Fair Hiring in Banking Act, 77906-77917 [2023-23853]
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77906
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 88, No. 218
Tuesday, November 14, 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.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Parts 303 and 308
RIN 3064–AF92
Fair Hiring in Banking Act
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) proposes
to revise its regulations to conform with
the Fair Hiring in Banking Act
(FHBA)—which was enacted on and
immediately effective as of December
23, 2022. Among other provisions, the
FHBA excluded or exempted categories
of otherwise-covered offenses from the
scope of statutory prohibitions on
participation in banking. These
categories pertain to certain older
offenses, offenses committed by
individuals 21 or younger, and ‘‘certain
lesser offenses.’’ The FHBA also
clarified several definitions in section
19 and provided application-processing
procedures. The FDIC considers most of
the proposed revisions to its regulations
to be required by the FHBA. Other
proposed revisions reflect the FDIC’s
interpretation of statutory prohibitions
in light of the FHBA.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before January 16, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 3064–AF92, by any of
the following methods:
• FDIC Website: https://
www.fdic.gov/resources/regulations/
federal-register-publications/. Follow
instructions for submitting comments
on the agency website.
• Email: comments@fdic.gov. Include
RIN 3064–AF92 on the subject line of
the message.
• Mail: James P. Sheesley, Assistant
Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments RIN 3064–AF92, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
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• Hand Delivery to FDIC: Comments
may be hand-delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street
NW building (located on F Street NW)
on business days between 7 a.m. and 5
p.m.
Please include your name, affiliation,
address, email address, and telephone
number(s) in your comment. All
statements received, including
attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record
and are subject to public disclosure.
• Public Inspection: Comments
received, including any personal
information provided, may be posted
without change to https://www.fdic.gov/
resources/regulations/federal-registerpublications/. Commenters should
submit only information that the
commenter wishes to make available
publicly. The FDIC may review, redact,
or refrain from posting all or any portion
of any comment that it may deem to be
inappropriate for publication, such as
irrelevant or obscene material. The FDIC
may post only a single representative
example of identical or substantially
identical comments, and in such cases
will generally identify the number of
identical or substantially identical
comments represented by the posted
example. All comments that have been
redacted, as well as those that have not
been posted, that contain comments on
the merits of this document will be
retained in the public comment file and
will be considered as required under all
applicable laws. All comments may be
accessible under the Freedom of
Information Act.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Timothy Schuett, Senior Review
Examiner, 763–614–9473, tschuett@
fdic.gov; Brian Zeller, Review Examiner,
571–345–8170, bzeller@fdic.gov,
Division of Risk Management
Supervision; or Graham Rehrig,
Counsel, 703–314–3401, grehrig@
fdic.gov, Legal Division.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 19 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (section 19) 1 prohibits,
without the prior written consent of the
FDIC (the FDIC refers to applications for
such consent as ‘‘consent
applications’’), the participation in
banking by any person who has been
1 12
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convicted of a crime involving
dishonesty or breach of trust or money
laundering or who has agreed to enter
into a pretrial diversion or similar
program in connection with the
prosecution for such an offense
(collectively, covered offenses). Further,
this law forbids an insured depository
institution (IDI) from permitting such a
person to engage in any conduct or to
continue any relationship prohibited by
section 19. Section 19 also imposes a
separate ten-year ban for a person
convicted of certain crimes enumerated
in Title 18 of the United States Code,
which can be removed only upon a
motion by the FDIC and approval by the
sentencing court.
From 1998 until 2020, the FDIC had
a Statement of Policy that was issued
related to section 19, occasionally
revised, and published in the Federal
Register.2 The purpose of the Statement
of Policy, as amended through the years,
was ‘‘to provide the public with
guidance relating to section 19 and the
FDIC’s application thereof.’’ 3 In 2020,
following notice and comment, the FDIC
revised and codified the Statement of
Policy into the FDIC’s Filing Procedures
under 12 CFR part 303, subpart L, and
Rules of Practice and Procedure under
part 308, subpart M (2020 Final Rule).4
On December 23, 2022, the President
signed into law the Fair Hiring in
Banking Act FHBA,5 which significantly
revised section 19 and was effective
immediately. The FHBA created several
categories of exceptions or exemptions
to the prohibition on participating in
banking, including the following:
• Certain older offenses: (1) if it has
been 7 years or more since the offense
occurred; (2) if the individual was
incarcerated with respect to the offense
and it has been 5 years or more since the
individual was released from
incarceration; or (3) for individuals who
committed an offense when they were
21 years of age or younger, if it has been
2 See 63 FR 66177 (Dec. 1, 1998); 72 FR 73823
(Dec. 8, 2007) with correction issued at 73 FR 5270
(Oct. 13, 2008); 76 FR 28031 (May 13, 2011); 77 FR
74847 (Dec. 18, 2012); 83 FR 38143 (Aug. 3, 2018).
3 See 84 FR 68353.
4 See 85 FR 51312 (Aug. 20, 2020).
5 The FHBA appears at section 5705 of the James
M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2023, Public Law 117–263, 136 Stat.
2395, 3411.
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more than 30 months since the
sentencing occurred.6
• Offenses for which an order of
expungement, sealing, or dismissal has
been issued in regard to the conviction
in connection with such offense and it
is 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 record to be
considered for certain character and
fitness evaluation purposes.
• ‘‘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
FDIC may designate), if 1 year or more
has passed since the applicable
conviction or program entry.
• Misdemeanor criminal offenses
involving dishonesty, if the offense was
committed more than one year before
the date on which an individual files a
consent application,7 excluding any
period of incarceration.
• A criminal offense involving
dishonesty that also ‘‘involv[es] the
possession of controlled substances.’’
The FHBA clarifies several terms in
section 19, including ‘‘criminal offense
involving dishonesty’’ and ‘‘pretrial
diversion or similar program.’’ It also
provides conditions regarding de
minimis offenses, to the extent the FDIC
provides de minimis exemptions by
rule.
The FHBA codifies procedures for
consent applications filed with the
FDIC. It requires the FDIC to make all
forms and instructions related to
consent applications available to the
public, including on the FDIC’s website.
