCUA’s decision. The Board believes
any notice of disapproval should
explicitly state the reason(s) for denial
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and has included clarifying language in
the proposed rule.
Other Relevant Authorities on
Prohibitions
Under section 206(i) of the FCU Act
(section 206(i)), the Board is authorized
to suspend or prohibit an IAP from
further participation in the conduct of
the affairs of any credit union if: (1) an
IAP is charged in any information,
indictment, or complaint with a crime
involving dishonesty or breach of trust
which is punishable by imprisonment
for a term exceeding 1 year under state
or federal law or certain specific
violations of federal criminal law
relating to anti-money laundering
provisions; and (2) continued service or
participation by the IAP may pose a
threat to the interests of the credit
union’s members or may threaten to
impair public confidence in the credit
union.36 Despite the similar language
between section 206(i) and section
205(d), the FHBA did not make similar
amendments to section 206(i) as were
made to section 205(d). Section 206(i) is
narrower in scope than section 205(d),
as it applies to current IAPs and
requires an additional showing by the
agency to suspend or prohibit an IAP.
Because the FHBA did not amend
section 206(i), the Board retains
statutory authority to suspend or
prohibit an IAP for all crimes involving
dishonesty or breach of trust, provided
that the IAP’s continued service or
participation may pose a threat to the
interests of the credit union’s members
or may threaten to impair public
confidence in the credit union.
The Board also notes that the Secure
and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage
Licensing Act of 2008 (commonly
known as the S.A.F.E. Act) mandates a
nationwide licensing and registration
system for residential mortgage loan
originators.37 The S.A.F.E. Act includes
certain requirements related to
minimum standards for state-licensed
loan originators—including those
working at credit union service
organizations—and related to felonies
involving dishonesty and breach of
trust.38 Additionally, regulations
implementing the S.A.F.E. Act impose
an obligation on depository institutions
to adopt certain policies, including a
requirement that the depository
institution review employee criminal
background reports, including the
criminal background standards for
employees in section 206(i) of the FCU
Act, 12 U.S.C. 1786(i). The Board notes
36 12
U.S.C. 1786(i)(1)(A).
U.S.C. 5101 et seq.
38 12 U.S.C. 5104.
37 12
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these requirements are not included in
the FHBA and remain applicable to
credit unions and credit union service
organizations.
Similarly, under the Anti-Money
Laundering Act of 2020, individuals
who are found to have committed an
‘‘egregious violation’’ of the Bank
Secrecy Act or its rules are barred from
serving on a U.S. financial institution’s
board of directors for 10 years from the
date of conviction or judgment.39 The
FHBA does not affect this separate
statutory prohibition, and it remains
applicable to credit unions.
III. Request for Comments
The Board seeks comments on all
aspects of this proposed rule and its
approach to section 205(d) and more
specifically on the questions that follow.
1. Scope. Should the final rule
include additional information on who
may fall within the scope of section
205(d), including persons who
participate in the conduct of the affairs
of an insured credit union?
2. Offense date. Section
205(d)(4)(A)(i) provides for an exception
for an offense if ‘‘it has been 7 years or
more since the offense occurred.’’ 40
There is a similar provision that
removes from the definition of
‘‘criminal offense involving dishonesty’’
‘‘a misdemeanor criminal offense
committed more than 1 year before the
date on which an individual files a
consent application, excluding any
period of incarceration[.]’’ 41
Historically, the NCUA’s position has
been that actions do not amount to a
covered ‘‘offense,’’ for section 205(d)
purposes, until there has been either a
conviction via a guilty plea, finding of
guilt, or an entry into a pretrialdiversion program. This is because
culpability and responsibility for the
actions do not attach until one of those
events occurs.42 However, for purposes
of evaluating whether the 7-year or 1year exception applies, the Board must
evaluate if it has been 7 years or more
since the ‘‘offense occurred’’ or if an
‘‘offense [was] committed more than one
year before the date on which an
individual files a consent application,
excluding any period of incarceration.’’
The Board proposes to interpret the
phrases ‘‘offense occurred’’ and
‘‘offenses committed’’ as the ‘‘last date
39 Public Law 116–283, codified at 31 U.S.C.
5321(g).
40 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(A).
41 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(6)(B)(iii).
42 See 84 FR 65907, 65917 (Dec. 2, 2019) (‘‘There
must be a conviction of record. Section 205(d) does
not apply to arrests, pending cases not brought to
trial, acquittals, or any conviction which has been
reversed on appeal.’’)
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of the underlying misconduct’’ given the
text of the statute. In instances with
multiple offenses, ‘‘offense occurred’’ or
‘‘offense committed’’ would mean the
last date of any of the underlying
offenses. However, the Board
acknowledges that there may be other,
supportable interpretations of this
phrase. For example, the Board is aware
of legislative history indicating that the
timeframes established by the FHBA
were chosen because of their relation to
an individual’s likelihood of
rehabilitation and that an individual’s
rehabilitation likely begins only with
conviction or program entry, rather than
the date of their misconduct. As such,
the Board seeks public comment on the
following topic: Is the Board’s
interpretation of the phrases ‘‘offense
occurred’’ and ‘‘offense committed’’ as
the ‘‘last date of underlying
misconduct’’ appropriate, or are there
other interpretations the Board should
consider? What support do commenters
have for other interpretations given the
language of the statute?
3. ‘‘Sentencing occurred.’’ The FHBA
exempts offenses committed by
individuals 21 years of age or younger
if it has been more than 30 months since
the sentencing occurred.43 However, the
statute does not define the phrase
‘‘sentencing occurred.’’ The Board
proposes to interpret ‘‘sentencing
occurred’’ to mean the date on which a
court imposed the sentence, not the date
on which all conditions of sentencing
were completed. The Board seeks public
comment on the following topic: Is the
Board’s proposed interpretation of the
phrase ‘‘sentencing occurred’’
appropriate?
4. Foreign convictions. Section 205(d)
applies to any person who has been
convicted of any criminal offense
involving dishonesty or a breach of
trust, or has agreed to enter into a
pretrial diversion or similar program in
connection with a prosecution for such
offense.44 The phrase ‘‘criminal offense
involving dishonesty’’ is defined in the
statute but is silent as to whether it
includes convictions and pretrial
diversions for criminal offenses
prosecuted by foreign authorities
(foreign convictions).45 The statute does
not define ‘‘offense involving . . .
breach of trust.’’ The FDIC’s position
has been that foreign convictions and
pretrial diversions are included within
the scope of section 19. The Board
believes it is reasonable to follow and
adopt the FDIC’s long-held position
given the statutory mandate for
U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(A)(ii).
U.S.C. 1785(d)(1).
45 See 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(6).
consistency and the FDIC’s greater
experience with section 19 consent
applications. In addition, there are
strong public policy rationales for
prohibiting a person who has been
convicted of certain foreign criminal
offenses (or entered into a pretrial
diversion program in connection with
such an offense) from becoming or
continuing as an IAP or participating in
the affairs of an insured credit union.
However, the Board acknowledges that
there may be case law, statutory
construction, and other arguments that
support a reading of section 205(d) that
would exclude foreign convictions and
pretrial diversions from the scope of
section 205(d). Therefore, the Board
seeks public comment on the following
topic: Does section 205(d) encompass
foreign convictions and pretrial
diversions? What support do
commenters have for their position?
5. Expungements, sealings, and
dismissals. The FHBA establishes a new
statutory exemption for expunged,
sealed, and dismissed convictions
(collectively, ‘‘expungements’’).46 The
statutory language does not mention
expungements ‘‘by operation of law’’—
as opposed to through a court order. The
proposed rule incorporates the new
statutory language but also includes a
broad interpretation of ‘‘expungement’’
to encompass covered offenses that have
been expunged by operation of law. The
Board seeks public comment on the
following topic: Given the new statutory
exemption for expunged offenses, is the
Board’s more expansive proposed
interpretation of expungement—which
term includes records that have been
expunged by application of law—
appropriate?
6. Offenses involving controlled
substances. The FHBA states that an
‘‘offense involving the possession of
controlled substances’’ is not included
within the definition of ‘‘criminal
offense involving dishonesty’’ and,
therefore, are not subject to the section
205(d) prohibition.47 The proposed rule
includes this definitional exclusion and
notes that the Board interprets the
phrase ‘‘offenses involving the
possession of controlled substances’’ to
include, at a minimum, the offenses of
simple possession of controlled
substances and possession with intent
to distribute controlled substances. This
interpretation would mark an expansion
from IRPS 19–1. At the same time, this
interpretation would track the statutory
language of ‘‘offenses involving the
possession of controlled substances’’ by
encompassing the offense of possession
43 12
44 12
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47 12
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U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(B).
U.S.C. 1785(d)(6)(B)(iii)(II).
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with intent to distribute controlled
substances. The Board seeks public
comment on the following topic: Is the
Board’s interpretation of ‘‘offense[s]
involving the possession of controlled
substances’’ as applying, at a minimum,
to simple possession and possession
with intent to distribute appropriate?
7. De minimis offenses. The FHBA
states that the NCUA may exempt by
rule certain de minimis offenses from
the section 205(d) prohibition. The
NCUA considers de minimis offenses to
be covered offenses for which a consent
application is not required because the
NCUA deems the application
automatically granted. The NCUA has
previously promulgated IRPS 19–1,
which specified de minimis offenses
under section 205(d). However, given
this new statutory language, the Board
is reevaluating its current approach to
de minimis offenses. Accordingly, the
Board seeks public comment on the
following topic: Is the Board’s current
approach to de minimis offenses
appropriate? Are there additional
offenses that the Board should consider
de minimis under section 19?
Commenters should provide support for
such a designation.
8. Conforming changes. The Board
also requests comments on other
conforming changes or updates that it
should make to its regulations or
guidance to implement the new
statutory provisions. As noted, in the
final rule, the Board may adopt
additional conforming amendments to
its regulations if it finds that other
provisions should be changed solely to
indicate the new, more limited scope of
the section 205(d) prohibitions. The
Board would not anticipate making
substantive changes to these provisions
that would create new standards beyond
those in the statutory amendments.
IV. Regulatory Procedures
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Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) applies to rulemakings in which
an agency creates a new or amends
existing information collection
requirements.48 For purposes of the
PRA, an information collection
requirement may take the form of a
reporting, recordkeeping, or a thirdparty disclosure requirement. The
NCUA may not conduct or sponsor and
the respondent is not required to
respond to an information collection,
unless it displays a valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number.
48 44
U.S.C. 3507(d); 5 CFR part 1320.
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The proposed rule would extend
greater relief than what is currently
available to certain individuals with
prior convictions seeking employment
with an insured credit union, thereby
eliminating the need to submit consent
applications for certain offenses,
particularly older or expunged
convictions, prior misdemeanors, drug
possession offenses, and other lesser
offenses. The proposed rule should
reduce the number of respondents
applying for consent, but it may also
increase the number of applications
because of a renewed awareness of the
statutory prohibition. Thus, the
estimated number of respondents
applying for consent would remain at
one. The proposed rule continues to
require credit unions to document when
an application is not required. This
recordkeeping requirement is minimal
and only impacts those credit unions or
individuals who would otherwise have
submitted an application for consent.
These program changes would revise
the information collection requirement
currently approved OMB control
number 3133–0203, as follows:
Title of Information Collection: IRPS
19–1, Guidance Regarding Prohibitions
Imposed by Section 205(d) of the
Federal Credit Union Act.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 4.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent: 1.
Estimated Annual Frequency of
Response: 1.
Estimated Hours per Response: 0.75.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 3.
Affected Public: Private Sector: Notfor-profit institutions; Individual or
Household.
The NCUA invites comments on: (a)
whether the collections of information
are necessary for the proper
performance of the agencies’ functions,
including whether the information has
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
estimates of the burden of the
information collections, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used; (c) ways to enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; (d) ways to
minimize the burden of the information
collections on respondents, including
through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology; and (e) estimates of capital
or start-up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services
to provide information.
All comments are a matter of public
record. Comments regarding the
information collection requirements
should be sent to (1) Jennifer Harrison,
NCUA PRA Clearance Officer, National
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Credit Union Administration, 1775
Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314,
or email at PRAcomments@ncua.gov
and the (2) Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, Attention:
Desk Officer for NCUA, New Executive
Office Building, Room 10235,
Washington, DC 20503, or email at
OIRA_Submission@OMB.EOP.gov.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires that when an agency
issues a proposed rule or a final rule
pursuant to the Administrative
Procedure Act or another law, the
agency must prepare a regulatory
flexibility analysis that meets the
requirements of the RFA and publish
such analysis in the Federal Register.
Specifically, the RFA normally requires
agencies to describe the impact of a
rulemaking on small entities by
providing a regulatory impact analysis.
For purposes of the RFA, the Board
considers credit unions with assets less
than $100 million to be small entities.49
A regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required, however, if the agency
certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities and
publishes its certification and a short,
explanatory statement in the Federal
Register together with the rule.
The Board does not believe the
proposed rule would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. In the period
from 2019 through 2023, the NCUA
received 4 consent applications. This
averages to one application a year.
Therefore, on average, only about one
small entity—at most—would be
affected by the proposed rule annually.
As discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section, the proposed rule
would align the NCUA’s regulations
with the FHBA’s provisions and more
closely align the NCUA’s section 205(d)
regulations with those of other federal
financial regulators. Most of the
proposed changes were precipitated by
the FHBA—which was effective
immediately upon passage—and the
proposed rule aligns the NCUA’s
regulations with these elements of the
FHBA; therefore, most of the associated
changes in the proposed rule will have
no direct effect on individuals or credit
unions. Further, since the NCUA
estimates that on average approximately
one NCUA-insured institution could be
affected by the proposed rule annually,
any direct effects realized because of the
proposed rule are likely to be small and
49 NCUA
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affect a relatively small number of
entities.
In light of the foregoing, the NCUA
certifies that the proposed rule would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. The NCUA invites comments
on all aspects of the supporting
information provided in this section. In
particular, would this proposed rule
have any significant effects on small
entities that the NCUA has not
identified?
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Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 encourages
independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on
state and local interests. The NCUA, an
independent regulatory agency as
defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5), voluntarily
complies with the executive order to
adhere to fundamental federalism
principles.
This proposed rule would apply to all
insured credit unions, including
federally insured, state-chartered credit
unions. The Board has determined that
the proposed amendments would not
have a substantial direct effect on the
states, on the connection between the
national government and the states, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Further, the
proposed rule would implement a
statutory amendment, and the NCUA
does not have discretion in
implementing the statutory changes to
section 205(d). In particular, the Board
does not believe that these changes will
affect its existing agreements and
division of supervisory responsibilities
with state regulatory agencies. The
Board expects to continue to coordinate
with these agencies as appropriate in
carrying out its responsibilities under
section 205(d) and related provisions.
Therefore, the Board has determined
that this rule does not constitute a
policy that has federalism implications
for purposes of the executive order.
Assessment of Federal Regulations and
Policies on Families
The NCUA has determined that this
proposed rule may affect family wellbeing positively within the meaning of
section 654 of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 1999,
Public Law 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681
(1998). In particular, the NCUA has
reviewed the criteria specified in
section 654(c)(1) of that act, by
evaluating whether this proposed
regulatory action (1) impacts the
stability or safety of the family,
particularly in terms of marital
commitment; (2) impacts the authority
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of parents in the education, nurture, and
supervision of their children; (3) helps
the family perform its functions; (4)
affects disposable income or poverty of
families and children; (5) only
financially impacts families, if at all, to
the extent such impacts are justified; (6)
may be carried out by State or local
government or by the family; or (7)
establishes a policy concerning the
relationship between the behavior and
personal responsibility of youth and the
norms of society. Under this statute, if
the agency determines the proposed
regulation may negatively affect family
well-being, then the agency must
provide an adequate rationale for its
implementation.
The proposed rule would implement
legislative amendments that increase
employment opportunities for
individuals with certain older or minor
criminal offenses involving dishonesty
or breach of trust. These increased
employment opportunities may
strengthen the stability of families, help
families perform their functions, and
increase disposable income. These
changes are not likely to affect the rights
of parents in the education or nurture of
their children. The changes call for
federal rather than state or local
government action because the
legislation affects the federal statute
governing all federally insured credit
unions. The Board also notes that it has
limited discretion in whether and how
to implement the legislative
amendments and thus cannot
substantially vary from the legislation.
The Board has determined that this
proposed rule may affect family wellbeing positively within the meaning of
this statute.50 As with all aspects of the
proposed rule, commenters are invited
to offer their opinion on this issue.