It requires the FDIC to primarily rely on
the criminal history record of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation when
evaluating consent applications and to
provide such records to the applicant to
review for accuracy. Further, it requires
the FDIC to assess evidence of an
individual’s rehabilitation including:
the applicant’s age at the time of the
conviction or program entry; the time
that has elapsed since conviction or
program entry; and the relationship of
an individual’s offense to the
responsibilities of the applicable
6 These exceptions do not apply to the offenses
described under 12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(2).
7 Under the FHBA, a ‘‘consent application’’
‘‘means an application filed with [the FDIC] by an
individual (or by an insured depository institution
or depository institution holding company on
behalf of an individual) seeking the written consent
of the [FDIC] under [12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(1)].’’ 12
U.S.C. 1829(g)(1).
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position. Other information, including
an individual’s employment history,
letters of recommendation, certificates
documenting participation in substance
abuse programs, successful participation
in job preparation and educational
programs, other relevant evidence, and
any additional information the FDIC
determines necessary for safety and
soundness shall also be considered.
II. Discussion of Proposed Amendments
The proposed amendments to the
FDIC’s section 19 regulations are
primarily intended to align the
regulations with the FHBA’s provisions.
The proposed amendments address,
among other topics, the types of offenses
covered by section 19, the effect of the
completion of sentencing or pretrialdiversion program requirements in the
context of section 19, and the FDIC’s
procedures for reviewing applications
filed under section 19. Furthermore, in
developing these proposed
amendments, the FDIC has consulted
and coordinated with the National
Credit Union Administration, the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (FRB), and the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency ‘‘to
promote consistent implementation [of
the FHBA] where appropriate.’’ 8
Significant proposed revisions 9
include the following:
A. Revised Provisions of 12 CFR Part
303, Subpart L
1. Section 303.220 What is section 19
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act?
The FDIC proposes revising paragraph
(b) of this section to clarify that IDIs
must make a reasonable, documented
inquiry to verify an applicant’s history
to ensure that a person who has a
covered offense on the person’s record
is not hired or permitted to participate
in its affairs without the written consent
of the FDIC.
2. Section 303.221 Who is covered by
section 19?
The FDIC proposes to revise
paragraph (d) of this section to more
closely align its restrictions with the
analogous FRB regulations under 12
CFR 225.41 and 238.31 and the FDIC’s
regulations under 12 CFR part 303,
subpart E, concerning Change in Bank
Control applications. A person will be
deemed to exercise ‘‘control’’ if that
8 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(9) (‘‘In carrying out this
section, the [FDIC] shall consult and coordinate
with the National Credit Union Administration as
needed to promote consistent implementation
where appropriate’’).
9 The proposed rule would also make a number
of non-substantive, technical edits to the section 19
regulations that are not discussed in this section.
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person: (1) has the ability to direct the
management or policies of an IDI; (2)
has the power to vote 25 percent or
more of the voting shares of an IDI; or
(3) has the power to vote 10 percent of
the voting shares of an IDI if: (a) no
other person owns, controls, or has the
power to vote more shares; or (b) the
institution has registered securities
under section 12 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934.10 Under the same
standards, a person will be deemed to
‘‘own’’ an IDI if that person owns: (1) 25
percent or more of the institution’s
voting stock; or (2) 10 percent of the
voting shares if: (a) no other person
owns more; or (b) the institution has
registered securities under section 12 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Paragraph (d) retains language
concerning individuals acting in concert
with others so as to have such
ownership or control.
3. Section 303.222 Which offenses
qualify as ‘‘Covered Offenses’’ under
section 19?
The proposed revisions to paragraph
(a) of this section would reflect the new
statutory definition of ‘‘criminal offense
involving dishonesty.’’ 11 The FHBA
excludes from the scope of such
offenses ‘‘an offense involving the
possession of controlled substances.’’ 12
The FDIC interprets this phrase
concerning controlled substances to
exclude, 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 from court
determinations that the statutory
provisions of the offenses do not involve
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money
laundering. Potential applicants may
contact their appropriate FDIC Regional
Office if they have questions about
whether their offenses are covered
under section 19.
This revised regulatory language
would mark a shift from the FDIC’s
current section 19 regulations, which
require an application for all
convictions and pretrial diversions
concerning the illegal manufacture, sale,
distribution of, or trafficking in
controlled substances. The FDIC
believes that this proposed revision
would be consistent with the text and
purposes of the FHBA, would align the
FDIC’s interpretation of section 19 as to
offenses involving controlled substances
10 15
U.S.C. 78l.
12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2).
12 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2)(C)(ii).
11 See
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more closely with other Federal banking
regulators, and continue to recognize
that a drug-related offense could
potentially involve dishonesty, breach
of trust, or money laundering. The FDIC
also notes that this proposed revision to
its section 19 regulations would not
affect the FDIC’s ability to consider
drug-related offenses, as they pertain to
the suitability of an individual, under
other statutory provisions, including the
Change in Bank Control Act and section
32 of the FDI Act.
The FHBA also states that the term
‘‘criminal offense involving dishonesty’’
does not include ‘‘a misdemeanor
criminal offense committed more than
one year before the date on which an
individual files a consent application,
excluding any period of
incarceration.’’ 13 The FDIC interprets
the term ‘‘offense committed’’ to mean
the ‘‘last date of the underlying
misconduct,’’ based on the plain text of
the statute. In instances with multiple
offenses, ‘‘offense committed’’ means
the last date of any of the underlying
offenses.
Revised paragraph (c) would include
new language reflecting the statute’s
exception of certain older offenses from
the scope of section 19.14 Among other
exceptions, the FHBA states that section
19’s restrictions will not apply to an
offense if ‘‘it has been 7 years or more
since the offense occurred.’’ 15 The FDIC
considers the phrases ‘‘offense
committed’’—noted above—and
‘‘offense occurred’’ to be substantially
similar. Accordingly, the FDIC
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. Revised paragraph (c) contains
another FHBA exception: section 19’s
restrictions would not apply to an
offense if ‘‘the individual was
incarcerated with respect to the offense
and it has been 5 years or more since the
individual was released from
incarceration.’’ 16 While the language of
the statute is clear, the FDIC notes that
there could be situations in which an
individual who was incarcerated with
respect to an offense would be
permitted to work at a bank before a
similarly situated individual who was
not incarcerated in connection with an
offense. Revised paragraph (c) also
tracks the FHBA’s language concerning
offenses committed by individuals 21
years of age or younger. The FHBA
U.S.C. 1829(g)(2)(C)(i).