Providing Accountability Through
Transparency Act of 2023
The Providing Accountability
Through Transparency Act of 2023 (5
U.S.C. 553(b)(4)) (Act) requires that a
notice of proposed rulemaking include
the internet address of a summary of not
more than 100 words in length of a
proposed rule, in plain language, that
shall be posted on the internet website
under section 206(d) of the EGovernment Act of 2002 (44 U.S.C. 3501
note) (commonly known as
regulations.gov). The Act, under its
terms, applies to notices of proposed
rulemaking and does not expressly
include other types of documents that
the Board publishes voluntarily for
public comment, such as notices and
interim-final rules that request comment
despite invoking ‘‘good cause’’ to forgo
such notice and public procedure. The
Board, however, has elected to address
the Act’s requirement in these types of
documents in the interests of
administrative consistency and
transparency.
In summary, the proposal would
incorporate the ‘‘Second Chance’’
Interpretive Ruling and Policy
Statement 19–1 and the Fair Hiring in
Banking Act into the NCUA’s
regulations. Section 205(d) of the
Federal Credit Union Act prohibits,
except with the Board’s prior written
consent, any person who has been
convicted of certain criminal offenses
involving dishonesty or breach of trust,
or who has entered into a pretrial
diversion or similar program in
connection with a prosecution for such
an offense, from participating in the
conduct of the affairs of an insured
credit union.
The proposal and the required
summary can be found at https://
www.regulations.gov.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 701
Administrative practice and
procedure, Credit, Credit unions.
12 CFR Part 741
Bank deposit insurance, Credit
unions, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
12 CFR Part 746
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Credit unions,
Investigations.
12 CFR Part 748
Computer technology, Confidential
business information, Credit unions,
internet, Personally identifiable
information, Privacy, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Security
measures.
12 CFR Part 752
Administrative practice and
procedure.
By the NCUA Board on October 19, 2023.
Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks,
Secretary of the Board.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Board proposes to amend
12 CFR chapter VII as follows:
PART 701— ORGANIZATION AND
OPERATION OF FEDERAL CREDIT
UNIONS
1. The authority citation for part 701
continues to read as follows:
■
50 Public
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Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1752(5), 1755, 1756,
1757, 1758, 1759, 1761a, 1761b, 1766, 1767,
1782, 1784, 1785, 1786, 1787, 1788, 1789.
Section 701.6 is also authorized by 15 U.S.C.
3717. Section 701.31 is also authorized by 15
U.S.C. 1601 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 1981 and 3601–
3610. Section 701.35 is also authorized by 42
U.S.C. 4311–4312.
2. In 701.14, revise paragraphs (c)(1),
(c)(3)(iii), and the second sentence in
paragraph (e) as follows:
■
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§ 701.14 Change in official or senior
executive officer in credit unions that are
newly chartered or are in troubled
condition.
Appendix A to Part 701—Federal
Credit Union Bylaws
(c) * * * (1) Prior Notice
Requirement. An insured credit union
must give the NCUA written notice at
least 30 days before the effective date of
adding or replacing any member of its
board of directors or committee
member, employing any person as a
senior executive officer of the credit
union, or changing the responsibilities
of a board member, committee member,
or a senior executive officer so that the
person would assume a different
position if:
(i) The credit union has been
chartered for less than 2 years; or
(ii) The credit union meets the
definition of troubled condition in
paragraph (b)(3) or (4) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) * * *
(iii) Processing. Within 15 calendar
days after receiving the notice, the
Regional Director will inform the credit
union either that the notice is complete
or that additional, specified information
is needed and must be submitted within
30 calendar days. If the initial notice is
complete, the Regional Director will
issue a written decision of approval or
disapproval to the individual and the
credit union within 30 calendar days of
receipt of the notice. If the initial notice
is not complete, the Regional Director
will issue a written decision within 30
calendar days of receipt of the original
notice plus the amount of time the
credit union takes to provide the
requested additional information. If the
additional information is not submitted
within 30 calendar days of the Regional
Director’s request, the Regional Director
may either disapprove the proposed
individual or review the notice based on
the information provided. If the credit
union and the individual have
submitted all requested information and
the Regional Director has not issued a
written decision within the applicable
time period, the individual is approved.
Regional Director communications may
be done through electronic mail.
*
*
*
*
*
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(e) * * * The Notice of Disapproval
will identify the reason(s) for the denial
and advise the parties of their rights to
request reconsideration from the
Regional Director and/or file an appeal
with the NCUA Board in accordance
with the procedures set forth in 12 CFR
part 746, subpart B.
■ 3. In the Official Commentary to
Appendix A to part 701, under ‘‘Article
V. Elections,’’ revise paragraph i.(b) to
read as follows:
Official NCUA Commentary—Federal
Credit Union Bylaws
Article V. Elections
*
*
*
*
*
i. Eligibility Requirements: * * *
(b) The individual cannot have been
convicted of a crime covered under section
205(d) of the Federal Credit Union Act (12
U.S.C. 1785(d)) unless the NCUA Board has
waived the prohibition for the conviction;
and
*
*
*
*
*
PART 741—REQUIREMENTS OF
INSURANCE
4. The authority citation for part 741
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1757, 1766(a), 1781–
1790, and 1790d; 31 U.S.C. 3717.
5. In § 741.3, revise the second
sentence of paragraph (c) as follows:
■
§ 741.3
Criteria.
(c) Fitness of management. * * * No
person shall serve as a director, officer,
committee member, or employee of an
insured credit union who has been
convicted of a crime covered under
section 205(d) of the Federal Credit
Union Act (12 U.S.C. 1785(d)), except
with the written consent of the Board.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 746—APPEALS PROCEDURES
6. The authority citation for part 746
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1766, 1787, and 1789.
§ 746.201
[Amended]
7. In § 746.201, in paragraph (c), add
‘‘752.11(b),’’ between ‘‘745.201(c),’’ and
‘‘subpart J to part 747 of this chapter,’’.
■
PART 748—SECURITY PROGRAM,
SUSPICIOUS TRANSACTIONS,
CATASTROPHIC ACTS, CYBER
INCIDENTS, AND BANK SECRECY
ACT COMPLIANCE
8. The authority citation for part 748
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1766(a), 1786(b)(1),
1786(q), 1789(a)(11); 15 U.S.C. 6801–6809; 31
U.S.C. 5311 and 5318.
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9. Revise footnote 7 in appendix B to
part 748 to read as follows.
■
Appendix B to Part 748—Guidance on
Response Programs for Unauthorized
Access to Member Information and
Member Notice
7 Credit unions must also conduct
background checks of employees to ensure
that the credit union does not violate 12
U.S.C. 1785(d), which prohibits a credit
union from hiring an individual convicted of
certain criminal offenses or who is subject to
a prohibition order under 12 U.S.C. 1786(g).
*
■
*
*
*
*
10. Add part 752 to read as follows:
PART 752—CONSENT TO SERVICE OF
PERSONS CONVICTED OF, OR WHO
HAVE PROGRAM ENTRIES FOR,
CERTAIN CRIMINAL OFFENSES
Sec.
752.1 What is section 205(d) of the FCU
Act?
752.2 Who is covered by section 205(d)?
752.3 What offenses are covered under
section 205(d)?
752.4 What constitutes a conviction under
section 205(d)?
752.5 What constitutes a pretrial diversion
or similar program under section 205(d)?
752.6 What are the types of consent
applications that can be filed?
752.7 When must a consent application be
filed?
752.8 De minimis offenses.
752.9 How to file a consent application.
752.10 How a consent application is
evaluated.
752.11 What will the NCUA do if the
consent application is denied?
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1785(d).
§ 752.1 What is section 205(d) of the
Federal Credit Union Act?
(a) This subpart covers consent
applications under section 205(d) of the
Federal Credit Union Act (FCU Act), 12
U.S.C. 1785(d). The NCUA refers to
such applications as ‘‘consent
applications.’’ Under section 205(d), any
person who has been convicted of any
criminal offense involving dishonesty or
breach of trust, or has agreed to enter
into a pretrial diversion or similar
program (program entry) in connection
with a prosecution for such offense
(collectively, covered offenses), may not
become, or continue as, an institutionaffiliated party (IAP) of an insured
credit union; or otherwise participate,
directly or indirectly, in the conduct of
the affairs of any insured credit union
without the prior written consent of the
NCUA. Section 205(d) imposes a tenyear ban against the Board granting
consent for a person convicted of certain
crimes enumerated in Title 18 of the
United States Code. In order for the
Board to grant consent during the tenyear period, the Board must file a
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motion with, and obtain the approval of,
the sentencing court.
(b) In addition, the law prohibits an
insured credit union from permitting
such a person to engage in any conduct
or to continue any relationship
prohibited by section 205(d). Insured
credit unions must therefore make a
reasonable, documented, inquiry to
verify an applicant’s history to ensure
that a person who has a conviction or
program entry covered by the provisions
of section 205(d) is not hired or
permitted to participate in its affairs
without the written consent of the
NCUA issued under this subpart.
Insured credit unions may extend a
conditional offer of employment
contingent on the completion of a
background check satisfactory to the
credit union to determine if the
applicant is prohibited under section
205(d), but the applicant may not work
for, be employed by, or otherwise
participate in the affairs of the insured
credit union until the credit union has
determined that the applicant is not
prohibited under section 205(d).
(c) If there is a conviction or program
entry covered by the prohibitions of
section 205(d), a consent application
under this subpart must be filed seeking
the NCUA’s consent to become, or to
continue as, an IAP; or to otherwise
participate, directly or indirectly, in the
affairs of the insured credit union. The
consent application must be filed, and
consented to, prior to serving in any of
the foregoing capacities unless such
consent application is not required
under the subsequent provisions of this
subpart. The purpose of a consent
application is to provide the applicant
an opportunity to demonstrate that,
notwithstanding the prohibition, a
person is fit to participate in the
conduct of the affairs of an insured
credit union without posing a risk to its
safety and soundness or impairing
public confidence in that credit union.
The burden is upon the applicant to
establish that the consent application
warrants approval.
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§ 752.2
Who is covered by section 205(d)?
(a)(1) Persons covered by section
205(d) include IAPs, as defined by 12
U.S.C. 1786(r), and others who are
participants in the conduct of the affairs
of an insured credit union. Therefore,
all directors, officers, and employees of
an insured credit union who fall within
the scope of section 205(d), including de
facto employees, as determined by the
NCUA based upon generally applicable
standards of employment law, will also
be subject to section 205(d).
(2) Whether other persons who are not
IAPs are covered depends upon their
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degree of influence or control over the
management or affairs of an insured
credit union. Those who exercise major
policymaking functions of an insured
credit union are deemed participants in
the affairs of that institution and
covered by section 205(d). Similarly,
directors and officers of subsidiaries or
joint ventures of an insured credit union
will be covered if they participate in the
affairs of the insured credit union or are
in a position to influence or control the
management or affairs of the insured
credit union. Typically, an independent
contractor does not have a relationship
with the insured credit union other than
the activity for which the credit union
has contracted. However, an
independent contractor who influences
or controls the management or affairs of
the insured credit union would be
covered by section 205(d).
(b) The term person, for purposes of
section 205(d), means an individual and
does not include a corporation, firm, or
other business entity.
§ 752.3 Which offenses qualify as
‘‘Covered Offenses’’ under section 205(d)?
(a) General definitions. The
conviction or program entry must be for
a criminal offense involving dishonesty
or breach of trust.
(1) The term criminal offense
involving dishonesty—
(i) Means an offense under which an
individual, directly or indirectly—
(A) Cheats or defrauds; or
(B) Wrongfully takes property
belonging to another in violation of a
criminal statute;
(ii) Includes an offense that federal,
state, or local law defines as dishonest,
or
for which dishonesty is an element of
the offense; and
(iii) Does not include—
(A) A misdemeanor criminal offense
committed more than 1 year before the
date on which an individual files a
consent application, excluding any
period of incarceration; or
(B) An offense involving the
possession of controlled substances. At
a minimum, this exclusion applies to
criminal offenses involving the simple
possession of a controlled substance and
possession with intent to distribute a
controlled substance. This exclusion
may also apply to other drug-related
offenses depending on the statutory
elements of the offenses or from court
determinations that the statutory
provisions of the offenses involve
dishonesty or breach of trust as noted in
paragraph (b) of this section. Potential
applicants may contact their appropriate
NCUA Regional Office or the Office of
National Examinations and Supervision,
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if applicable, if they have questions
about whether their offenses are covered
under section 205(d).
(iv) The term offense committed in
paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(A) means the last
date of the underlying misconduct. In
instances with multiple offenses,
offense committed means the last date of
any of the underlying offenses.
(2) The term breach of trust means a
wrongful act, use, misappropriation, or
omission with respect to any property or
fund that has been committed to a
person in a fiduciary or official capacity,
or the misuse of one’s official or
fiduciary position to engage in a
wrongful act, use, misappropriation, or
omission.
(b) Dishonesty or breach of trust.
Whether a crime involves dishonesty or
breach of trust will be determined from
the statutory elements of the offense
itself or from court determinations that
the statutory provisions of the offense
involve dishonesty or breach of trust.
(c) Certain older offenses excluded. —
(1) General. Section 205(d) does not
apply to an offense if—
(i) it has been 7 years or more since
the offense occurred; or
(ii) the individual was incarcerated
with respect to the offense, and it has
been 5 years or more since the
individual was released from
incarceration.
(iii) The NCUA interprets the term
‘‘offense occurred’’ to mean the last date
of the underlying misconduct. In
instances with multiple covered
offenses, ‘‘offense occurred’’ means the
last date of any of the underlying
offenses.
(2) Offenses committed by individuals
21 years of age or younger. For
individuals who committed an offense
when they were 21 years of age or
younger, section 205(d) shall not apply
to the offense if it has been more than
30 months since the sentencing
occurred. The NCUA interprets
‘‘sentencing occurred’’ to mean the date
on which a court imposed the sentence,
not the date on which all conditions of
sentencing were completed.
(3) Limitation. This paragraph (c)
shall not apply to an offense described
under 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2).
(d) Designated lesser offenses
excluded. Section 205(d) does not apply
to the following offenses, if 1 or more
years has passed since the applicable
conviction or program entry: using fake
identification; shoplifting; trespassing;
fare evasion; and driving with an
expired license or tag.
(e) Foreign convictions. The NCUA
considers individuals who are convicted
of or enter into a pretrial diversion
program for a criminal offense involving
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dishonesty or breach of trust in foreign
jurisdictions to be subject to section
205(d), unless the offense is otherwise
excluded by this subpart.
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§ 752.4 What constitutes a conviction
under section 205(d)?
(a) Convictions requiring a consent
application. There must be a conviction
of record. Section 205(d) does not cover
arrests or pending cases not brought to
trial, unless the person has a program
entry as set out in § 752.5. Section
205(d) does not cover acquittals or any
conviction that has been reversed on
appeal, unless the reversal was for the
purpose of re-sentencing. A conviction
with regard to which an appeal is
pending requires a consent application.
A conviction for which a pardon has
been granted will require a consent
application.
(b) Convictions not requiring a
consent application. When an
individual is charged with a covered
offense and, in the absence of a program
entry as set out in § 752.5, is
subsequently convicted of an offense
that is not a covered offense, the
conviction is not subject to section
205(d).
(c) Expungement, dismissal, and
sealing. A conviction shall not be
considered a conviction of record and
shall not require a consent application
if—
(1) there is an order of expungement,
sealing, or dismissal that has been
issued in regard to the conviction in
connection with such offense, or if a
conviction has been otherwise
expunged, sealed, or dismissed by
operation of law; and
(2) it is intended by the language in
the order itself, or in the legislative
provisions under which the order was
issued, or in other legislative provisions,
that the conviction shall be destroyed or
sealed from the individual’s state, tribal,
or federal record, even if exceptions
allow the conviction to be considered
for certain character and fitness
evaluation purposes.
(d) Youthful offenders. An
adjudication by a court against a person
as a ‘‘youthful offender’’ (or similar
term) under any youth-offender law
applicable to minors as defined by state
law, or any judgment as a ‘‘juvenile
delinquent’’ by any court having
jurisdiction over minors as defined by
state law, does not require a consent
application. Such an adjudication does
not constitute a matter covered under
section 205(d) and is not a conviction or
program entry for determining the
applicability of § 752.8.
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§ 752.5 What constitutes a pretrial
diversion or similar program under section
205(d)?
(a) The term ‘‘pretrial diversion or
similar program’’ (program entry) means
a program characterized by a suspension
or eventual dismissal or reversal of
charges or criminal prosecution upon
agreement by the accused to restitution,
drug or alcohol rehabilitation, anger
management, or community service.
Whether the outcome of a case
constitutes a program entry is
determined by relevant Federal, State,
or local law, and, if not so designated
under applicable law, then the
determination of whether a disposition
is a program entry will be made by the
Board on a case-by-case basis.