12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1).
15 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(A)(i).
16 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(A)(ii).
states that, for individuals who
committed an offense when the
individual was 21 years of age or
younger, section 19 shall not apply to
the offense if it has been more than 30
months since the sentencing occurred.17
The FDIC 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, revised
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. 1829(a)(2).18
Revised paragraph (d) excludes
‘‘designated lesser offenses’’ (for
example, using fake identification), as
specified in 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(3)(D), if
one year or more has passed since the
applicable conviction or program entry.
Revised paragraph (e) adds language
to codify 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, breach of trust, or money
laundering in foreign jurisdictions are
subject to section 19, unless the offense
is otherwise excluded by 12 CFR part
303, subpart L. For example, if an IDI
has operations outside the United
States, the IDI could conduct a
reasonable, documented inquiry to
verify an applicant’s history, in
accordance with 12 CFR 303.220, by
inquiring about potential covered
offenses that may have occurred in that
foreign country (or countries) in which
the IDI conducts operations, as well as
in the United States. As another
example of such an inquiry, if an IDI
plans to hire someone in the United
States who is from a foreign country, the
IDI could inquire about potential
covered offenses that may have occurred
in the United States and in that foreign
country.
4. Section 303.223 What constitutes a
conviction under section 19?
Paragraph (c) of this section has been
revised to reflect statutory language
related to the treatment of orders of
expungement, sealing, or dismissal of
criminal records.19 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 19. 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 record to be
considered for certain character and
fitness evaluation purposes.’’ 20 The
statute does not address expungements,
sealings, or dismissals by operation of
law, and the FDIC has sought to
harmonize its current regulations
concerning expunged and sealed
records with the statutory language to
provide a more comprehensive
framework as to such records. The FDIC
has also added language to the second
(intent) prong of the expungement
framework to encompass the language
in the expungement order itself, the
legislative provisions under which the
order was issued, and other legislative
provisions. This proposed revision also
seeks to harmonize the FDIC’s current
regulations concerning expungements
with the FHBA’s provisions. The FDIC
believes that all of the additional
language is consistent with the purposes
of the statute.
Revised paragraph (d) clarifies that it
encompasses the terms ‘‘youthful
offender’’ and ‘‘juvenile delinquent’’
and similar terms, since a court does not
have to specifically use these terms in
an adjudication in order for paragraph
(d)’s provisions to apply.
5. Section 303.224 What constitutes a
pretrial diversion or similar program
(program entry) under section 19?
This section has been revised to
reflect the statutory definition of
‘‘pretrial diversion or similar
program.’’ 21
6. Section 303.225 What are the types
of applications that can be filed?
This section has been revised to
reflect the updated statutory filing
procedures. The statute removes the
FDIC’s former policy that an institution
sponsor a consent application or that an
individual seek a waiver of the
institution filing requirement. Moreover,
the statute enables a depository
institution holding company to file an
application on behalf of an individual
(previously, only IDIs could file such
sponsored applications).22 In order to
avoid duplication of applications filed
with the FRB and the FDIC, revised
paragraph (a) states that the FDIC will
accept applications from: an individual;
an IDI applying on behalf of an
13 12
14 See
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U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(B).
12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(C).
19 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(2).
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17 12
20 12
18 See
21 See
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U.S.C. 1829(c)(2).
12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(3).
22 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(1).
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individual; a depository institution
holding company applying on behalf of
an individual with respect to a
depository institution subsidiary of the
holding company; and a depository
institution holding company applying
on behalf of an individual who will
work at the holding company but also
participate in the affairs of the IDI or
who would be in a position to influence
or control the management or affairs of
the IDI, in accordance with 12 CFR
303.221(a).
Revised paragraph (b), consistent with
the FHBA, states that an individual or
an institution may file applications at
separate times. Under either approach,
the application(s) must be filed with the
appropriate FDIC Regional Office.23
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7. Section 303.226 When may an
application be filed?
This revised section notes that, before
an 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.’’ The FDIC
proposes to include this revised
language to accord with several of the
FHBA’s exclusions from section 19 that
are not tied to the completion of
sentencing requirements.
Furthermore, the FHBA requires the
FDIC to ‘‘make all forms and
instructions related to consent
applications available to the public,
including on the website of the
Corporation.’’ 24 These forms and
instructions ‘‘shall provide a sample
cover letter and a comprehensive list of
items that may accompany the
application, including clear guidance on
evidence that may support a finding of
rehabilitation.’’ 25 While the FDIC has
not explicitly mentioned these
requirements in its regulations, the
agency will comply with them.
8. Section 303.227 De minimis
Offenses
The FDIC proposes to retitle this
section to avoid confusion between
‘‘designated lesser offenses’’ and ‘‘de
minimis offenses.’’ This section’s
current title is, ‘‘When is an application
not required for a covered offense or
program entry (De minimis offenses)?’’
The FHBA includes ‘‘designated lesser
offenses,’’ which offenses are excluded
from the scope of section 19 (that is,
they are not considered de minimis
offenses—which offenses are considered
covered offenses for which no
application is required because the
application is deemed automatically
granted). The FDIC believes that the
current title would cause confusion for
a reader and therefore proposes retitling
this section.
The FHBA removed the use of fake
identification from the scope of section
19, and revised paragraphs (a)(1) and
(b)(4) reflect this exclusion.26 Revised
paragraph (a)(2) would reflect the
FHBA’s confinement criteria as to the
FDIC’s determination of de minimis
offenses.27
The FDIC proposes to revise the de
minimis requirement related to the
aggregate total face value of all ‘‘bad’’ or
insufficient funds checks in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) from $1,000 to $2,000 to
conform with the statute.28
9. Section 303.228
Application
How To File an
This revised section would eliminate
the institution filing requirement and
waiver process and indicate that an
‘‘institution’’—an IDI or a depository
institution holding company—could file
an application on behalf of an
individual, rather than just an IDI. Both
of these proposed revisions are due to
the updated statutory language.29 This
revised section would also clarify that
the appropriate FDIC Regional Office for
an institution-sponsored application
would be the office covering the state
where the institution’s home office is
located and that the appropriate FDIC
Regional Office for an individual
application would be the office covering
the state where the person resides.