(b) When a covered offense either is
reduced by a program entry to an
offense that would otherwise not be
covered by section 205(d) or is
dismissed upon successful completion
of a program entry, the covered offense
remains a covered offense for purposes
of section 205(d). The covered offense
will require a consent application
unless it is de minimis as provided by
§ 752.8 of this subpart.
(c) Expungements, dismissals, or
sealings of program entries will be
treated the same as those for
convictions.
§ 752.6 What are the types of consent
applications that can be filed?
(a) The NCUA will accept consent
applications from—
(1) an individual; or
(2) an insured credit union applying
on behalf of an individual.
(b) An individual or an insured credit
union may file consent applications at
separate times. Under either approach,
the consent application(s) must be filed
with the appropriate NCUA Regional
Office, or the Office of National
Examinations and Supervision, as
required by this subpart.
§ 752.7 When may a consent application
be filed?
(a) Except for situations in which no
consent application is required under
section 205(d) and this subpart, a
consent application must be filed when
there is a conviction by a court of
competent jurisdiction for a covered
offense by any adult or minor treated as
an adult, or when such person has a
program entry regarding that offense.
Before a consent application may be
filed, all of the sentencing requirements
associated with a conviction, or
conditions imposed by the program
entry, including but not limited to,
imprisonment, fines, condition of
rehabilitation, and probation
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76715
requirements, must be completed, and
the case must be considered final by the
procedures of the applicable
jurisdiction.
(b) The NCUA’s consent application
forms as well as additional information
concerning section 205(d) can be
accessed at the NCUA’s Regional Offices
or the Office of National Examinations
and Supervision, if applicable, or on the
NCUA’s website.
§ 752.8
De minimis offenses
(a) In general. Approval is
automatically granted, and a consent
application will not be required where
all of the following de minimis criteria
are met.
(1) The individual has been convicted
of, or has program entries for, no more
than 2 covered offenses, including those
subject to paragraph (b) of this section;
and for each covered offense, all of the
sentencing requirements associated with
the conviction, or conditions imposed
by the program entry, have been
completed (the sentence- or programcompletion requirement does not apply
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section);
(2) For each covered offense, the
individual could have been sentenced to
a term of confinement in a correctional
facility of 3 years or less and/or a fine
of $2,500 or less, and the individual
actually served 3 days or less of jail time
for each covered offense.
(i) Jail time is calculated based on the
time an individual spent incarcerated as
a punishment or a sanction—not as
pretrial detention—and does not
include probation or parole where an
individual was restricted to a particular
jurisdiction or was required to report
occasionally to an individual or a
specific location. Jail time includes
confinement to a psychiatric treatment
center in lieu of a jail, prison, or house
of correction on mental-competency
grounds. The definition is not intended
to include either of the following:
(ii) Persons who are restricted to a
substance-abuse treatment program
facility for part or all of the day; and
(iii) Persons who are ordered to attend
outpatient psychiatric treatment.
(3) If there are 2 convictions or
program entries for a covered offense,
each conviction or program entry was
entered at least 3 years prior to the date
a consent application would otherwise
be required, except as provided in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section; and
(4) Each covered offense was not
committed against an insured
depository institution or insured credit
union.
(b) Other types of offenses for which
the de minimis exception applies and
no consent application is required—(1)
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Age of person at time of covered offense.
If there are 2 convictions or program
entries for a covered offense, and the
actions that resulted in both convictions
or program entries all occurred when
the individual was 21 years of age or
younger, then the de minimis criteria in
paragraph (a)(3) of this section shall be
met if the convictions or program
entries were entered at least 18 months
prior to the date a consent application
would otherwise be required.
(2) Convictions or program entries for
insufficient funds checks. Convictions
or program entries of record based on
the writing of ‘‘bad’’ or insufficient
funds check(s) shall be considered de
minimis offenses under this provision if
the following conditions apply:
(i) The aggregate total face value of all
‘‘bad’’ or insufficient funds check(s)
cited across all the conviction(s) or
program entry(ies) for ‘‘bad’’ or
insufficient funds checks is $2,000 or
less;
(ii) No insured depository institution
or insured credit union was a payee on
any of the ‘‘bad’’ or insufficient funds
checks that were the basis of the
conviction(s) or program entry(ies); and
(iii) The individual has no more than
1 other de minimis offense under this
section.
(3) Convictions or program entries for
small-dollar, simple theft. Convictions
or program entries based on the simple
theft of goods, services, or currency (or
other monetary instrument) shall be
considered de minimis offenses under
this provision if the following
conditions apply:
(i) The value of the currency, goods,
or services taken is $1,000 or less;
(ii) The theft was not committed
against an insured depository institution
or insured credit union;
(iii) The individual has no more than
1 other de minimis offense under this
section; and
(iv) If there are 2 de minimis offenses
under this section, each conviction or
program entry was entered at least 3
years prior to the date a consent
application would otherwise be
required, or at least 18 months prior to
the date a consent application would
otherwise be required if the actions that
resulted in the conviction or program
entry all occurred when the individual
was 21 years of age or younger.
(v) Simple theft excludes burglary,
forgery, robbery, identity theft, and
fraud.
(c) Fidelity bond coverage and
disclosure to institutions. Any person
who meets the criteria under this
section shall be covered by a fidelity
bond to the same extent as others in
similar positions, and shall disclose the
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presence of the conviction(s) or program
entry(ies) to all insured credit unions in
the affairs of which he or she intends to
participate.
(d) Non-qualifying convictions or
program entries. No conviction or
program entry for a violation of the Title
18 sections set out in 12 U.S.C.
1785(d)(2) can qualify under any of the
de minimis exceptions set out in this
section.
§ 752.9
How to file a consent application.
Forms and instructions should be
obtained from the NCUA’s website
(www.ncua.gov), and the consent
application(s) must be filed with the
appropriate NCUA Regional Director. A
consent application may be filed by an
individual and by an insured credit
union on behalf of an individual. The
appropriate Regional Office for a credit
union-sponsored application is the
office covering the state where the
insured credit union’s home office is
located, or the Office of National
Examinations and Supervision. The
appropriate Regional Office for an
individual consent application is the
office covering the state where the
person resides. States covered by each
NCUA Regional Office are listed in
section 790.2 of this chapter.
§ 752.10 How a consent application is
evaluated.
(a) Criminal history records. In
reviewing a consent application, the
NCUA will—
(1) primarily rely on the criminal
history record of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation; and
(2) provide such record to the
applicant to review for accuracy.
(b) Certified copies. The NCUA will
not require an applicant to provide
certified copies of criminal history
records unless the NCUA determines
that there is a clear and compelling
justification to require additional
information to verify the accuracy of the
criminal history record of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
(c) Factors for determination. The
ultimate determinations in assessing a
consent application are whether the
person has demonstrated their fitness to
participate in the conduct of the affairs
of an insured credit union, and whether
the affiliation, or participation by the
person in the conduct of the affairs of
the credit union may constitute a threat
to the safety and soundness of the credit
union or the interests of its members or
threaten to impair public confidence in
the credit union.
(d) Individualized assessment. When
evaluating consent applications, the
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NCUA will conduct an individualized
assessment that will consider:
(1) Whether the conviction or program
entry is subject to section 205(d) and the
specific nature and circumstances of the
offense;
(2) Whether the participation directly
or indirectly by the person in any
manner in the conduct of the affairs of
the insured credit union constitutes a
threat to the safety and soundness of the
credit union or the interests of its
members or threatens to impair public
confidence in the credit union;
(3) Evidence of rehabilitation
including the applicant’s age at the time
of the conviction or program entry, the
time that has elapsed since the
conviction or program entry, the
relationship of the individual’s offense
to the responsibilities of the applicable
position;
(4) The individual’s employment
history, letters of recommendation,
certificates documenting participation
in substance-abuse programs, successful
participating in job preparation and
educational programs, and other
relevant evidence;
(5) The ability of management of the
insured credit union to supervise and
control the person’s activities;
(6) The applicability of the insured
credit union’s fidelity bond coverage to
the person; and
(7) For state-chartered, federally
insured credit unions, the opinion or
position of the state regulator; and
(8) Any additional factors in the
specific case that appear relevant to the
consent application.
(e) Underlying merits not at issue. The
question of whether a person, who was
convicted of a crime or who agreed to
a program entry, was guilty of that crime
shall not be at issue in a proceeding
under this subpart or under 12 CFR part
746, subpart B.
(f) Application of factors to 10-year
ban exception. The foregoing factors
will also be applied by the NCUA to
determine whether the interests of
justice are served in seeking an
exception in the appropriate court when
a consent application is made to
terminate the 10-year ban prior to its
expiration date under 12 U.S.C.
1785(d)(2)(A) for certain Federal
offenses.
(g) Fidelity bond requirements not
affected. All approvals and orders will
be subject to the condition that the
person be covered by a fidelity bond to
the same extent as others in similar
positions. If the NCUA has approved a
consent application filed by an
individual and has issued a consent
order, the individual must disclose the
presence of the conviction(s) or program
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entry(ies) to all insured credit unions in
the affairs of which they wish to
participate.
(h) Sponsored consent applications.
When deemed appropriate by the
NCUA, credit union-sponsored consent
applications are to allow the individual
to work for the same employer (without
restrictions on the location) and across
positions, except that the prior consent
of the NCUA (which may require a new
consent application) will be required for
any proposed significant changes in the
individual’s security-related duties or
responsibilities, such as promotion to an
officer or other positions that the
employer determines will require higher
security screening credentials.
(i) Subsequent consent applications.
In situations in which an approval has
been granted for a person to participate
in the affairs of a particular insured
credit union and the person
subsequently seeks to participate at
another insured credit union, another
consent application must be submitted
and approved by the NCUA prior to the
person participating in the affairs of the
other insured credit union.
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§ 752.11 What will the NCUA do if the
consent application is denied?
(a) The NCUA will inform the
applicant in writing that the consent
application has been denied and
summarize or cite the relevant
considerations specified in § 752.10 of
this subpart.
(b) The denial will also notify the
applicant of the right to request
reconsideration from the Regional Office
or the Office of National Examinations
and Supervision, or to file an appeal
with the Board, and shall include a
description of applicable filing
deadlines and time frames for agency
responses. The Regional Office or the
Office of National Examinations and
Supervision and the Board will apply
the review process contained in 12 CFR
part 746, subpart B, to any request for
reconsideration or appeal. The request
for review must include a statement of
the underlying facts that form the basis
of the request for reconsideration or
appeal, a statement of the basis for the
denial to which the applicant objects
and the alleged error in such denial, and
any other support, materials, or
evidence relied upon by the applicant
that were not previously provided.
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
Jkt 262001
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 1, 31, and 301
[Docket No. CPSC–2019–0020]
[REG–122793–19]
Safety Standard for Residential Gas
Furnaces and Boilers; Correction
RIN 1545–BP71
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Proposed rule; correction.
On October 25, 2023, the
Commission published a notice of
proposed rulemaking (NPR) to address
dangerous levels of carbon monoxide
production and leakage from residential
gas furnaces and boilers. That document
contained a typographical error in the
preamble. This document corrects that
error.
SUMMARY:
DATES:
November 7, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ronald A. Jordan, Directorate for
Engineering Sciences, Mechanical
Engineering, Consumer Product Safety
Commission, National Product Testing
and Evaluation Center, 5 Research
Place, Rockville, MD 20850; telephone:
301–987–2219; rjordan@cpsc.gov.
The
Commission is correcting a
typographical error in the preamble of
the NPR, Safety Standard for
Residential Gas Furnaces and Boilers,
16 CFR part 1408, which appeared in
the Federal Register on October 25,
2023. 88 FR 73272. This document
corrects a typographical error in section
XV of the preamble, entitled Paperwork
Reduction Act. On page 73289, first
column, second paragraph, the first
sentence erroneously states ‘‘4,374
hours (833 hours + 833 + 208 hours +
2,500 hours)’’. This notice corrects that
error by revising that language to
correctly read ‘‘3,541 hours (833 hours
+ 208 hours + 2,500 hours)’’. The
estimated time burden thus is lower
than stated in the NPR. The estimated
financial burden in the same sentence is
unchanged.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2023–24538 Filed 11–6–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
BILLING CODE 7535–01–P
16:01 Nov 06, 2023
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
16 CFR Part 1408
[FR Doc. 2023–23509 Filed 11–6–23; 8:45 am]
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Gross Proceeds and Basis Reporting
by Brokers and Determination of
Amount Realized and Basis for Digital
Asset Transactions
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notification of rescheduling of
public hearing on a proposed
rulemaking.
AGENCY:
This document reschedules
and changes to telephonic-only the
public hearing originally scheduled for
November 7, 2023, for a notice of
proposed rulemaking (REG–122793–19)
that was published in the Federal
Register on Tuesday, August 29, 2023.
The rescheduled hearing will be held on
November 13, 2023, at 10 a.m. ET by
telephone only. The proposed
regulations relate to information
reporting by brokers, the determination
of amount realized and basis, and
backup withholding, for certain digital
asset sales and exchanges.
DATES: The previously scheduled public
hearing for the notice of proposed
rulemaking published on August 29,
2023 (88 FR 59576), has been
rescheduled to a telephonic-only
hearing on November 13, 2023, at 10
a.m. ET.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly
encouraged to submit public comments
electronically. Submit electronic
submissions via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and
REG–122793–19) by following the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments
cannot be edited or withdrawn. The
Department of the Treasury and the IRS
will publish any comments submitted
electronically or on paper to the public
docket. Send paper submissions to
CC:PA:01:PR (REG–122793–19), Room
5203, Internal Revenue Service, P.O.
Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044. Submissions
may be hand-delivered Monday through
Friday between the hours of 8 a.m. and
4 p.m. to CC:PA:01:PR (REG–122793–
19), Courier’s Desk, Internal Revenue
Service, 1111 Constitution Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20224.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning submissions of comments
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\07NOP1.SGM
07NOP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 214 (Tuesday, November 7, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 76702-76717]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-23509]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 88 , No. 214 / Tuesday, November 7, 2023 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 76702]]
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Parts 701, 741,746, 748, and 752
[NCUA-2023-0023]
RIN: 3133-AF55
Fair Hiring in Banking
AGENCY: National Credit Union Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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SUMMARY: The NCUA Board (Board) proposes to incorporate its ``Second
Chance'' Interpretive Ruling and Policy Statement 19-1 (IRPS 19-1) and
the Fair Hiring in Banking Act (FHBA) into its regulations. The Federal
Credit Union Act prohibits, except with the Board's prior written
consent, any person who has been convicted of certain criminal offenses
involving dishonesty or breach of trust (a covered offense), or who has
entered into a pretrial diversion or similar program in connection with
a prosecution for such offense (program entry), from participating in
the conduct of the affairs of an insured credit union.
DATES: Comments must be received by January 8, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written comments, identified by RIN 3133-
AF55, by any of the following methods (Please send comments by one
method only):
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
The docket number for this proposed rule is NCUA-2023-0023. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. A plain language summary of the
proposed rule is also available on the docket website.
Mail: Address to Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks, Secretary of
the Board, National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street,
Alexandria, Virginia 22314-3428.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mailing address.
Public inspection: You may view all public comments on the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov, as submitted, except
for those we cannot post for technical reasons. The NCUA will not edit
or remove any identifying or contact information from the public
comments submitted. If you are unable to access public comments on the
internet, you may contact the NCUA for alternative access by calling
(703) 518-6540 or emailing [email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rachel Ackmann, Senior Staff Attorney,
Office of General Counsel, and Pamela Yu, Special Counsel to the
General Counsel, Office of General Counsel, at the above address or
telephone (703) 518-6540.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 205(d) of the Federal Credit Union Act (Section 205(d))
Prior to December 23, 2022, section 205(d)(1) of the Federal Credit
Union Act (FCU Act) provided that, except with the prior written
consent of the Board, a person who has been convicted of any criminal
offense involving dishonesty or breach of trust, or has agreed to enter
into a pretrial diversion or similar program in connection with a
prosecution for such offense, may not:
Become, or continue as, an institution-affiliated party
(IAP) with respect to any insured credit union; or
Otherwise participate, directly or indirectly, in the
conduct of the affairs of any insured credit union.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 205(d)(1)(B) further provides that an insured credit union
may not allow any person described above to participate in the conduct
of the affairs of the credit union without Board consent. Section
205(d)(2) restricts the Board from approving a consent application
related to a person convicted of certain crimes enumerated in Title 18
of the United States Code for 10 years, absent a motion by the Board
and approval by the sentencing court. Finally, section 205(d)(3) states
that ``whoever knowingly violates'' section (d)(1)(A) or (d)(1)(B)
commits a felony, punishable by up to 5 years in prison or a fine of up
to $1,000,000 a day, or both. Section 205(d) prohibitions have existed
in some form since 1970, and since then federally insured credit unions
have been required to make a diligent inquiry as to whether prospective
employees or IAPs \2\ are subject to a section 205(d) prohibition.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The NCUA has made its administrative orders against IAPs
available in a searchable database on the agency's website. See
https://ncua.gov/news/enforcement-actions/administrative-orders.
\3\ 73 FR 48399, 48401 (Aug. 19, 2008).
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In 2008, the Board adopted Interpretive Rule and Policy Statement
08-1 (IRPS 08-1) to provide direction and guidance to federally insured
credit unions and those persons who may be affected by section
205(d).\4\ The Board specifically sought comments as to whether the
format of the guidance as an IRPS was appropriate or whether a
regulation would be more suitable.\5\ The Board received some comments
supporting guidance in the form of an IRPS and others supporting a
regulation, but ultimately chose to issue the guidance through an
IRPS.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Id.
\5\ The Board had not previously adopted any policies or
regulations on section 205(d), as the statute at that time imposed
no guidance or limitations on the information that the Board may
consider, and the Board received a limited number of applications
under section 205(d). However, due to an increasing number of
applications requesting the Board's consent under section 205(d),
the Board believed it was appropriate to issue guidance on the
topic.
\6\ Two commenters believed that a regulation was the more
appropriate format for the guidance. One of the commenters who
favored a regulation thought a regulation provided greater
protection to a credit union that might be challenged by a
prospective employee. Another commenter believed a regulation was
preferable because it would help reinforce a credit union's right to
appeal an adverse decision and subject future changes to public
notice and comment. The Board concluded that the source of the
requirement stems from federal statute, namely section 205(d).
Therefore, the Board believed that the need to comply with federal
law, as augmented by guidance in the form of an IRPS, was sufficient
to protect a credit union. The Board believed that credit union
officials should be able to adequately understand and apply the
guidance styled as an IRPS and that the right to request a hearing
contained in the IRPS provided a credit union a sufficient right to
appeal a denial of consent by the Board. Additionally, the Board
noted that it would not amend its IRPS without providing the public
notice and an opportunity to comment. For all these reasons, the
Board believed it appropriate to issue the final guidance in the
form of an IRPS.
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IRPS 08-1 outlined the actions prohibited under the FCU Act and the
procedures for applying the Board's consent on a case-by-case basis.
Recognizing that certain offenses are so minor and dated that they
would not presently pose a substantial risk to the insured credit
union, IRPS 08-1 excluded certain de minimis offenses that met
specified requirements and juvenile offenses from the need to
[[Page 76703]]
request consent from the Board. In effect, the IRPS gave automatic
consent for these offenses without requiring a consent application or
any notice.
In 2019, the Board rescinded IRPS 08-1 and issued IRPS 19-1, a
revised and updated IRPS to reduce regulatory burden (also known as the
Second Chance IRPS).\7\ IRPS 19-1 amended IRPS 08-1 to expand the
definition of de minimis offenses to reduce the scope and number of
offenses that would require submission of a consent application to the
Board. Specifically, the IRPS did not require a consent application for
convictions involving insufficient funds checks of moderate aggregate
value, small-dollar simple theft, false identification, simple drug
possession, and isolated minor offenses committed by covered persons as
young adults. The Board recognized that many Americans faced hiring
barriers due to a criminal record, a great number of whom are not
violent or career criminals, but rather people who made poor choices
early in life who have since paid their debt to society. The Board
found that offering second chances to those who are truly penitent was
consistent with our nation's shared values of forgiveness and
redemption. In keeping with this spirit of clemency, the Board expanded
career opportunities for those who had demonstrated remorse and
responsibility for past indiscretions and who wished to set forth on a
path to productive living.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 84 FR 65907 (Dec. 2, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On December 23, 2022, Congress passed the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (NDAA), which amended section
205(d).\8\ The NDAA included the FHBA--which became immediately
effective on December 23, 2022. The FHBA amends section 205(d) to
expand employment opportunities for those with a previous minor or
older criminal offense, among other provisions. Generally, the
amendments codify a number of elements already contained in the NCUA's
current policy regarding section 205(d) but also extend greater relief
than what is currently available to certain individuals with prior
convictions seeking employment with an insured credit union,
particularly individuals with older convictions, expunged convictions,
or prior convictions for a misdemeanor, any drug-related possession
offense, or certain designated ``lesser offenses.'' The FHBA also
clarifies several definitions and the procedures for processing a
consent application. The specific provisions of the FHBA are discussed
in detail later in this preamble.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Public Law 117-263 (Dec. 23, 2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 19 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act
Section 19 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act) (section
19) contains a prohibition provision similar to section 205(d) of the
FCU Act.\9\ Before 2020, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC) provided the public with guidance relating to section 19 and the
FDIC's application thereof through a Statement of Policy similar to the
NCUA's IRPS 19-1.\10\ Similar to the NCUA's IRPS, the FDIC's Statement
of Policy, among other things, instituted a set of criteria to provide
for blanket approval of certain low-risk crimes and for persons
convicted of such de minimis crimes to forgo filing a section 19
consent application.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(a).
\10\ See 84 FR 68353 (Dec. 16, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2020, the FDIC revised and incorporated its then existing
Statement of Policy into its regulations to, among other purposes,
provide for greater transparency as to its section 19 application,
provide greater certainty as to the FDIC's application process, and to
assist both insured depository institutions and individuals who may be
affected by section 19 with understanding its impact and potentially
seek relief from its provisions.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Id.; 85 FR 51312 (Aug. 20, 2020) (FDIC 2020 final rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In December 2022, the FHBA made amendments to section 19 that are
comparable to the amendments made in section 205(d). The FDIC proposed
to implement these changes through a notice-and-comment rulemaking in
October 2023.
Coordination With the FDIC
In the past, the NCUA has drawn extensively on the FDIC's guidance
related to section 19 due to the FDIC's greater experience processing
section 19 consent applications. Further, in the Board's view it is
beneficial to both insured financial institutions and covered
individuals for the NCUA's section 205(d) related requirements to be
consistent, to the extent possible, with the FDIC's section 19
requirements. Consistent guidelines between the two agencies with
respect to these parallel statutory provisions help streamline the
consent application process, particularly for those individuals seeking
consent from both the NCUA and the FDIC to allow for potential
employment at federally insured financial institutions. The FHBA
formalizes the expectation that the agencies implement these comparable
statutory provisions similarly and requires the NCUA and the FDIC to
consult and coordinate to promote consistent procedures, where
appropriate.\12\ The Board finds that adopting similar definitions,
terminology, and procedures in all aspects of this proposed rule will
promote consistent implementation of consent applications because even
those provisions that fall outside the scope of consent applications
are likely to affect how the agency administers those applications.
Staffs of the NCUA and the FDIC have consulted and coordinated on this
proposed rulemaking as directed by the FHBA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(I), and 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(9).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, in developing this proposed rule, NCUA staff has
consulted with staffs at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
Board and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
II. The Proposed Rule
Section-by-Section Analysis
The Board is now issuing a proposed rule to codify IRPS 19-1, along
with significant changes that are consistent with the FHBA amendments
to section 205(d) and the FDIC's comparable implementing
regulations.\13\ The proposed rule would address, among other topics,
the individuals and types of offenses covered by section 205(d), as
well as the NCUA's procedures for reviewing a consent application. The
proposed rule would add new part 752 to Chapter VII of Title 12 of the
U.S. Code of Federal Regulations. A section-by-section analysis of the
proposed rule follows.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ The NCUA is issuing a proposed rule to codify its policy
regarding section 205(d) consent applications due to the FDIC's
recent codification of its similar section 19 Statement of Policy.
The NCUA believes codifying IRPS 19-1 will provide for greater
transparency as to its application, provide greater certainty as to
the NCUA's application process, and help both credit unions and
individuals who may be affected by section 205(d) to understand its
impact and potentially seek relief from its provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Section 752.1--What is section 205(d) of the FCU Act?
This section sets out the scope of proposed new part 752. Paragraph
(a) would generally describe the requirements of section 205(d).
Paragraph (b) would set out insured credit unions' obligations
under section 205(d), including that insured credit unions would be
required to make a reasonable inquiry regarding an applicant's history
to ensure that a
[[Page 76704]]
person who is subject to the prohibition provision of section 205(d) is
not hired or permitted to participate in the conduct of credit unions'
affairs without the written consent of the NCUA. Paragraph (b) also
would set out that insured credit unions would be permitted to make
conditional offers of employment to prospective applicants.
Paragraph (c) would address the need for a consent application and
establishes the standard for an application's approval. The NCUA would
evaluate a consent application to determine if a person is fit to
participate in the conduct of the affairs of an insured credit union
without posing a risk to its safety and soundness or impairing public
confidence in that credit union. The burden is upon the applicant to
establish that the application warrants approval. Section 752.1
includes no substantive changes as compared to IRPS 19-1.
2. Section 752.2--Who is covered by section 205(d)?
This section identifies who is covered by section 205(d). Paragraph
(a) would state that IAPs, as defined by 12 U.S.C. 1786(r), would be
covered. Similar to IRPS 19-1, volunteer and de facto employees would
be deemed covered under section 205(d) as well.
Whether other persons who are not IAPs, such as certain independent
contractors, are covered depends upon their degree of influence or
control over the management or affairs of an insured credit union.
Those who exercise major policymaking functions of an insured credit
union are deemed to be covered by section 205(d). The proposed rule
includes less detail than IRPS 19-1 regarding how the NCUA would
determine whether a person participates in the conduct of the affairs
of an insured credit union. For example, the proposed rule would not
state that the NCUA would analyze each individual's conduct on a case-
by-case basis and make a determination or that agency and court
decisions will provide the guide as to what standards will be applied.
The Board does not intend any substantive changes by these omissions.
Instead, the proposed rule includes more streamlined language regarding
persons who participate in the conduct of the affairs of an insured
credit union, consistent with the FDIC's comparable part 303. The NCUA
intends to publish guidance that further clarifies its intent about
other persons who are not IAPs. The guidance would include language
similar to IRPS 19-1.
The proposed rule would also state directors and officers of
affiliates, or joint ventures of an insured credit union, would be
covered if they participate in the conduct of affairs of the insured
credit union or are in a position to influence or control the
management or affairs of the insured credit union. IRPS 19-1 does not
specifically state these persons would be covered if they participate
in the conduct of affairs of the insured credit union; however, this is
not a policy change because these persons would have been covered under
the IRPS if they participated in the conduct of affairs of the credit
union.
Paragraph (b) would define the term ``person'' for the purposes of
section 205(d) as an individual only and not a legal entity.
3. Section 752.3--Which offenses qualify as ``Covered Offenses'' under
section 205(d)?
This section addresses what constitutes a covered offense under
section 205(d).\14\ Paragraph (a) would state that a conviction or
program entry must have been for a criminal offense involving
dishonesty or breach of trust. The paragraph would define criminal
offenses involving dishonesty and breach of trust. The FHBA defines
``criminal offense involving dishonesty'' as ``an offense under which
an individual, directly or indirectly, cheats or defrauds or wrongfully
takes property belonging to another in violation of a criminal
statute.'' The FHBA further provides that the term includes an offense
that federal, state, or local law defines as dishonest or for which
dishonesty is an element of the offense. However, the term does not
include a misdemeanor criminal offense committed more than 1 year
before the date on which an individual files a consent application,
excluding any period of incarceration, or an offense involving the
possession of controlled substances.
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\14\ The Board notes that the approach to criminal offenses
mandated by the statute and rulemaking would not have an impact on
other processes related to criminal convictions. For example, the
NCUA may consider a more expansive scope of convictions related to
controlled substances under section 212 of the Federal Credit Union
Act in disapproving directors, committee members, and senior
executive officers of troubled or newly chartered insured credit
unions. See 12 CFR 701.14 for the NCUA's implementation of this
provision, also addressed elsewhere in this proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FHBA does not define breach of trust. Under the proposed rule,
breach of trust would mean a wrongful act, use, misappropriation, or
omission with respect to any property or fund that has been committed
to a person in a fiduciary or official capacity, or the misuse of one's
official or fiduciary position to engage in a wrongful act, use,
misappropriation, or omission. This definition is identical to the
definition in IRPS 19-1.
As discussed previously, the FHBA excludes from the scope of such
offenses ``an offense involving the possession of controlled
substances.'' The Board interprets this phrase concerning controlled
substances to exclude from the scope of the prohibition, at a minimum,
criminal offenses involving the simple possession of controlled
substances and possession with intent to distribute a controlled
substance. This exclusion may also apply to other drug-related offenses
depending on the statutory elements of the offenses or court
determinations that the statutory provisions of the offenses involve
dishonesty or breach of trust, as noted in paragraph (b) of proposed
Sec. 752.3. The Board notes that in processing other applications,
such as change in official or senior executive officer in credit unions
that are newly chartered or are in troubled condition, the NCUA may
still consider excluded offenses as appropriate. For example, an
offense that is not covered under section 205(d) may bear on an
individual's competence, experience, character, or integrity under 12
U.S.C. 1790a and 12 CFR 701.14.
Potential applicants may contact their appropriate NCUA Regional
Office or the Office of National Examinations and Supervision (ONES) if
they have questions about whether their offenses are covered under
section 205(d).
This language marks a shift from IRPS 19-1, which requires consent
applications for certain simple misdemeanor drug possession offenses.
Under IRPS 19-1, a consent application for a simple misdemeanor drug
possession offense is required except if the conviction or program
entry was classified as a misdemeanor at the time of conviction or
program entry, the person had no other conviction or program entry
described in section 205(d), and it had been 5 years since the
conviction or program entry (or 30 months in the case of a person 21
years or younger at the time of the conviction or program entry), and
the conviction did not involve the illegal distribution (including an
intent to distribute), sale, trafficking, or manufacture of a
controlled substance or other related offense. The Board believes that
the proposed revision is consistent with the text and purposes of the
FHBA, would align the Board's interpretation of section 205(d) as to
offenses involving controlled substances more closely with other
federal banking regulators, and would continue to recognize that a
drug-
[[Page 76705]]
related offense could potentially involve dishonesty or breach of
trust.\15\ The Board also notes that this proposed provision would not
affect its ability to consider drug-related offenses as they pertain to
the suitability of an individual under other statutory provisions,
including section 212 of the FCU Act.\16\
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\15\ See House Rpt. No. 117-314 (May 10, 2022), available at
https://www.congress.gov/congressional-report/117th-congress/house-report/314/1.
\16\ 12 U.S.C. 1790a.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph (b) would require that, to determine if the criminal
offense is one of dishonesty or breach of trust, the NCUA would look to
the statutory elements of the criminal offense or to court decisions in
the relevant jurisdiction that have interpreted these statutory
elements. This policy is similar to IRPS 19-1.
Paragraph (c) would include new language reflecting the FHBA's
exclusion of certain older offenses from the scope of section
205(d).\17\ The FHBA provides that individuals are not subject to a
prohibition under section 205(d) if they committed a covered offense
and it has been 7 years or more since the offense occurred; or if the
individual was incarcerated with respect to the offense, it has been 5
years or more since the individual was released from incarceration; or
the individual committed the offense when they were 21 years of age or
younger, and it has been more than 30 months since the sentencing
occurred.\18\
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\17\ See 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(A).
\18\ Note that these exceptions do not apply to the offenses
described under 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board considers the phrases ``offense committed''--noted
previously--and ``offense occurred'' to be substantially similar.
Accordingly, the Board interprets the term ``offense occurred'' to mean
the ``last date of the underlying misconduct.'' In instances with
multiple offenses, ``offense occurred'' means the last date of any of
the underlying offenses.
Paragraph (c) would track the FHBA's language concerning offenses
committed by individuals 21 years of age or younger. The FHBA states
that, for individuals who committed an offense when the individual was
21 years of age or younger, section 205(d) shall not apply to the
offense if it has been more than 30 months since the sentencing
occurred.\19\ The Board interprets ``sentencing occurred'' to mean the
date on which a court imposed the sentence, not the date on which all
conditions of sentencing were completed. Moreover, paragraph (c) notes
that its exclusions--which are derived from the FHBA--do not apply to
the enumerated offenses described under 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(A)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FHBA also excludes designated lesser offenses, including the
use of fake identification, shoplifting, trespass, fare evasion,
driving with an expired license or tag (and such other low-risk
offenses as the NCUA may designate), if 1 year or more has passed since
the applicable conviction or program entry. Paragraph (d) would exclude
these ``designated lesser offenses'' to reflect the revised statutory
language.