10. Section 303.229 How an
Application Is Evaluated
Revised paragraph (a) would reflect
new statutory requirements related to
the FDIC’s review process, including the
requirement that the FDIC primarily rely
on the criminal history record of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation in the
FDIC’s review and provide such record
to the applicant to review for
accuracy.30 The FDIC interprets the term
‘‘criminal history record’’ to mean
‘‘identity history summary checks,’’
which are commonly known as ‘‘rap
sheets.’’ Under revised paragraph (a)—
and in accordance with the FHBA—the
FDIC, in reviewing a consent
26 See
12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(3)(D).
12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(3)(B).
28 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(3)(C).
29 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(1).
30 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(6)(A)(i).
27 See
23 See
12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(1).
U.S.C. 1829(f)(5)(A).
25 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(5)(B).
24 12
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77909
application, would provide a copy of
the rap sheet to an applicant to review
for accuracy.31
Revised paragraph (b) would state that
the FDIC will not require an applicant
to provide certified copies of criminal
history records unless the FDIC
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
(that is, the rap sheet).32
Revised paragraph (d) would clarify
how the FDIC will evaluate evidence of
rehabilitation and other evidence, as
required by the FHBA.33
Revised paragraph (g) would
eliminate references to the former
application-waiver requirement.
Finally, revised paragraph (h) would
incorporate statutory language
explaining when a new institutionsponsored application would be
necessary due to changes in the scope
of an applicant’s employment.34
11. Section 303.231 Waiting Time for
a Subsequent Application if An
Application Is Denied
This section, as currently written and
among other provisions, requires a oneyear waiting period to file a consent
application, following the issuance of a
decision denying such an application.
The proposed rule would retain the
existing regulatory text as paragraph (a)
and create a new paragraph (b)—which
would note that an institutionsponsored application is not subject to
the one-year waiting period if the
application (1) follows the denial of an
individual application, or (2) follows
the denial of an institution-sponsored
application and the subsequent
application is sponsored by a different
institution or is for a different position.
B. Revised Provisions of 12 CFR Part
308, Subpart M
The proposed rule would make
several technical amendments to
§§ 308.156 and 308.158 to encompass
applications that are sponsored by
depository institution holding
companies, clarify two sentences
concerning hearing procedures, and use
more consistent terminology.
31 See
12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(6)(A)(ii).
U.S.C. 1829(f)(6)(B).
33 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(7). 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 19
applications, and the use of both terms in these
regulations may create confusion. Therefore, the
proposed rule uses the term rehabilitation not
mitigating.
34 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(8).
32 12
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III. Expected Effects
As previously discussed, the
proposed rule would align the FDIC’s
regulations with the FHBA’s provisions,
make additional changes to further
clarify the FDIC’s regulations related to
section 19, more closely align the FDIC’s
section 19 regulations with those of
other Federal financial regulators, and
make a number of non-substantive,
technical edits. As of the quarter ending
June 30, 2023, there were 4,654 FDICinsured depository institutions, all of
which are covered by the rule and
therefore could be affected.35
Additionally, the rule will apply to
persons covered by the provisions of
section 19, including those who are or
wish to become employees, officers,
directors, or controlling shareholders of
an IDI or who otherwise are or wish to
become an institution-affiliated party
(IAP) of an IDI.
To estimate the number of institutions
and individuals affected by the rule, the
FDIC counted the number of section 19
applications it has received between
2020 and 2022. Over this period, the
FDIC received 27 bank-sponsored
section 19 applications, an average of 9
per year. Additionally, the FDIC
received 202 individual section 19
applications during the same period, an
average of approximately 67 per year.36
Therefore, the FDIC estimates that the
proposed rule could affect at least 9
FDIC-insured depository institutions
and 67 individuals per year. Assuming
that each application involves a
different institution, approximately 2
percent of insured institutions, or 76,
could be affected per year on average.37
As previously described, the proposed
rule would align the FDIC’s regulations
with the FHBA’s provisions. In
particular, the FHBA created several
categories of exceptions or exemptions
to the prohibition on participating in
banking. The proposed rule would
incorporate these categories of
exemptions and exceptions. The FDIC
believes that the additional categories
for exceptions or exemptions to the
prohibition on participating in banking
established by the FHBA could benefit
certain individuals and IDIs by reducing
the number of applications they would
otherwise be required to file under
section 19. Additionally, the categories
of exceptions or exemptions to the
prohibition on participating in banking
established by the FHBA could benefit
IDIs by marginally expanding the
supply of labor available. However,
these changes were created by the FHBA
35 FDIC
Call Report data, March 31, 2023.
Application Tracking System.
37 (76/4,654) * 100 = 1.6 percent.
36 FDIC
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and were effective immediately upon
passage, and the proposed rule aligns
the FDIC’s regulations with these
elements of the FHBA; therefore, the
associated changes in the proposed rule
will have no direct effect on individuals
or IDIs.
The proposed rule would amend the
FDIC’s existing section 19 applicationprocedure regulations to incorporate the
FHBA’s provisions. The FDIC’s current
section 19 regulations contain
references to existing application
procedures that are similar in substance
to those established by FHBA. However,
the FHBA, among other requirements,
compels the FDIC to primarily rely on
the criminal history record of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation when
reviewing consent applications. It is the
current practice of the FDIC to consider
all relevant information when
evaluating a section 19 application.