Paragraph (e) would add language that reflects the FDIC's long-held
position that individuals who are convicted of or enter into a pretrial
diversion program for a criminal offense involving dishonesty or breach
of trust in foreign jurisdictions are subject to section 19, unless the
offense is otherwise excluded by 12 CFR 303, subpart L, as stated in
the FDIC's parallel proposed rule. The Board has not previously had a
position on foreign offenses; however, given the congressional mandate
to consult and coordinate to promote consistent implementation on
consent application procedures where appropriate, the Board is
proposing to adopt the FDIC's interpretation. Under the proposed rule,
for example, if an insured credit union has operations outside the
United States, the credit union could conduct a reasonable, documented
inquiry to verify an applicant's history by inquiring about potential
covered offenses that may have occurred in that foreign country (or
countries) in which the credit union conducts operations, as well as
the United States. As another example of such an inquiry, if an insured
credit union plans to hire someone in the United States who is from a
foreign country, the credit union could inquire about potential covered
offenses that may have occurred in the United States and in that
foreign country.
4. Section 752.4--What constitutes a conviction under section 205(d)?
Paragraph (a) would state that there must have been a conviction of
record for section 205(d) to apply, and that section 205(d) would not
apply to arrests, pending cases not brought to trial (unless the person
has a program entry as set out in Sec. 752.5), or any conviction
reversed on appeal unless the reversal was for the purpose of re-
sentencing. The Board notes, however, that covered offenses that have
been pardoned--and which are not otherwise excluded by Sec. 752.8--
would still require a consent application. Paragraph (a) is
substantively similar to IRPS 19-1.
Paragraph (b) would clarify that, absent a program entry, when an
individual is charged with a covered offense but is subsequently
convicted of an offense that is not a covered offense, that conviction
is not subject to section 205(d). IRPS 19-1 does not have this
clarification; however, it is included in the FDIC's current part 303.
The NCUA's provision would merely clarify that the conviction, not the
originally charged offense, is relevant under section 205(d).
Paragraph (c) would exclude covered offenses that have been
expunged or sealed by a court of competent jurisdiction or by operation
of law. Under IRPS 19-1, a conviction that has been completely expunged
is not considered a conviction of record and does not require a consent
application. However, IRPS 19-1 further noted that where an order of
expungement has been issued and is intended to be a complete
expungement, the jurisdiction cannot allow the conviction or program
entry to be used for any subsequent purpose including, but not limited
to, an evaluation of a person's fitness or character. Also, the failure
to destroy or seal the records will not prevent the expungement from
being considered complete for the purposes of section 205(d). This
caveat to the general premise that an expunged conviction is not
considered a conviction of record is not included in the FDIC's current
part 303.
The FHBA provides a two-pronged test to determine whether a covered
offense should be considered expunged, dismissed, or sealed and
therefore excluded from the scope of section 205(d). First, there must
be an ``order of expungement, sealing, or dismissal that has been
issued in regard to the conviction in connection with such offense'';
second, it must be ``intended by the language in the order itself, or
in the legislative provisions under which the order was issued, that
the conviction shall be destroyed or sealed from the individual's
state, tribal, or federal record, even if exceptions allow the
conviction to be considered for certain character and fitness
evaluation purposes.'' \20\
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\20\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(B)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FHBA does not address expungements, sealings, or dismissals by
operation of law, and the Board has sought to provide a more
comprehensive framework as to such records. The Board has added
language to the second (intent) proposed prong of the expungement
framework to encompass the language in the expungement order itself,
the legislative
[[Page 76706]]
provisions under which the order was issued, and other legislative
provisions. The Board believes that the additional language is
consistent with the purposes of the statute and congressional intent to
provide relief to individuals with older or minor offenses.
Paragraph (d) would exclude ``youthful offender'' judgments for
minors from the scope of section 205(d). The proposed rule would
clarify that it encompasses the term ``youthful offender'' and similar
terms, because paragraph (d) may apply even if a court does not
specifically use the term ``youthful offender'' in an adjudication.
5. Section 752.5--What constitutes a pretrial diversion or similar
program under section 205(d)?
Paragraph (a) would define what constitutes a pretrial diversion or
similar program (a program entry). A pretrial diversion or similar
program means a program characterized by a suspension or eventual
dismissal or reversal of charges or criminal prosecution upon agreement
by the accused to restitution, drug or alcohol rehabilitation, anger
management, or community service. The FHBA establishes this definition.
Paragraph (b) would clarify that when a covered offense either is
reduced by a program entry to an offense that would otherwise not be
covered by section 205(d) or is dismissed upon successful completion of
a program entry, the offense remains a covered offense for purposes of
section 205(d). The covered offense will require a consent application
unless it is de minimis as provided by Sec. 752.8. This language is
new as compared to IRPS 19-1 and comes from the FDIC's part 303.
Paragraph (c) would state that expungements or sealings of program
entry records will be treated the same as expungements or sealings of
convictions. This language is new as compared to IRPS 19-1 and comes
from the FDIC's part 303.
6. Section 752.6--What are the types of consent applications that can
be filed?
The FHBA codifies procedures for consent applications filed with
the NCUA. Specifically, the proposed rule would provide that the NCUA
will accept applications from an individual or an insured credit union
applying on behalf of an individual. The Board notes the FHBA uses the
terms ``national office'' and ``regional office,'' which are
inconsistent with the NCUA's organization.\21\ The Board is
contemplating addressing those technical inconsistencies in the final
rule.
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\21\ See 12 CFR 790.2. The NCUA is composed of the Board with a
Central Office; Field Offices, consisting of 3 Regional Offices and
ONES; the Asset Management and Assistance Center; the Community
Development Revolving Loan Program; and the NCUA Central Liquidity
Facility.
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Paragraph (b) would provide that an individual consent application
or a credit union-sponsored consent application may be filed separately
or contemporaneously with the appropriate NCUA Regional Office or ONES.
7. Section 752.7--When must a consent application be filed?
This section states that a consent application is not required for
covered offenses that are considered de minimis under this part or
where another exception under the part applies. A consent application
would not be considered by the NCUA until all sentencing requirements
associated with a conviction have been met or all requirements of the
program entry have been completed. The Board proposes to include this
revised language to accord with several of the FHBA's exclusions from
section 205(d) that are not tied to the completion of sentencing
requirements.
Furthermore, the FHBA requires the NCUA to ``make all forms and
instructions related to consent applications available to the public,
including on [its] website.'' \22\ These forms and instructions ``shall
provide a sample cover letter and a comprehensive list of items that
may accompany the consent application, including clear guidance on
evidence that may support a finding of rehabilitation.'' \23\ While the
proposed rule would not codify these requirements, the agency will
comply with the statutory mandate to make appropriate forms and
instructions available to the public. The proposed rule would provide
generally that the NCUA's consent application forms as well as
additional information concerning section 205(d) can be accessed at the
NCUA's Regional Offices or on the NCUA's website.
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\22\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(E)(i).
\23\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(E)(ii).
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8. Section 752.8--De Minimis Offenses
IRPS 19-1 includes several offenses that would be otherwise covered
under section 205(d), but do not require a consent application because
they are considered de minimis. For these de minimis offenses, a person
is deemed automatically approved to serve in an insured credit union,
and no consent application is required.
IRPS 19-1 updated the general criteria for the de minimis offenses
to better align with developments in criminal reform and sentencing
guidelines. The FHBA largely codified the conditions included in IRPS
19-1; however, in several cases the FHBA expanded upon the relief
included in IRPS 19-1. The proposed rule generally would retain the de
minimis factors included in IRPS 19-1 but would amend the factors to
reflect the FHBA.
Paragraph (a)(1) would state an individual who has been convicted
of 2 or fewer covered offenses need not file if the individual could
have been sentenced to a term of confinement in a correctional facility
of 3 years or less and/or a fine of $2,500 or less, and the individual
actually served 3 days or less of jail time for each, provided that all
of the sentencing requirements associated with the conviction have been
completed, each conviction or program entry was entered at least 3
years prior to the date of a consent application (assuming there are 2
convictions or program entries for a covered offense), and each covered
offense was not committed against an insured depository institution or
insured credit union. Jail time would be calculated based on the time
an individual spent incarcerated as a punishment or a sanction--not as
pretrial detention--and would not include probation or parole where an
individual was restricted to a particular jurisdiction or was required
to report occasionally to an individual or a specific location. Jail
time would include confinement to a psychiatric treatment center in
lieu of a jail, prison, or house of correction on mental competency
grounds. The definition is not intended to include any of the
following: persons who are restricted to a substance-abuse treatment
program facility for part or all of the day; and persons who are
ordered to attend outpatient psychiatric treatment.
A consent application would also not be required if there are 2
convictions or program entries for a covered offense, and the actions
that resulted in both convictions or program entries all occurred when
the individual was 21 years of age or younger and the convictions or
program entries were entered at least 18 months prior to the date of a
consent application.
A consent application would also not be required under the proposed
rule if an individual has convictions or program entries of record
based on the writing of ``bad'' or insufficient funds checks and the
following conditions apply: (i) the aggregate total face value of all
``bad'' or insufficient funds checks cited across all the convictions
or
[[Page 76707]]
program entries for ``bad'' or insufficient funds checks is $2,000 or
less; (ii) no insured depository institution or insured credit union
was a payee on any of the ``bad'' or insufficient funds checks that
were the basis of the convictions or program entries; and (iii) the
individual has no more than 1 other de minimis offense.
The FHBA and the proposed rule would also not require a consent
application for convictions or program entries for small-dollar, simple
theft. Under the proposed rule, convictions or program entries based on
the simple theft of goods, services, or currency (or other monetary
instrument) would be considered de minimis offenses if the following
conditions apply: (i) the value of the currency, goods, or services
taken is $1,000 or less; (ii) the theft was not committed against an
insured depository institution or insured credit union; (iii) the
individual has no more than 1 other de minimis offense under this
section; and (iv) if there are 2 de minimis offenses under this
section, each conviction or program entry was entered at least 3 years
prior to the date a consent application would otherwise be required, or
at least 18 months prior to the date a consent application would
otherwise be required if the actions that resulted in the conviction or
program entry all occurred when the individual was 21 years of age or
younger. This exception excludes burglary, forgery, robbery, identity
theft, and fraud.
Paragraph (c) would provide that individuals must be covered by a
fidelity bond to the same extent as others in similar positions. This
policy is consistent with IRPS 19-1.\24\
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\24\ See 12 CFR 713 (Fidelity bond and insurance coverage for
federally insured credit unions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph (d) would state that any conviction or program entry for
specific criminal offenses under Title 18 set out in 12 U.S.C.
1785(d)(2) cannot qualify for a de minimis exemption.
Finally, the Board notes that the FHBA includes ``designated lesser
offenses'' in addition to de minimis offenses. Designated lesser
offenses, including use of fake identification, shoplifting, trespass,
fare evasion, or driving with an expired license or tag, are low-risk
offenses statutorily excluded from the scope of section 205(d).
9. Sec. 752.9--How To File a Consent Application
This section would provide that consent applications filed by a
credit union should be filed with the NCUA's Regional Office where the
credit union's home office is located (or with ONES for credit unions
that office supervises), and consent applications filed by an
individual should be filed with the NCUA's Regional Office where the
person lives. States covered by each NCUA Regional Office are listed in
12 CFR 790.2.
When the proposed rule is finalized, the Board will revise
delegations of authority related to consent applications. Under the
revised delegations, Regional Directors and the ONES Director will have
authority to act on both individual and credit union-sponsored
applications. Currently, the Regional Directors and the ONES Director
only have delegated authority to act on credit union-sponsored
applications, and the Board has retained the authority to approve/
disapprove individual applications.
10. Section 752.10--How a Consent Application Is Evaluated
Paragraph (a) would set out the factors the NCUA would assess to
determine the level of risk the applicant poses to an insured credit
union and whether the NCUA would consent to the person's participation
in a credit union's affairs. The paragraph reflects new statutory
requirements related to the NCUA's review process, including the
requirement that the NCUA primarily rely on the criminal history record
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in its review and provide such
record to the applicant to review for accuracy.\25\ The Board
interprets the term ``criminal history record'' to mean ``identity
history summary checks,'' which are commonly known as ``rap sheets.''
Under paragraph (a)--and in accordance with the FHBA--the NCUA, in
reviewing a consent application, would provide ``such record'' to the
individual to review for accuracy.\26\ The NCUA would not provide it to
the credit union, but only to the individual. In evaluating the risk
posed by the person's participation, the Board has proposed 8
considerations that it would evaluate. These considerations are
substantively similar to factors under IRPS 19-1.
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\25\ See 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(F).
\26\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph (b) would state that the NCUA would not require an
applicant to provide certified copies of criminal history records
unless the NCUA determines that there is a clear and compelling
justification to require additional information to verify the accuracy
of the criminal history record of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Paragraph (c) would state that the determining factors in assessing
a consent application would be whether the person has demonstrated
their fitness to participate in the conduct of the affairs of an
insured credit union, and whether the affiliation, or participation by
the person in the conduct of the affairs of the credit union, may
constitute a threat to the safety and soundness of the credit union or
the interests of its members or threaten to impair public confidence in
the credit union.
Paragraph (d) would set forth the considerations the NCUA would
evaluate in conducting an individualized assessment. The proposed rule
also clarifies how the NCUA will evaluate evidence of rehabilitation
and other evidence, as required by the FHBA.\27\
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\27\ While the statute uses the terms ``rehabilitation'' and
``mitigating'' as separate categories of evidence, the terms appear
to be substantially similar in the context of section 205 consent
applications, and the use of both terms in these regulations may
create confusion. Therefore, the proposed rule uses the term
rehabilitation, not mitigating.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph (e) would provide that the question of whether a person,
who was convicted of a crime or who agreed to a program entry, was
guilty of that crime shall not be at issue in a proceeding under this
subpart or under 12 CFR part 746, subpart B.
Paragraph (f) would provide that the NCUA will also apply the
considerations in paragraph (d) to determine whether the interests of
justice are served in seeking an exception in the appropriate court
when a consent application is made prior to 10 years after the final
conviction or agreement to program entry for certain federal
offenses.\28\
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\28\ See 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph (g) would provide that all approvals and orders will be
subject to the condition that the person be covered by a fidelity bond
to the same extent as others in similar positions.
Paragraph (h) would provide that when deemed appropriate by the
NCUA, credit union-sponsored consent applications are intended to allow
the individual to work for the same employer and across positions. NCUA
consent would be required for any proposed significant changes in the
individual's security-related duties or responsibilities, such as
promotion to an officer or other positions that the employer determines
will require higher security-screening credentials.
Paragraph (i) would provide that when a person who has received
approval under section 205(d) subsequently seeks to participate in the
conduct of the affairs of another insured credit union, another consent
application must be submitted.
[[Page 76708]]
11. Section 752.11--What will the NCUA do if the consent application is
denied?
Paragraph (a) would provide that the NCUA would provide a written
denial that would summarize or cite the relevant factors from the
proposed Sec. 752.10. Paragraph (b) would provide that the applicant
can file a written request for reconsideration or appeal under the
process contained in 12 CFR part 746, subpart B. That subpart includes
uniform procedures by which petitioners may appeal initial agency
determinations to the Board.
Under part 746, subpart B, prior to submitting an appeal to the
Board, the petitioner may make a written request to the appropriate
Regional Office or, if appropriate, ONES, to reconsider an initial
agency determination within 30 calendar days of the date of that
determination. Within 60 calendar days of the date of an initial agency
determination or, as applicable, a determination by the Regional Office
or, if appropriate, ONES, on any request for reconsideration, a
petitioner may file an appeal seeking review of the determination by
the Board. Under part 746, subpart B, a petitioner may also request an
oral hearing before the Board. These procedures meet the statutory
requirement for ``national office review'' of any consent application
that is denied by a Regional Office, if the individual requests a
review by the Board.\29\ This option is also substantially similar to
the FDIC's current parts 303 and 308, except that under those
regulations, an oral hearing is conducted unless the applicant or the
insured depository institution waives it in writing and instead makes a
written submission.\30\
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\29\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(5)(D).
\30\ 12 CFR 308.158(d).
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NCUA Practice on Section 205(d)
In general, the proposed rule would mirror the FDIC's part 303 with
minimal, non-substantive changes. Additionally, while there were a few
differences between the FDIC's part 303 and IRPS 19-1 before the FHBA,
such as some details on de minimis offenses, expungements, and
treatment of drug-related offenses, the enactment of the FBHA resolved
most discrepancies between the two agencies' rules and created a more
uniform standard. However, there are a few areas in which IRPS 19-1
provided additional context and discussion on its policy and procedures
related to section 205(d) compared to part 303. In general, the
additional information does not provide any substantive difference from
part 303 and instead provides additional clarifying information.