However, the establishment of a
common source of criminal history,
together with only requiring certified
copies of criminal history records if
there exists clear and compelling
justification for doing so, could benefit
certain individuals and IDIs by
marginally reducing the volume of
information they need to supply to the
FDIC. The FDIC believes that, while
these proposed changes to the
application procedures will directly
affect certain individuals and
institutions that file section 19
applications, they may not have a
substantial effect on potential
applicants. Finally, these changes were
created by the FHBA and were effective
immediately upon passage, and the
proposed rule aligns the FDIC’s
regulations with these elements of the
FHBA; therefore, the associated changes
in the proposed rule will have no direct
effect on individuals or IDIs.
Finally, in seeking to align its section
19 regulations with the provisions of the
FHBA, the FDIC used its discretion to
marginally increase the scope of certain
terms so as to better reflect the purposes
of the FHBA. In particular, the FDIC has
provided broader language as to the
scope of expunged, sealed, or dismissed
offenses. This aspect of the proposed
rule could potentially benefit persons
covered by the provisions of section 19,
including individuals who are or wish
to become employees, officers, directors,
or controlling shareholders of an IDI, or
who otherwise are or wish to become an
IAP of an IDI. However, given that most
of the proposed amendments are
focused on aligning the FDIC’s
regulations with the FHBA, the marginal
effect of this aspect of the proposed rule
is likely to be small.
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The FDIC invites comments on all
aspects of this analysis. In particular,
would the proposed rule have any costs
or benefits that the FDIC has not
identified?
IV. Alternatives
As discussed above, almost all of the
proposed substantive changes stem from
the FHBA’s revisions to section 19. The
FDIC does not have discretion in
considering alternatives to those
statutory revisions. The FDIC has,
however, proposed several clarifications
and interpretations to its section 19
regulations. For example, the FDIC has
provided broader language as to the
scope of expunged, sealed, or dismissed
offenses. The FDIC considered whether
to simply provide the statutory
definition for such offenses. The FDIC
chose to propose the inclusion of more
expansive language, in the interest of
harmonizing the FDIC’s existing
regulations with the revisions to section
19, and under the belief that this
language would be consistent with the
purposes of the FHBA. The FDIC invites
comments on its consideration of
alternatives. In particular, are there
other alternatives that the FDIC should
consider?
V. Request for Comments
1. The FDIC seeks comments on all
aspects of its approach to section 19 and
more specifically on the questions that
follow.
2. Offense date. As revised, section 19
provides for an exception for an offense
if ‘‘it has been 7 years or more since the
offense occurred.’’ 38 There is a similar
provision that removes from the
definition of ‘‘criminal offense involving
dishonesty’’ ‘‘a misdemeanor criminal
offense committed more than one year
before the date on which an individual
files a consent application, excluding
any period of incarceration[.]’’ 39
Historically, the FDIC’s position has
been that actions do not amount to a
covered ‘‘offense,’’ for section 19
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.40 However, for purposes
38 12
U.S.C. 1829(c)(1).
U.S.C. 1829(g)(2)(C)(i).
40 See 12 CFR 303.223(a) (2020). (‘‘There must be
a conviction of record. Section 19 does not cover
arrests or pending cases not brought to trial, unless
the person has a program entry as set out in
§ 303.224.’’). The FDIC’s current section 19
regulations only focus on underlying misconduct in
the context of de minimis offenses for individuals
who were 21 years of age of younger when the
‘‘actions that resulted in [the] conviction[ ] or
39 12
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of evaluating whether the seven-year or
one-year exception applies, the FDIC
must evaluate if it has been seven years
or more since the ‘‘offense occurred’’ or
whether the ‘‘offense [was] committed
more than one year before the date on
which an individual files a consent
application, excluding any period of
incarceration.’’ The FDIC 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 FDIC acknowledges that
there may be other, supportable
interpretations of this phrase. For
example, the FDIC 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 only begins with conviction or
program entry, rather than the date of
their misconduct. As such, the FDIC
seeks public comment on the following
topic: Is the FDIC’s interpretation of the
phrases ‘‘offense occurred’’ and ‘‘offense
committed’’ as the ‘‘last date of
underlying misconduct’’ appropriate or
are there other interpretations the FDIC
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.41 However, the
statute does not define the phrase
‘‘sentencing occurred.’’ The FDIC
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 FDIC seeks public
comment on the following topic: Is the
FDIC’s proposed interpretation of the
phrase ‘‘sentencing occurred’’
appropriate?
4. Foreign convictions and pretrial
diversions. Section 19 applies to ‘‘any
person who has been convicted of any
criminal offense involving dishonesty or
a breach of trust or money laundering,
or has agreed to enter into a pretrial
diversion or similar program in
connection with a prosecution for such
offense.’’ 42 The phrase ‘‘criminal
program entr[y] all occurred.’’ See 12 CFR
303.227(b)(1).
41 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(B).
42 12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(1).
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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).43 The statute does
not define ‘‘offense involving . . .
breach of trust or money laundering.’’
The FDIC’s position has been that
foreign convictions and pretrial
diversions are included within the
scope of section 19. There are strong
public policy rationales for prohibiting
persons who have been convicted of
certain foreign criminal offenses (or
entered into a pre-trial diversion
program in connection with such an
offense) from becoming or continuing as
an IAP or owning, controlling, or
otherwise participating in the affairs of
an insured depository institution.
However, the FDIC acknowledges that
there may be caselaw, statutory
construction, and other arguments that
support a reading of section 19 that
would exclude foreign convictions and
pretrial diversions from the scope of
section 19. As such, the FDIC seeks
public comment on the following topic:
Does section 19 encompass foreign
convictions and pretrial diversions?
What support do commenters have for
their position?
5. Expungements, sealings, and
dismissals. The FHBA established a new
statutory exemption for expunged,
sealed, and dismissed convictions
(collectively, ‘‘expungements’’).44 The
FDIC’s current regulations contain more
expansive language concerning
expungements than the statutory text.