The Board has chosen to omit much of the clarifying information in
the proposed rule to ensure its uniformity with part 303; however, the
Board also believes credit unions generally have less experience with
section 205(d) than insured depository institutions and are typically
smaller in size with fewer resources, so additional guidance would help
insured credit unions to discharge their responsibilities under section
205(d). Therefore, in finalizing and implementing this rule, the NCUA
will prepare guidance that provides insured credit unions additional
information about section 205(d). The guidance will include portions of
IRPS 19-1 that were not incorporated into the proposed rule.
For example, IRPS 19-1 provides that when the credit union learns
that a prospective employee has a prior conviction or entered into a
pretrial diversion program for a covered offense, the credit union
should document in its files that a consent application is not required
because the covered offense is considered de minimis and meets all of
the criteria for the exception, or--if the credit union is willing to
sponsor the prospective employee's consent application--submit an
application requesting the Board's consent. The credit union could also
extend a conditional offer of employment and notify the prospective
employee that it is contingent upon a satisfactory background check to
determine whether the individual is prohibited under section 205(d).
The Board intends no change of position regarding these policies even
though they are not included in the proposed rule.
IRPS 19-1 also states that persons who will occupy clerical,
maintenance, service, or purely administrative positions generally can
be approved without an extensive review. A more detailed analysis,
however, would be performed in the case of persons who will be in a
position to influence or control the management or affairs of the
insured credit union. The proposed rule would not include a similar
delineation between how the NCUA intends to approve consent
applications for different types of positions. The Board continues to
believe that applications for clerical, maintenance, service, or purely
administrative positions do not require the same review as applications
for other positions that have access to more of the day-to-day
financial operations of a credit union. The NCUA will address this
issue in future guidance.
Waiting Time for a Subsequent Consent Application if a Consent
Application Is Denied
The FDIC's current part 303 states that an applicant will need to
wait one year from the date of the denial or decision of the FDIC
Board, or its designee, before resubmitting a consent application. The
Board is not proposing to include similar language for several reasons.
First, the NCUA does not receive a significant volume of section 205(d)
consent applications and does not believe allowing credit unions or
individuals to resubmit consent applications at any time would present
a burden on the agency and its resources. Second, the NCUA would not
want to unfairly delay an individual from seeking employment if the
consent application was denied for a reason that could be immediately
addressed by the applicant. For example, if the consent application was
denied due to insufficient support showing rehabilitation, the
individual could immediately refile with additional evidence, such as
employment history, letters of recommendation, documentation of
participation in substance-abuse programs or job preparation and
educational programs, or other relevant evidence.
Other Conforming Amendments
Both the standard FCU Bylaws in appendix A of part 701 and the
criteria for determining the insurability of a credit union in 12 CFR
741.3(c) reference section 205(d). In general, both sections prohibit a
person who has been convicted of any criminal offense involving
dishonesty or breach of trust from serving at an insured credit union,
except with the written consent of the Board. The Board believes these
references are incomplete because not all convictions of criminal
offenses involving dishonesty or breach of trust now serve as the valid
basis for a section 205(d) prohibition. Therefore, the proposed rule
would replace the current reference to ``any crime involving dishonesty
or a breach of trust'' to refer to the specific crimes covered under
section 205(d). Referring directly to the FCU Act would also
automatically incorporate future statutory changes to section 205(d).
The Board may make other similar conforming amendments in finalizing
this proposed rule if it identifies other provisions that should be
clarified simply to reflect the changes that the FHBA made to the
statutory prohibitions.
Additionally, as required by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, appendix B
to part 748 (Appendix B) contains
[[Page 76709]]
guidance on creating an effective incident response plan in the event
of unauthorized access to member information and the requirements of
the notices distributed to the affected members.\31\ Appendix B states
that credit unions should also conduct background checks of employees
to ensure that the credit union does not violate 12 U.S.C. 1785(d). The
proposed rule would require a background check in Sec. 752.1(b), which
is consistent with current expectations, as discussed in the
introductory portion of this preamble.\32\ Therefore, the proposed rule
would amend this footnote to state that insured credit unions must also
conduct background checks of employees.
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\31\ 12 CFR 748, App. B.
\32\ The Board notes that insured credit unions may extend a
conditional offer of employment contingent on the completion of a
background check satisfactory to the credit union to determine if
the applicant is barred under section 205(d).
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Proposed Amendments to Sec. 701.14 on Change in Official or Senior
Executive Officer in Credit Unions That Are Newly Chartered or Are in
Troubled Condition
In addition to the prohibition on certain individuals participating
in the conduct of the affairs of a credit union included in section
205(d), the FCU Act also sets forth conditions under which certain
insured credit unions must notify the NCUA in writing of any proposed
changes in its board of directors, committee members, or senior
executive staff (section 212).\33\ The Board implements section 212
through Sec. 701.14 of its rules.\34\ Section 701.14 requires
generally that insured credit unions that are newly chartered or
troubled file notice with the NCUA before adding, replacing, or
changing the duties of a board or committee member or a senior
executive officer. The Board has not substantively amended Sec. 701.14
since 2012 when the Board revised the definition of troubled
condition.\35\ The proposed rule would make minor amendments to Sec.
701.14 and would clarify when a notice is required, how the NCUA would
process the notice, and what information must be included in the NCUA's
notice of disapproval to the applicant.
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\33\ 12 U.S.C. 1790a.
\34\ 12 CFR 701.14.
\35\ 77 FR 45285 (July 31, 2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, the proposed rule would clarify when notice is required.
Currently, Sec. 701.14 specifies that notice is required whenever
there is ``any addition or replacement of a member of the board of
directors or committee member or the employment or change in
responsibilities of an individual to a position of senior executive
officer.'' NCUA staff has received questions on whether notice is
required when a member of the board or a committee moves to another
position, such as when an existing board member switches to the board
chair position. For clarity, the proposed rule would specify that a
credit union must provide notice when adding or replacing any member of
its board of directors or committees, employing any person as a senior
executive officer of the credit union, or changing the responsibilities
of a board member, committee member, or a senior executive officer so
that the person would assume a different position. The Board solicits
comment on whether this proposed change provides clarity or increases
burden on credit unions.
Second, the proposed rule would increase the amount of time the
NCUA has to initially review a notice. Currently, in Sec.
701.14(c)(3)(iii), the NCUA has 10 calendar days after receiving the
notice to inform the credit union that the notice is complete or that
additional information is needed. The 10-day notification requirement
is not specified in the statute, and NCUA staff has found the 10-day
timeframe difficult to meet, as additional information to analyze the
request may be required. The Board does not believe that the additional
5 calendar days would unduly delay the start or change in position of
board members, committee members, or senior executive officers.
However, the Board solicits comments on whether insured credit unions
believe this change would pose any significant operational burden, in
addition to the general solicitation for comments included in this
proposed rule.
The proposed rule would also specify that Regional Director and
ONES Director communications under Sec. 701.14 may be done through
email. This is not a substantive change but rather a clarification of
existing practices and common use of electronic communications in time-
sensitive matters.
Finally, the proposed rule would explicitly state that the notice
of disapproval will identify the reason(s) for the denial. On occasion,
when appealing such a denial, the NCUA has received complaints that
applicants were not provided sufficient information in the notice of
disapproval about the reason for the decision. Appellants have
expressed frustrations that they could not adequately support their
appeal without sufficient information on the rationale for the NCUA's
decision. The Board believes any notice of disapproval should
explicitly state the reason(s) for denial and has included clarifying
language in the proposed rule.
Other Relevant Authorities on Prohibitions
Under section 206(i) of the FCU Act (section 206(i)), the Board is
authorized to suspend or prohibit an IAP from further participation in
the conduct of the affairs of any credit union if: (1) an IAP is
charged in any information, indictment, or complaint with a crime
involving dishonesty or breach of trust which is punishable by
imprisonment for a term exceeding 1 year under state or federal law or
certain specific violations of federal criminal law relating to anti-
money laundering provisions; and (2) continued service or participation
by the IAP may pose a threat to the interests of the credit union's
members or may threaten to impair public confidence in the credit
union.\36\ Despite the similar language between section 206(i) and
section 205(d), the FHBA did not make similar amendments to section
206(i) as were made to section 205(d). Section 206(i) is narrower in
scope than section 205(d), as it applies to current IAPs and requires
an additional showing by the agency to suspend or prohibit an IAP.
Because the FHBA did not amend section 206(i), the Board retains
statutory authority to suspend or prohibit an IAP for all crimes
involving dishonesty or breach of trust, provided that the IAP's
continued service or participation may pose a threat to the interests
of the credit union's members or may threaten to impair public
confidence in the credit union.
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\36\ 12 U.S.C. 1786(i)(1)(A).
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The Board also notes that the Secure and Fair Enforcement for
Mortgage Licensing Act of 2008 (commonly known as the S.A.F.E. Act)
mandates a nationwide licensing and registration system for residential
mortgage loan originators.\37\ The S.A.F.E. Act includes certain
requirements related to minimum standards for state-licensed loan
originators--including those working at credit union service
organizations--and related to felonies involving dishonesty and breach
of trust.\38\ Additionally, regulations implementing the S.A.F.E. Act
impose an obligation on depository institutions to adopt certain
policies, including a requirement that the depository institution
review employee criminal background reports, including the criminal
background standards for employees in section 206(i) of the FCU Act, 12
U.S.C. 1786(i). The Board notes
[[Page 76710]]
these requirements are not included in the FHBA and remain applicable
to credit unions and credit union service organizations.
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\37\ 12 U.S.C. 5101 et seq.
\38\ 12 U.S.C. 5104.
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Similarly, under the Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2020, individuals
who are found to have committed an ``egregious violation'' of the Bank
Secrecy Act or its rules are barred from serving on a U.S. financial
institution's board of directors for 10 years from the date of
conviction or judgment.\39\ The FHBA does not affect this separate
statutory prohibition, and it remains applicable to credit unions.
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\39\ Public Law 116-283, codified at 31 U.S.C. 5321(g).
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III. Request for Comments
The Board seeks comments on all aspects of this proposed rule and
its approach to section 205(d) and more specifically on the questions
that follow.
1. Scope. Should the final rule include additional information on
who may fall within the scope of section 205(d), including persons who
participate in the conduct of the affairs of an insured credit union?
2. Offense date. Section 205(d)(4)(A)(i) provides for an exception
for an offense if ``it has been 7 years or more since the offense
occurred.'' \40\ There is a similar provision that removes from the
definition of ``criminal offense involving dishonesty'' ``a misdemeanor
criminal offense committed more than 1 year before the date on which an
individual files a consent application, excluding any period of
incarceration[.]'' \41\ Historically, the NCUA's position has been that
actions do not amount to a covered ``offense,'' for section 205(d)
purposes, until there has been either a conviction via a guilty plea,
finding of guilt, or an entry into a pretrial-diversion program. This
is because culpability and responsibility for the actions do not attach
until one of those events occurs.\42\ However, for purposes of
evaluating whether the 7-year or 1-year exception applies, the Board
must evaluate if it has been 7 years or more since the ``offense
occurred'' or if an ``offense [was] committed more than one year before
the date on which an individual files a consent application, excluding
any period of incarceration.'' The Board proposes to interpret the
phrases ``offense occurred'' and ``offenses committed'' as the ``last
date of the underlying misconduct'' given the text of the statute. In
instances with multiple offenses, ``offense occurred'' or ``offense
committed'' would mean the last date of any of the underlying offenses.
However, the Board acknowledges that there may be other, supportable
interpretations of this phrase. For example, the Board is aware of
legislative history indicating that the timeframes established by the
FHBA were chosen because of their relation to an individual's
likelihood of rehabilitation and that an individual's rehabilitation
likely begins only with conviction or program entry, rather than the
date of their misconduct. As such, the Board seeks public comment on
the following topic: Is the Board's interpretation of the phrases
``offense occurred'' and ``offense committed'' as the ``last date of
underlying misconduct'' appropriate, or are there other interpretations
the Board should consider? What support do commenters have for other
interpretations given the language of the statute?
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\40\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(A).
\41\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(6)(B)(iii).
\42\ See 84 FR 65907, 65917 (Dec. 2, 2019) (``There must be a
conviction of record. Section 205(d) does not apply to arrests,
pending cases not brought to trial, acquittals, or any conviction
which has been reversed on appeal.'')
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3. ``Sentencing occurred.'' The FHBA exempts offenses committed by
individuals 21 years of age or younger if it has been more than 30
months since the sentencing occurred.\43\ However, the statute does not
define the phrase ``sentencing occurred.'' The Board proposes to
interpret ``sentencing occurred'' to mean the date on which a court
imposed the sentence, not the date on which all conditions of
sentencing were completed. The Board seeks public comment on the
following topic: Is the Board's proposed interpretation of the phrase
``sentencing occurred'' appropriate?
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\43\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(A)(ii).
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4. Foreign convictions. Section 205(d) applies to any person who
has been convicted of any criminal offense involving dishonesty or a
breach of trust, or has agreed to enter into a pretrial diversion or
similar program in connection with a prosecution for such offense.\44\
The phrase ``criminal offense involving dishonesty'' is defined in the
statute but is silent as to whether it includes convictions and
pretrial diversions for criminal offenses prosecuted by foreign
authorities (foreign convictions).\45\ The statute does not define
``offense involving . . . breach of trust.'' The FDIC's position has
been that foreign convictions and pretrial diversions are included
within the scope of section 19. The Board believes it is reasonable to
follow and adopt the FDIC's long-held position given the statutory
mandate for consistency and the FDIC's greater experience with section
19 consent applications. In addition, there are strong public policy
rationales for prohibiting a person who has been convicted of certain
foreign criminal offenses (or entered into a pretrial diversion program
in connection with such an offense) from becoming or continuing as an
IAP or participating in the affairs of an insured credit union.
However, the Board acknowledges that there may be case law, statutory
construction, and other arguments that support a reading of section
205(d) that would exclude foreign convictions and pretrial diversions
from the scope of section 205(d). Therefore, the Board seeks public
comment on the following topic: Does section 205(d) encompass foreign
convictions and pretrial diversions? What support do commenters have
for their position?
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\44\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(1).
\45\ See 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(6).
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5. Expungements, sealings, and dismissals. The FHBA establishes a
new statutory exemption for expunged, sealed, and dismissed convictions
(collectively, ``expungements'').\46\ The statutory language does not
mention expungements ``by operation of law''--as opposed to through a
court order. The proposed rule incorporates the new statutory language
but also includes a broad interpretation of ``expungement'' to
encompass covered offenses that have been expunged by operation of law.
The Board seeks public comment on the following topic: Given the new
statutory exemption for expunged offenses, is the Board's more
expansive proposed interpretation of expungement--which term includes
records that have been expunged by application of law--appropriate?
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\46\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(4)(B).
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6. Offenses involving controlled substances. The FHBA states that
an ``offense involving the possession of controlled substances'' is not
included within the definition of ``criminal offense involving
dishonesty'' and, therefore, are not subject to the section 205(d)
prohibition.\47\ The proposed rule includes this definitional exclusion
and notes that the Board interprets the phrase ``offenses involving the
possession of controlled substances'' to include, at a minimum, the
offenses of simple possession of controlled substances and possession
with intent to distribute controlled substances. This interpretation
would mark an expansion from IRPS 19-1. At the same time, this
interpretation would track the statutory language of ``offenses
involving the possession of controlled substances'' by encompassing the
offense of possession
[[Page 76711]]
with intent to distribute controlled substances. The Board seeks public
comment on the following topic: Is the Board's interpretation of
``offense[s] involving the possession of controlled substances'' as
applying, at a minimum, to simple possession and possession with intent
to distribute appropriate?
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\47\ 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(6)(B)(iii)(II).
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7. De minimis offenses. The FHBA states that the NCUA may exempt by
rule certain de minimis offenses from the section 205(d) prohibition.
The NCUA considers de minimis offenses to be covered offenses for which
a consent application is not required because the NCUA deems the
application automatically granted. The NCUA has previously promulgated
IRPS 19-1, which specified de minimis offenses under section 205(d).
However, given this new statutory language, the Board is reevaluating
its current approach to de minimis offenses. Accordingly, the Board
seeks public comment on the following topic: Is the Board's current
approach to de minimis offenses appropriate? Are there additional
offenses that the Board should consider de minimis under section 19?
Commenters should provide support for such a designation.
8. Conforming changes. The Board also requests comments on other
conforming changes or updates that it should make to its regulations or
guidance to implement the new statutory provisions. As noted, in the
final rule, the Board may adopt additional conforming amendments to its
regulations if it finds that other provisions should be changed solely
to indicate the new, more limited scope of the section 205(d)
prohibitions. The Board would not anticipate making substantive changes
to these provisions that would create new standards beyond those in the
statutory amendments.
IV. Regulatory Procedures
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) applies to rulemakings in
which an agency creates a new or amends existing information collection
requirements.\48\ For purposes of the PRA, an information collection
requirement may take the form of a reporting, recordkeeping, or a
third-party disclosure requirement. The NCUA may not conduct or sponsor
and the respondent is not required to respond to an information
collection, unless it displays a valid Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ 44 U.S.C. 3507(d); 5 CFR part 1320.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule would extend greater relief than what is
currently available to certain individuals with prior convictions
seeking employment with an insured credit union, thereby eliminating
the need to submit consent applications for certain offenses,
particularly older or expunged convictions, prior misdemeanors, drug
possession offenses, and other lesser offenses. The proposed rule
should reduce the number of respondents applying for consent, but it
may also increase the number of applications because of a renewed
awareness of the statutory prohibition. Thus, the estimated number of
respondents applying for consent would remain at one. The proposed rule
continues to require credit unions to document when an application is
not required. This recordkeeping requirement is minimal and only
impacts those credit unions or individuals who would otherwise have
submitted an application for consent.
These program changes would revise the information collection
requirement currently approved OMB control number 3133-0203, as
follows:
Title of Information Collection: IRPS 19-1, Guidance Regarding
Prohibitions Imposed by Section 205(d) of the Federal Credit Union Act.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 4.
Estimated Number of Responses per Respondent: 1.
Estimated Annual Frequency of Response: 1.
Estimated Hours per Response: 0.75.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 3.
Affected Public: Private Sector: Not-for-profit institutions;
Individual or Household.
The NCUA invites comments on: (a) whether the collections of
information are necessary for the proper performance of the agencies'
functions, including whether the information has practical utility; (b)
the accuracy of the estimates of the burden of the information
collections, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions
used; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; (d) ways to minimize the burden of the
information collections on respondents, including through the use of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology; and (e) estimates of capital or start-up costs and costs of
operation, maintenance, and purchase of services to provide
information.
All comments are a matter of public record. Comments regarding the
information collection requirements should be sent to (1) Jennifer
Harrison, NCUA PRA Clearance Officer, National Credit Union
Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314, or email
at [email protected] and the (2) Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Attention: Desk
Officer for NCUA, New Executive Office Building, Room 10235,
Washington, DC 20503, or email at [email protected].
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires that when
an agency issues a proposed rule or a final rule pursuant to the
Administrative Procedure Act or another law, the agency must prepare a
regulatory flexibility analysis that meets the requirements of the RFA
and publish such analysis in the Federal Register. Specifically, the
RFA normally requires agencies to describe the impact of a rulemaking
on small entities by providing a regulatory impact analysis. For
purposes of the RFA, the Board considers credit unions with assets less
than $100 million to be small entities.\49\ A regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required, however, if the agency certifies that the
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities and publishes its certification and a short,
explanatory statement in the Federal Register together with the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ NCUA IRPS 15-1, 80 FR 57512 (Sept. 24, 2015).
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The Board does not believe the proposed rule would have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In the period from 2019 through 2023, the NCUA received 4 consent
applications. This averages to one application a year. Therefore, on
average, only about one small entity--at most--would be affected by the
proposed rule annually.
As discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the proposed
rule would align the NCUA's regulations with the FHBA's provisions and
more closely align the NCUA's section 205(d) regulations with those of
other federal financial regulators. Most of the proposed changes were
precipitated by the FHBA--which was effective immediately upon
passage--and the proposed rule aligns the NCUA's regulations with these
elements of the FHBA; therefore, most of the associated changes in the
proposed rule will have no direct effect on individuals or credit
unions. Further, since the NCUA estimates that on average approximately
one NCUA-insured institution could be affected by the proposed rule
annually, any direct effects realized because of the proposed rule are
likely to be small and
[[Page 76712]]
affect a relatively small number of entities.
In light of the foregoing, the NCUA certifies that the proposed
rule would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The NCUA invites comments on all aspects of
the supporting information provided in this section. In particular,
would this proposed rule have any significant effects on small entities
that the NCUA has not identified?
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 encourages independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on state and local interests. The
NCUA, an independent regulatory agency as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5),
voluntarily complies with the executive order to adhere to fundamental
federalism principles.
This proposed rule would apply to all insured credit unions,
including federally insured, state-chartered credit unions. The Board
has determined that the proposed amendments would not have a
substantial direct effect on the states, on the connection between the
national government and the states, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government. Further, the
proposed rule would implement a statutory amendment, and the NCUA does
not have discretion in implementing the statutory changes to section
205(d). In particular, the Board does not believe that these changes
will affect its existing agreements and division of supervisory
responsibilities with state regulatory agencies. The Board expects to
continue to coordinate with these agencies as appropriate in carrying
out its responsibilities under section 205(d) and related provisions.
Therefore, the Board has determined that this rule does not constitute
a policy that has federalism implications for purposes of the executive
order.
Assessment of Federal Regulations and Policies on Families
The NCUA has determined that this proposed rule may affect family
well-being positively within the meaning of section 654 of the Treasury
and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999, Public Law 105-277,
112 Stat. 2681 (1998). In particular, the NCUA has reviewed the
criteria specified in section 654(c)(1) of that act, by evaluating
whether this proposed regulatory action (1) impacts the stability or
safety of the family, particularly in terms of marital commitment; (2)
impacts the authority of parents in the education, nurture, and
supervision of their children; (3) helps the family perform its
functions; (4) affects disposable income or poverty of families and
children; (5) only financially impacts families, if at all, to the
extent such impacts are justified; (6) may be carried out by State or
local government or by the family; or (7) establishes a policy
concerning the relationship between the behavior and personal
responsibility of youth and the norms of society. Under this statute,
if the agency determines the proposed regulation may negatively affect
family well-being, then the agency must provide an adequate rationale
for its implementation.
The proposed rule would implement legislative amendments that
increase employment opportunities for individuals with certain older or
minor criminal offenses involving dishonesty or breach of trust. These
increased employment opportunities may strengthen the stability of
families, help families perform their functions, and increase
disposable income. These changes are not likely to affect the rights of
parents in the education or nurture of their children. The changes call
for federal rather than state or local government action because the
legislation affects the federal statute governing all federally insured
credit unions. The Board also notes that it has limited discretion in
whether and how to implement the legislative amendments and thus cannot
substantially vary from the legislation. The Board has determined that
this proposed rule may affect family well-being positively within the
meaning of this statute.\50\ As with all aspects of the proposed rule,
commenters are invited to offer their opinion on this issue.
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\50\ Public Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1998).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Providing Accountability Through Transparency Act of 2023
The Providing Accountability Through Transparency Act of 2023 (5
U.S.C. 553(b)(4)) (Act) requires that a notice of proposed rulemaking
include the internet address of a summary of not more than 100 words in
length of a proposed rule, in plain language, that shall be posted on
the internet website under section 206(d) of the E-Government Act of
2002 (44 U.S.C. 3501 note) (commonly known as regulations.gov). The
Act, under its terms, applies to notices of proposed rulemaking and
does not expressly include other types of documents that the Board
publishes voluntarily for public comment, such as notices and interim-
final rules that request comment despite invoking ``good cause'' to
forgo such notice and public procedure. The Board, however, has elected
to address the Act's requirement in these types of documents in the
interests of administrative consistency and transparency.
In summary, the proposal would incorporate the ``Second Chance''
Interpretive Ruling and Policy Statement 19-1 and the Fair Hiring in
Banking Act into the NCUA's regulations. Section 205(d) of the Federal
Credit Union Act prohibits, except with the Board's prior written
consent, any person who has been convicted of certain criminal offenses
involving dishonesty or breach of trust, or who has entered into a
pretrial diversion or similar program in connection with a prosecution
for such an offense, from participating in the conduct of the affairs
of an insured credit union.
The proposal and the required summary can be found at https://www.regulations.gov.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 701
Administrative practice and procedure, Credit, Credit unions.
12 CFR Part 741
Bank deposit insurance, Credit unions, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
12 CFR Part 746
Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Credit unions,
Investigations.
12 CFR Part 748
Computer technology, Confidential business information, Credit
unions, internet, Personally identifiable information, Privacy,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Security measures.
12 CFR Part 752
Administrative practice and procedure.
By the NCUA Board on October 19, 2023.
Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks,
Secretary of the Board.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Board proposes to
amend 12 CFR chapter VII as follows:
PART 701-- ORGANIZATION AND OPERATION OF FEDERAL CREDIT UNIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 701 continues to read as follows:
[[Page 76713]]
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1752(5), 1755, 1756, 1757, 1758, 1759,
1761a, 1761b, 1766, 1767, 1782, 1784, 1785, 1786, 1787, 1788, 1789.
Section 701.6 is also authorized by 15 U.S.C. 3717. Section 701.31
is also authorized by 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 1981 and
3601-3610. Section 701.35 is also authorized by 42 U.S.C. 4311-4312.
0
2. In 701.14, revise paragraphs (c)(1), (c)(3)(iii), and the second
sentence in paragraph (e) as follows:
Sec. 701.14 Change in official or senior executive officer in credit
unions that are newly chartered or are in troubled condition.
(c) * * * (1) Prior Notice Requirement. An insured credit union
must give the NCUA written notice at least 30 days before the effective
date of adding or replacing any member of its board of directors or
committee member, employing any person as a senior executive officer of
the credit union, or changing the responsibilities of a board member,
committee member, or a senior executive officer so that the person
would assume a different position if:
(i) The credit union has been chartered for less than 2 years; or
(ii) The credit union meets the definition of troubled condition in
paragraph (b)(3) or (4) of this section.
* * * * *
(3) * * *
(iii) Processing. Within 15 calendar days after receiving the
notice, the Regional Director will inform the credit union either that
the notice is complete or that additional, specified information is
needed and must be submitted within 30 calendar days. If the initial
notice is complete, the Regional Director will issue a written decision
of approval or disapproval to the individual and the credit union
within 30 calendar days of receipt of the notice. If the initial notice
is not complete, the Regional Director will issue a written decision
within 30 calendar days of receipt of the original notice plus the
amount of time the credit union takes to provide the requested
additional information. If the additional information is not submitted
within 30 calendar days of the Regional Director's request, the
Regional Director may either disapprove the proposed individual or
review the notice based on the information provided. If the credit
union and the individual have submitted all requested information and
the Regional Director has not issued a written decision within the
applicable time period, the individual is approved. Regional Director
communications may be done through electronic mail.
* * * * *
(e) * * * The Notice of Disapproval will identify the reason(s) for
the denial and advise the parties of their rights to request
reconsideration from the Regional Director and/or file an appeal with
the NCUA Board in accordance with the procedures set forth in 12 CFR
part 746, subpart B.
0
3. In the Official Commentary to Appendix A to part 701, under
``Article V. Elections,'' revise paragraph i.(b) to read as follows:
Appendix A to Part 701--Federal Credit Union Bylaws
Official NCUA Commentary--Federal Credit Union Bylaws
Article V. Elections
* * * * *
i. Eligibility Requirements: * * *
(b) The individual cannot have been convicted of a crime covered
under section 205(d) of the Federal Credit Union Act (12 U.S.C.
1785(d)) unless the NCUA Board has waived the prohibition for the
conviction; and
* * * * *
PART 741--REQUIREMENTS OF INSURANCE
0
4. The authority citation for part 741 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1757, 1766(a), 1781-1790, and 1790d; 31
U.S.C. 3717.
0
5. In Sec. 741.3, revise the second sentence of paragraph (c) as
follows:
Sec. 741.3 Criteria.
(c) Fitness of management. * * * No person shall serve as a
director, officer, committee member, or employee of an insured credit
union who has been convicted of a crime covered under section 205(d) of
the Federal Credit Union Act (12 U.S.C. 1785(d)), except with the
written consent of the Board.
* * * * *
PART 746--APPEALS PROCEDURES
0
6. The authority citation for part 746 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1766, 1787, and 1789.
Sec. 746.201 [Amended]
0
7. In Sec. 746.201, in paragraph (c), add ``752.11(b),'' between
``745.201(c),'' and ``subpart J to part 747 of this chapter,''.
PART 748--SECURITY PROGRAM, SUSPICIOUS TRANSACTIONS, CATASTROPHIC
ACTS, CYBER INCIDENTS, AND BANK SECRECY ACT COMPLIANCE
0
8. The authority citation for part 748 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1766(a), 1786(b)(1), 1786(q), 1789(a)(11);
15 U.S.C. 6801-6809; 31 U.S.C. 5311 and 5318.
0
9. Revise footnote 7 in appendix B to part 748 to read as follows.
Appendix B to Part 748--Guidance on Response Programs for Unauthorized
Access to Member Information and Member Notice
\7\ Credit unions must also conduct background checks of
employees to ensure that the credit union does not violate 12 U.S.C.
1785(d), which prohibits a credit union from hiring an individual
convicted of certain criminal offenses or who is subject to a
prohibition order under 12 U.S.C. 1786(g).
* * * * *
0
10. Add part 752 to read as follows:
PART 752--CONSENT TO SERVICE OF PERSONS CONVICTED OF, OR WHO HAVE
PROGRAM ENTRIES FOR, CERTAIN CRIMINAL OFFENSES
Sec.
752.1 What is section 205(d) of the FCU Act?
752.2 Who is covered by section 205(d)?
752.3 What offenses are covered under section 205(d)?
752.4 What constitutes a conviction under section 205(d)?
752.5 What constitutes a pretrial diversion or similar program under
section 205(d)?
752.6 What are the types of consent applications that can be filed?
752.7 When must a consent application be filed?
752.8 De minimis offenses.
752.9 How to file a consent application.
752.10 How a consent application is evaluated.
752.11 What will the NCUA do if the consent application is denied?
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1785(d).
Sec. 752.1 What is section 205(d) of the Federal Credit Union Act?
(a) This subpart covers consent applications under section 205(d)
of the Federal Credit Union Act (FCU Act), 12 U.S.C. 1785(d). The NCUA
refers to such applications as ``consent applications.'' Under section
205(d), any person who has been convicted of any criminal offense
involving dishonesty or breach of trust, or has agreed to enter into a
pretrial diversion or similar program (program entry) in connection
with a prosecution for such offense (collectively, covered offenses),
may not become, or continue as, an institution-affiliated party (IAP)
of an insured credit union; or otherwise participate, directly or
indirectly, in the conduct of the affairs of any insured credit union
without the prior written consent of the NCUA. Section 205(d) imposes a
ten-year ban against the Board granting consent for a person convicted
of certain crimes enumerated in Title 18 of the United States Code. In
order for the Board to grant consent during the ten-year period, the
Board must file a
[[Page 76714]]
motion with, and obtain the approval of, the sentencing court.
(b) In addition, the law prohibits an insured credit union from
permitting such a person to engage in any conduct or to continue any
relationship prohibited by section 205(d). Insured credit unions must
therefore make a reasonable, documented, inquiry to verify an
applicant's history to ensure that a person who has a conviction or
program entry covered by the provisions of section 205(d) is not hired
or permitted to participate in its affairs without the written consent
of the NCUA issued under this subpart. Insured credit unions may extend
a conditional offer of employment contingent on the completion of a
background check satisfactory to the credit union to determine if the
applicant is prohibited under section 205(d), but the applicant may not
work for, be employed by, or otherwise participate in the affairs of
the insured credit union until the credit union has determined that the
applicant is not prohibited under section 205(d).
(c) If there is a conviction or program entry covered by the
prohibitions of section 205(d), a consent application under this
subpart must be filed seeking the NCUA's consent to become, or to
continue as, an IAP; or to otherwise participate, directly or
indirectly, in the affairs of the insured credit union. The consent
application must be filed, and consented to, prior to serving in any of
the foregoing capacities unless such consent application is not
required under the subsequent provisions of this subpart. The purpose
of a consent application is to provide the applicant an opportunity to
demonstrate that, notwithstanding the prohibition, a person is fit to
participate in the conduct of the affairs of an insured credit union
without posing a risk to its safety and soundness or impairing public
confidence in that credit union. The burden is upon the applicant to
establish that the consent application warrants approval.
Sec. 752.2 Who is covered by section 205(d)?
(a)(1) Persons covered by section 205(d) include IAPs, as defined
by 12 U.S.C. 1786(r), and others who are participants in the conduct of
the affairs of an insured credit union. Therefore, all directors,
officers, and employees of an insured credit union who fall within the
scope of section 205(d), including de facto employees, as determined by
the NCUA based upon generally applicable standards of employment law,
will also be subject to section 205(d).