Notably, the FDIC’s expungement
provisions encompass all convictions
that had been expunged—whether by
court order or otherwise by operation of
law. 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
maintains the FDIC’s broad
interpretation of ‘‘expungement’’ to
encompass covered offenses that have
been expunged by operation of law. The
FDIC seeks public comment on the
following topic: Given the new statutory
exemption for expunged offenses, is the
FDIC’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
‘‘offenses involving the possession of
controlled substances’’ are not included
within the definition of ‘‘criminal
offense involving dishonesty’’ and,
therefore, are not subject to section 19’s
prohibition.45 The proposed rule
includes this definitional exclusion and
notes that the FDIC 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 the FDIC’s current section 19
regulations, which only provide an
exclusion for the simple possession of
controlled substances. 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 with intent to
distribute controlled substances. The
FDIC seeks public comment on the
following topic: Is the FDIC’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 FDIC may exempt by rule
certain de minimis offenses from section
19’s prohibition. The FDIC considers de
minimis offenses to be covered offenses
for which an application is not required
because the FDIC deems the application
automatically granted. The FDIC has
previously promulgated rules that
specified de minimis offenses under
section 19.46 However, given this new
statutory language, the FDIC is
reevaluating its current approach to de
minimis offenses. Accordingly, the FDIC
seeks public comment on the following
topic: Is the FDIC’s current approach to
de minimis offenses appropriate? Are
there additional offenses that the FDIC
should consider de minimis under
section 19? Please provide support for
such a designation.
8. Written comments must be received
by the FDIC no later than January 16,
2024.
VI. Regulatory Analysis and Procedure
A. The Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the requirements
of the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA),47 the FDIC may not conduct or
sponsor, and the respondent is not
required to respond to, an information
collection unless it displays a currently
45 12
43 See
12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2).
44 See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(2).
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77911
U.S.C. 1829(g)(2)(C)(ii).
12 CFR 303.227.
47 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
46 See
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 14, 2023 / Proposed Rules
valid Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number.
The FDIC is revising its section 19
application form to conform with the
changes to section 19 under the FHBA.
These changes will amend the FDIC’s
existing information collection
associated with this proposed rule,
entitled ‘‘Application Pursuant to
Section 19 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act’’ (3064–0018). For this
reason, the information-collection
requirements contained in this proposed
rule will be submitted by the FDIC to
OMB for review and approval under
section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)) and § 1320.11 of the OMB’s
implementing regulations (5 CFR part
1320). Based on available data, the
number of respondents and the
estimated annual burden associated
with the information collection will
decrease. Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the FDIC’s functions,
including whether the information has
practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the estimate of the
burden of the information collection,
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 collection 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 will become a matter of
public record. Comments on the
collection of information should be sent
to the address listed in the ADDRESSES
section of this document. A copy of the
comments may also be submitted to the
OMB desk officer: By mail to U.S. Office
of Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street NW, #10235, Washington, DC
20503, or by facsimile to 202–395–6974;
or email to oira_submission@
omb.eop.gov, Attention, Federal
Banking Agency Desk Officer.
Information Collection
Title: ‘‘Application Pursuant to
Section 19 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act’’.
OMB Number: 3064–0018.
Affected Public: Insured depository
institutions and individuals.
SUMMARY OF ESTIMATED ANNUAL BURDENS
[OMB No. 3064–0018]
Type of burden (obligation
to respond)
Frequency
of response
Application Pursuant to
Section 19 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act.
Reporting (Required to obtain or retain benefits).
On occasion ...
76
1
16
1,216
.............................................
........................
........................
........................
........................
1,216
Total Annual Burden
Hours:
Number of
respondents
Number of
responses/
respondent
IC Description
Hours per
response
Annual burden
(hours)
Source: FDIC.
B. The Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency, in
connection with a proposed rule, to
prepare and make available for public
comment an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis that describes the impact of the
proposed rule on small entities.48
However, an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required if the agency
certifies that the proposed rule will not,
if promulgated, have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The Small
Business Administration (SBA) has
defined ‘‘small entities’’ to include
banking organizations with total assets
of less than or equal to $850 million.49
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48 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
SBA defines a small banking organization
as having $850 million or less in assets, where an
organization’s ‘‘assets are determined by averaging
the assets reported on its four quarterly financial
statements for the preceding year.’’ See 13 CFR
121.201 (as amended by 87 FR 69118, effective
December 19, 2022). In its determination, the ‘‘SBA
counts the receipts, employees, or other measure of
size of the concern whose size is at issue and all
of its domestic and foreign affiliates.’’ See 13 CFR
121.103. Following these regulations, the FDIC uses
an IDI’s affiliated and acquired assets, averaged over
49 The
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Generally, the FDIC considers a
significant economic impact to be a
quantified effect in excess of 5 percent
of total annual salaries and benefits or
2.5 percent of total noninterest
expenses. The FDIC believes that effects
in excess of one or more of these
thresholds typically represent
significant economic impacts for FDICsupervised institutions.
As discussed further below, the FDIC
certifies that the proposed rule, if
adopted, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of FDIC-supervised small
entities.
As of the quarter ending June 30,
2023, the FDIC insured 4,654 depository
institutions, of which 3,373 are defined
as small banking organizations for the
purposes of the RFA.50 In the period
from 2020 through 2022, the FDIC
received 9 bank-sponsored section 19
applications from small, FDIC-insured
institutions, an average of 3 per year.
the preceding four quarters, to determine whether
the insured depository institution is ‘‘small’’ for the
purposes of the RFA.
50 FDIC Call Report, March 31, 2023.
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Additionally, the FDIC received 202
section 19 applications from individuals
during the same period, an average of
about 67 per year.51 To determine the
maximum number of small, FDICinsured institutions that could be
affected by the proposed rule, this
analysis assumes that each applicant is
seeking employment at a different bank
and that each bank is a small, FDICinsured institution. Based on these
assumptions, 70 (2.1 percent of) small,
FDIC-insured institutions, on average,
annually, could be affected by the
proposed rule.52 Section 19 applications
from individuals are compelled by the
applicant’s intent to seek employment at
FDIC-insured institutions, many of
which are not small. Therefore, the
FDIC believes that the number of small,
FDIC-insured institutions affected by
the proposed rule is likely to be less
than 70.
As discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section, the proposed rule
would align the FDIC’s regulations with
the FHBA’s provisions, make additional
51 FDIC
Application Tracking System.
* 100 = 2.04 percent.