(2) Whether other persons who are not IAPs are covered depends upon
their degree of influence or control over the management or affairs of
an insured credit union. Those who exercise major policymaking
functions of an insured credit union are deemed participants in the
affairs of that institution and covered by section 205(d). Similarly,
directors and officers of subsidiaries or joint ventures of an insured
credit union will be covered if they participate in the affairs of the
insured credit union or are in a position to influence or control the
management or affairs of the insured credit union. Typically, an
independent contractor does not have a relationship with the insured
credit union other than the activity for which the credit union has
contracted. However, an independent contractor who influences or
controls the management or affairs of the insured credit union would be
covered by section 205(d).
(b) The term person, for purposes of section 205(d), means an
individual and does not include a corporation, firm, or other business
entity.
Sec. 752.3 Which offenses qualify as ``Covered Offenses'' under
section 205(d)?
(a) General definitions. The conviction or program entry must be
for a criminal offense involving dishonesty or breach of trust.
(1) The term criminal offense involving dishonesty--
(i) Means an offense under which an individual, directly or
indirectly--
(A) Cheats or defrauds; or
(B) Wrongfully takes property belonging to another in violation of
a criminal statute;
(ii) Includes an offense that federal, state, or local law defines
as dishonest, or
for which dishonesty is an element of the offense; and
(iii) Does not include--
(A) A misdemeanor criminal offense committed more than 1 year
before the date on which an individual files a consent application,
excluding any period of incarceration; or
(B) An offense involving the possession of controlled substances.
At a minimum, this exclusion applies to criminal offenses involving the
simple possession of a controlled substance and possession with intent
to distribute a controlled substance. This exclusion may also apply to
other drug-related offenses depending on the statutory elements of the
offenses or from court determinations that the statutory provisions of
the offenses involve dishonesty or breach of trust as noted in
paragraph (b) of this section. Potential applicants may contact their
appropriate NCUA Regional Office or the Office of National Examinations
and Supervision, if applicable, if they have questions about whether
their offenses are covered under section 205(d).
(iv) The term offense committed in paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(A) means
the last date of the underlying misconduct. In instances with multiple
offenses, offense committed means the last date of any of the
underlying offenses.
(2) The term breach of trust means a wrongful act, use,
misappropriation, or omission with respect to any property or fund that
has been committed to a person in a fiduciary or official capacity, or
the misuse of one's official or fiduciary position to engage in a
wrongful act, use, misappropriation, or omission.
(b) Dishonesty or breach of trust. Whether a crime involves
dishonesty or breach of trust will be determined from the statutory
elements of the offense itself or from court determinations that the
statutory provisions of the offense involve dishonesty or breach of
trust.
(c) Certain older offenses excluded. -- (1) General. Section 205(d)
does not apply to an offense if--
(i) it has been 7 years or more since the offense occurred; or
(ii) the individual was incarcerated with respect to the offense,
and it has been 5 years or more since the individual was released from
incarceration.
(iii) The NCUA interprets the term ``offense occurred'' to mean the
last date of the underlying misconduct. In instances with multiple
covered offenses, ``offense occurred'' means the last date of any of
the underlying offenses.
(2) Offenses committed by individuals 21 years of age or younger.
For individuals who committed an offense when they were 21 years of age
or younger, section 205(d) shall not apply to the offense if it has
been more than 30 months since the sentencing occurred. The NCUA
interprets ``sentencing occurred'' to mean the date on which a court
imposed the sentence, not the date on which all conditions of
sentencing were completed.
(3) Limitation. This paragraph (c) shall not apply to an offense
described under 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2).
(d) Designated lesser offenses excluded. Section 205(d) does not
apply to the following offenses, if 1 or more years has passed since
the applicable conviction or program entry: using fake identification;
shoplifting; trespassing; fare evasion; and driving with an expired
license or tag.
(e) Foreign convictions. The NCUA considers individuals who are
convicted of or enter into a pretrial diversion program for a criminal
offense involving
[[Page 76715]]
dishonesty or breach of trust in foreign jurisdictions to be subject to
section 205(d), unless the offense is otherwise excluded by this
subpart.
Sec. 752.4 What constitutes a conviction under section 205(d)?
(a) Convictions requiring a consent application. There must be a
conviction of record. Section 205(d) does not cover arrests or pending
cases not brought to trial, unless the person has a program entry as
set out in Sec. 752.5. Section 205(d) does not cover acquittals or any
conviction that has been reversed on appeal, unless the reversal was
for the purpose of re-sentencing. A conviction with regard to which an
appeal is pending requires a consent application. A conviction for
which a pardon has been granted will require a consent application.
(b) Convictions not requiring a consent application. When an
individual is charged with a covered offense and, in the absence of a
program entry as set out in Sec. 752.5, is subsequently convicted of
an offense that is not a covered offense, the conviction is not subject
to section 205(d).
(c) Expungement, dismissal, and sealing. A conviction shall not be
considered a conviction of record and shall not require a consent
application if--
(1) there is an order of expungement, sealing, or dismissal that
has been issued in regard to the conviction in connection with such
offense, or if a conviction has been otherwise expunged, sealed, or
dismissed by operation of law; and
(2) it is intended by the language in the order itself, or in the
legislative provisions under which the order was issued, or in other
legislative provisions, that the conviction shall be destroyed or
sealed from the individual's state, tribal, or federal record, even if
exceptions allow the conviction to be considered for certain character
and fitness evaluation purposes.
(d) Youthful offenders. An adjudication by a court against a person
as a ``youthful offender'' (or similar term) under any youth-offender
law applicable to minors as defined by state law, or any judgment as a
``juvenile delinquent'' by any court having jurisdiction over minors as
defined by state law, does not require a consent application. Such an
adjudication does not constitute a matter covered under section 205(d)
and is not a conviction or program entry for determining the
applicability of Sec. 752.8.
Sec. 752.5 What constitutes a pretrial diversion or similar program
under section 205(d)?
(a) The term ``pretrial diversion or similar program'' (program
entry) means a program characterized by a suspension or eventual
dismissal or reversal of charges or criminal prosecution upon agreement
by the accused to restitution, drug or alcohol rehabilitation, anger
management, or community service. Whether the outcome of a case
constitutes a program entry is determined by relevant Federal, State,
or local law, and, if not so designated under applicable law, then the
determination of whether a disposition is a program entry will be made
by the Board on a case-by-case basis.
(b) When a covered offense either is reduced by a program entry to
an offense that would otherwise not be covered by section 205(d) or is
dismissed upon successful completion of a program entry, the covered
offense remains a covered offense for purposes of section 205(d). The
covered offense will require a consent application unless it is de
minimis as provided by Sec. 752.8 of this subpart.
(c) Expungements, dismissals, or sealings of program entries will
be treated the same as those for convictions.
Sec. 752.6 What are the types of consent applications that can be
filed?
(a) The NCUA will accept consent applications from--
(1) an individual; or
(2) an insured credit union applying on behalf of an individual.
(b) An individual or an insured credit union may file consent
applications at separate times. Under either approach, the consent
application(s) must be filed with the appropriate NCUA Regional Office,
or the Office of National Examinations and Supervision, as required by
this subpart.
Sec. 752.7 When may a consent application be filed?
(a) Except for situations in which no consent application is
required under section 205(d) and this subpart, a consent application
must be filed when there is a conviction by a court of competent
jurisdiction for a covered offense by any adult or minor treated as an
adult, or when such person has a program entry regarding that offense.
Before a consent application may be filed, all of the sentencing
requirements associated with a conviction, or conditions imposed by the
program entry, including but not limited to, imprisonment, fines,
condition of rehabilitation, and probation requirements, must be
completed, and the case must be considered final by the procedures of
the applicable jurisdiction.
(b) The NCUA's consent application forms as well as additional
information concerning section 205(d) can be accessed at the NCUA's
Regional Offices or the Office of National Examinations and
Supervision, if applicable, or on the NCUA's website.
Sec. 752.8 De minimis offenses
(a) In general. Approval is automatically granted, and a consent
application will not be required where all of the following de minimis
criteria are met.
(1) The individual has been convicted of, or has program entries
for, no more than 2 covered offenses, including those subject to
paragraph (b) of this section; and for each covered offense, all of the
sentencing requirements associated with the conviction, or conditions
imposed by the program entry, have been completed (the sentence- or
program-completion requirement does not apply under paragraph (b)(2) of
this section);
(2) For each covered offense, the individual could have been
sentenced to a term of confinement in a correctional facility of 3
years or less and/or a fine of $2,500 or less, and the individual
actually served 3 days or less of jail time for each covered offense.
(i) Jail time is calculated based on the time an individual spent
incarcerated as a punishment or a sanction--not as pretrial detention--
and does not include probation or parole where an individual was
restricted to a particular jurisdiction or was required to report
occasionally to an individual or a specific location. Jail time
includes confinement to a psychiatric treatment center in lieu of a
jail, prison, or house of correction on mental-competency grounds. The
definition is not intended to include either of the following:
(ii) Persons who are restricted to a substance-abuse treatment
program facility for part or all of the day; and
(iii) Persons who are ordered to attend outpatient psychiatric
treatment.
(3) If there are 2 convictions or program entries for a covered
offense, each conviction or program entry was entered at least 3 years
prior to the date a consent application would otherwise be required,
except as provided in paragraph (b)(1) of this section; and
(4) Each covered offense was not committed against an insured
depository institution or insured credit union.
(b) Other types of offenses for which the de minimis exception
applies and no consent application is required--(1)
[[Page 76716]]
Age of person at time of covered offense. If there are 2 convictions or
program entries for a covered offense, and the actions that resulted in
both convictions or program entries all occurred when the individual
was 21 years of age or younger, then the de minimis criteria in
paragraph (a)(3) of this section shall be met if the convictions or
program entries were entered at least 18 months prior to the date a
consent application would otherwise be required.
(2) Convictions or program entries for insufficient funds checks.
Convictions or program entries of record based on the writing of
``bad'' or insufficient funds check(s) shall be considered de minimis
offenses under this provision if the following conditions apply:
(i) The aggregate total face value of all ``bad'' or insufficient
funds check(s) cited across all the conviction(s) or program entry(ies)
for ``bad'' or insufficient funds checks is $2,000 or less;
(ii) No insured depository institution or insured credit union was
a payee on any of the ``bad'' or insufficient funds checks that were
the basis of the conviction(s) or program entry(ies); and
(iii) The individual has no more than 1 other de minimis offense
under this section.
(3) Convictions or program entries for small-dollar, simple theft.
Convictions or program entries based on the simple theft of goods,
services, or currency (or other monetary instrument) shall be
considered de minimis offenses under this provision if the following
conditions apply:
(i) The value of the currency, goods, or services taken is $1,000
or less;
(ii) The theft was not committed against an insured depository
institution or insured credit union;
(iii) The individual has no more than 1 other de minimis offense
under this section; and
(iv) If there are 2 de minimis offenses under this section, each
conviction or program entry was entered at least 3 years prior to the
date a consent application would otherwise be required, or at least 18
months prior to the date a consent application would otherwise be
required if the actions that resulted in the conviction or program
entry all occurred when the individual was 21 years of age or younger.
(v) Simple theft excludes burglary, forgery, robbery, identity
theft, and fraud.
(c) Fidelity bond coverage and disclosure to institutions. Any
person who meets the criteria under this section shall be covered by a
fidelity bond to the same extent as others in similar positions, and
shall disclose the presence of the conviction(s) or program entry(ies)
to all insured credit unions in the affairs of which he or she intends
to participate.
(d) Non-qualifying convictions or program entries. No conviction or
program entry for a violation of the Title 18 sections set out in 12
U.S.C. 1785(d)(2) can qualify under any of the de minimis exceptions
set out in this section.
Sec. 752.9 How to file a consent application.
Forms and instructions should be obtained from the NCUA's website
(www.ncua.gov), and the consent application(s) must be filed with the
appropriate NCUA Regional Director. A consent application may be filed
by an individual and by an insured credit union on behalf of an
individual. The appropriate Regional Office for a credit union-
sponsored application is the office covering the state where the
insured credit union's home office is located, or the Office of
National Examinations and Supervision. The appropriate Regional Office
for an individual consent application is the office covering the state
where the person resides. States covered by each NCUA Regional Office
are listed in section 790.2 of this chapter.
Sec. 752.10 How a consent application is evaluated.
(a) Criminal history records. In reviewing a consent application,
the NCUA will--
(1) primarily rely on the criminal history record of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation; and
(2) provide such record to the applicant to review for accuracy.
(b) Certified copies. The NCUA will not require an applicant to
provide certified copies of criminal history records unless the NCUA
determines that there is a clear and compelling justification to
require additional information to verify the accuracy of the criminal
history record of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
(c) Factors for determination. The ultimate determinations in
assessing a consent application are whether the person has demonstrated
their fitness to participate in the conduct of the affairs of an
insured credit union, and whether the affiliation, or participation by
the person in the conduct of the affairs of the credit union may
constitute a threat to the safety and soundness of the credit union or
the interests of its members or threaten to impair public confidence in
the credit union.
(d) Individualized assessment. When evaluating consent
applications, the NCUA will conduct an individualized assessment that
will consider:
(1) Whether the conviction or program entry is subject to section
205(d) and the specific nature and circumstances of the offense;
(2) Whether the participation directly or indirectly by the person
in any manner in the conduct of the affairs of the insured credit union
constitutes a threat to the safety and soundness of the credit union or
the interests of its members or threatens to impair public confidence
in the credit union;
(3) Evidence of rehabilitation including the applicant's age at the
time of the conviction or program entry, the time that has elapsed
since the conviction or program entry, the relationship of the
individual's offense to the responsibilities of the applicable
position;
(4) The individual's employment history, letters of recommendation,
certificates documenting participation in substance-abuse programs,
successful participating in job preparation and educational programs,
and other relevant evidence;
(5) The ability of management of the insured credit union to
supervise and control the person's activities;
(6) The applicability of the insured credit union's fidelity bond
coverage to the person; and
(7) For state-chartered, federally insured credit unions, the
opinion or position of the state regulator; and
(8) Any additional factors in the specific case that appear
relevant to the consent application.
(e) Underlying merits not at issue. The question of whether a
person, who was convicted of a crime or who agreed to a program entry,
was guilty of that crime shall not be at issue in a proceeding under
this subpart or under 12 CFR part 746, subpart B.
(f) Application of factors to 10-year ban exception. The foregoing
factors will also be applied by the NCUA to determine whether the
interests of justice are served in seeking an exception in the
appropriate court when a consent application is made to terminate the
10-year ban prior to its expiration date under 12 U.S.C. 1785(d)(2)(A)
for certain Federal offenses.
(g) Fidelity bond requirements not affected. All approvals and
orders will be subject to the condition that the person be covered by a
fidelity bond to the same extent as others in similar positions. If the
NCUA has approved a consent application filed by an individual and has
issued a consent order, the individual must disclose the presence of
the conviction(s) or program
[[Page 76717]]
entry(ies) to all insured credit unions in the affairs of which they
wish to participate.
(h) Sponsored consent applications. When deemed appropriate by the
NCUA, credit union-sponsored consent applications are to allow the
individual to work for the same employer (without restrictions on the
location) and across positions, except that the prior consent of the
NCUA (which may require a new consent application) will be required for
any proposed significant changes in the individual's security-related
duties or responsibilities, such as promotion to an officer or other
positions that the employer determines will require higher security
screening credentials.
(i) Subsequent consent applications. In situations in which an
approval has been granted for a person to participate in the affairs of
a particular insured credit union and the person subsequently seeks to
participate at another insured credit union, another consent
application must be submitted and approved by the NCUA prior to the
person participating in the affairs of the other insured credit union.
Sec. 752.11 What will the NCUA do if the consent application is
denied?
(a) The NCUA will inform the applicant in writing that the consent
application has been denied and summarize or cite the relevant
considerations specified in Sec. 752.10 of this subpart.
(b) The denial will also notify the applicant of the right to
request reconsideration from the Regional Office or the Office of
National Examinations and Supervision, or to file an appeal with the
Board, and shall include a description of applicable filing deadlines
and time frames for agency responses. The Regional Office or the Office
of National Examinations and Supervision and the Board will apply the
review process contained in 12 CFR part 746, subpart B, to any request
for reconsideration or appeal. The request for review must include a
statement of the underlying facts that form the basis of the request
for reconsideration or appeal, a statement of the basis for the denial
to which the applicant objects and the alleged error in such denial,
and any other support, materials, or evidence relied upon by the
applicant that were not previously provided.
[FR Doc. 2023-23509 Filed 11-6-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7535-01-P