52 (70/3,433)
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 14, 2023 / Proposed Rules
changes to further clarify the FDIC’s
regulations related to section 19, more
closely align the FDIC’s section 19
regulations with those of other Federal
financial regulators, and make a number
of non-substantive, technical edits. Most
of the proposed changes were
precipitated by the FHBA—which was
effective immediately upon passage—
and the proposed rule aligns the FDIC’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 IDIs.
Further, since the FDIC estimates that a
maximum of 70 small, FDIC-insured
institutions could be affected by the
proposed rule, on average, annually, any
direct affects realized as a result of the
proposed rule are likely to be small and
affect a relatively small number of
entities.
In light of the foregoing, the FDIC
certifies that the proposed rule would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. The FDIC invites comments on
all aspects of the supporting information
provided in this RFA section. In
particular, would this proposed rule
have any significant effects on small
entities that the FDIC has not identified?
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C. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act 53 requires each Federal
banking agency (FBA) to use plain
language in its proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
FDIC has sought to present the proposed
rule in a simple and straightforward
manner. The FDIC invites comments on
whether the proposal is clearly stated
and effectively organized, and how the
FDIC might make the proposal easier to
understand. For example:
• Has the FDIC organized the material
to suit your needs? If not, how could it
present the rule more clearly?
• Have we clearly stated the
requirements of the rule? If not, how
could the rule be more clearly stated?
• Does the rule contain technical
jargon that is not clear? If so, which
language requires clarification?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the regulation
easier to understand? If so, what
changes would make the regulation
easier to understand?
• What else could we do to make the
regulation easier to understand?
53 Public Law 106–102, sec. 722, 113 Stat. 1338,
1471 (1999), 12 U.S.C. 4809.
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D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Under section 302(a) of the Riegle
Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
(RCDRIA),54 in determining the effective
date and administrative compliance
requirements for new regulations that
impose additional reporting, disclosure,
or other requirements on IDIs, each FBA
must consider, consistent with
principles of safety and soundness and
the public interest, any administrative
burdens that such regulations would
place on depository institutions,
including small depository institutions,
and customers of depository
institutions, as well as the benefits of
such regulations. In addition, section
302(b) of the RCDRIA requires new
regulations and amendments to
regulations that impose additional
reporting, disclosures, or other new
requirements on IDIs generally to take
effect on the first day of a calendar
quarter that begins on or after the date
on which the regulations are published
in final form.55 The FDIC invites
comments that further will inform its
consideration of RCDRIA.
77913
2. Revise subpart L, consisting of
§§ 303.220 through 303.231, to read as
follows:
■
Subpart L—Section 19 of the FDI Act
(Consent to Service of Persons
Convicted of, or Who Have Program
Entries for, Certain Criminal Offenses)
Sec.
303.220 What is section 19 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act?
303.221 Who is covered by section 19?
303.222 Which offenses qualify as ‘‘Covered
Offenses’’ under section 19?
303.223 What constitutes a conviction
under section 19?
303.224 What constitutes a pretrial
diversion or similar program under
section 19?
303.225 What are the types of applications
that can be filed?
303.226 When may an application be filed?
303.227 De minimis offenses.
303.228 How to file an application.
303.229 How an application is evaluated.
303.230 What will the FDIC do if the
application is denied?
303.231 Waiting time for a subsequent
application if an application is denied.
§ 303.220 What is section 19 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act?
(a) This subpart covers applications
under section 19 of the Federal Deposit
List of Subjects
Insurance Act (FDI Act), 12 U.S.C. 1829.
The FDIC refers to such applications as
12 CFR Part 303
‘‘consent applications.’’ Under section
Administrative practice and
19, any person who has been convicted
procedure, Bank deposit insurance,
of any criminal offense involving
Banks, banking, Reporting and
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
laundering, or has agreed to enter into
associations.
a pretrial diversion or similar program
(program entry) in connection with a
12 CFR Part 308
prosecution for such offense
(collectively, Covered Offenses), may
Administrative practice and
not become, or continue as, an
procedure, Bank deposit insurance,
institution-affiliated party (IAP) of an
Banks, banking, Claims, Crime, Equal
insured depository institution (IDI); own
access to justice, Fraud, Investigations,
or control, directly or indirectly, any
Lawyers, Penalties, Savings
IDI; or otherwise participate, directly or
associations.
indirectly, in the conduct of the affairs
Authority and Issuance
of any IDI without the prior written
For the reasons stated in the preamble consent of the FDIC.
(b) In addition, the law prohibits an
and under the authority of 12 U.S.C.
IDI from permitting such a person to
1819 (Seventh and Tenth), the FDIC
engage in any conduct or to continue
proposes to amend 12 CFR parts 303
any relationship prohibited by section
and 308 as follows:
19. IDIs must therefore make a
reasonable, documented inquiry to
PART 303—FILING PROCEDURES
verify an applicant’s history to ensure
that a person who has a Covered Offense
■ 1. The authority citation for part 303
under section 19 is not hired or
is revised to read as follows:
permitted to participate in its affairs
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 378, 1464, 1813,
without the written consent of the FDIC
1815, 1817, 1818, 1819(a) (Seventh and
Tenth), 1820, 1823, 1828, 1829, 1831a, 1831e, issued under this subpart. FDIC1831o, 1831p–1, 1831w, 1835a, 1843(l), 3104, supervised IDIs may extend a
conditional offer of employment
3105, 3108, 3207, 5414, 5415, and 15 U.S.C.
contingent on the completion of a
1601–1607.
background check satisfactory to the
54 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
institution to determine if the applicant
55 12 U.S.C. 4802.
is prohibited under section 19, but the
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applicant may not work for, be
employed by, or otherwise participate in
the affairs of the IDI until the IDI has
determined that the applicant is not
prohibited under section 19.
(c) If there is a conviction or program
entry covered by the prohibitions of
section 19, an application under this
subpart must be filed seeking the FDIC’s
consent to become, or to continue as, an
IAP; to own or control, directly or
indirectly, an IDI; or to otherwise
participate, directly or indirectly, in the
affairs of the IDI. The application must
be filed, and consented to, prior to
serving in any of the foregoing
capacities unless such application is not
required under the subsequent
provisions of this subpart. The purpose
of an 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 IDI without
posing a risk to its safety and soundness
or impairing public confidence in that
institution. The burden is upon the
applicant to establish that the
application warrants approval.
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§ 303.221
Who is covered by section 19?
(a) Persons covered by section 19
include IAPs, as defined by 12 U.S.C.
1813(u), and others who are participants
in the conduct of the affairs of an IDI.
Therefore, all directors, officers, and
employees of an IDI who fall within the
scope of section 19, including de facto
employees, as determined by the FDIC
based upon generally applicable
standards of employment law, will also
be subject to section 19. Whether other
persons are covered by section 19
depends upon their degree of influence
or control over the management or
affairs of an IDI. For example, section 19
would apply to an officer or director of
an IDI’s holding company to the extent
that they have the power to define and
direct the management or affairs of an
IDI. Similarly, directors and officers of
affiliates, subsidiaries, or joint ventures
of an IDI or its holding company will be
covered if they participate in the affairs
of the IDI or are in a position to
influence or control the management or
affairs of the IDI. Typically, an
independent contractor does not have a
relationship with the IDI other than the
activity for which the institution has
contracted. However, an independent
contractor who influences or controls
the management or affairs of the IDI
would be covered by section 19.
(b) The term person, for purposes of
section 19, means an individual, and
does not include a corporation, firm, or
other business entity.
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(c) Individuals who file an application
with the FDIC under the provisions of
section 19 who also seek to participate
in the affairs of a bank holding company
or savings and loan holding company
may have to comply with any filing
requirements of the Board of the
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System under 12 U.S.C. 1829(d) and (e).
(d) Section 19 specifically prohibits a
person subject to its provisions from
owning or controlling, directly or
indirectly, an IDI. The terms control and
ownership under section 19 shall have
the meaning given to those terms in
subpart E of this part (including the
rebuttable presumptions stated in
subpart E).
(1) A person will be deemed to
exercise ‘‘control’’ if that person—
(i) Has the ability to direct the
management or policies of an IDI;
(ii) Has the power to vote 25 percent
or more of the voting shares of an IDI;
or
(iii) Has the power to vote 10 percent
of the voting shares of an IDI if—
(A) No other person owns, controls, or
has the power to vote more shares; or
(B) The institution has registered
securities under section 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78l).
(2) Under this paragraph (d), a person
will be deemed to ‘‘own’’ an IDI if that
person owns—
(i) 25 percent or more of the
institution’s voting stock; or
(ii) 10 percent of the voting shares if—
(A) No other person owns more; or
(B) The institution has registered
securities under section 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78l).
(3) The standards in this paragraph (d)
would also apply to an individual acting
in concert with others so as to have such
ownership or control. Absent the FDIC’s
consent, persons subject to the
prohibitions of section 19 must divest
their control or ownership of shares
above the foregoing limits.
§ 303.222 Which offenses qualify as
‘‘Covered Offenses’’ under section 19?
(a) Categories of Covered Offenses.
The conviction or program entry must
be for a criminal offense involving
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money
laundering.
(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,
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or for which dishonesty is an element of
the offense; and
(iii) Does not include—
(A) A misdemeanor criminal offense
committed more than one 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 do not involve
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money
laundering, as noted in paragraph (b) of
this section. Potential applicants may
contact their appropriate FDIC Regional
Office if they have questions about
whether their offenses are covered
under section 19.
(iv) The term offense committed in
paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(A) of this section
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) Elements of the offense. Whether
a crime involves dishonesty, breach of
trust, or money laundering will be
determined from the statutory elements
of the offense itself or from court
determinations that the statutory
provisions of the offense involve
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money
laundering.
(c) Certain older offenses excluded—
(1) Exclusions for certain older offenses.
Section 19 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 term offense occurred means
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.
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(2) Offenses committed by individuals
21 year of age or younger. For
individuals who committed an offense
when they were 21 years of age or
younger, section 19 does not apply to
the offense if it has been more than 30
months since the sentencing occurred.
The term sentencing occurred means 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) does
not apply to an offense described under
12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(2).
(d) Designated lesser offenses
excluded. Section 19 does not apply to
the following offenses, if one year or
more 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. Individuals
who are convicted of or enter into a
pretrial diversion program for a criminal
offense involving dishonesty, breach of
trust, or money laundering in any
foreign jurisdiction are subject to
section 19, unless the offense is
otherwise excluded by this subpart.
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§ 303.223 What constitutes a conviction
under section 19?
(a) Convictions requiring an
application. There must be a conviction
of record. Section 19 does not cover
arrests or pending cases not brought to
trial, unless the person has a program
entry as set out in § 303.224. Section 19
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 an application. A
conviction for which a pardon has been
granted will require an application.
(b) Convictions not requiring an
application. When an individual is
charged with a Covered Offense and, in
the absence of a program entry as set out
in § 303.224, is subsequently convicted
of an offense that is not a Covered
Offense, the conviction is not subject to
section 19.
(c) Expungement, dismissal, and
sealing. A conviction is not considered
a conviction of record and does not
require an 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
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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’’ (or similar term) by any
court having jurisdiction over minors as
defined by State law, does not require
an application. Such an adjudication
does not constitute a matter covered
under section 19 and is not a conviction
or program entry for determining the
applicability of § 303.227.
§ 303.224 What constitutes a pretrial
diversion or similar program under section
19?
(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
FDIC on a case-by-case basis. Program
entries prior to November 29, 1990, are
not covered by section 19.
(b) When a Covered Offense either is
reduced by a program entry to an
offense that would otherwise not be
covered by section 19 or is dismissed
upon successful completion of a
program entry, the offense remains a
Covered Offense for purposes of section
19. The Covered Offense will require an
application unless it is de minimis as
provided by § 303.227.
(c) Expungements, dismissals, or
sealings of program entries will be
treated the same as those for
convictions.
§ 303.225 What are the types of
applications that can be filed?
(a) The FDIC will accept applications
from—
(1) An individual;
(2) An IDI applying on behalf of an
individual;
(3) A depository institution holding
company applying on behalf of an
individual with respect to an IDI
subsidiary of the holding company; and
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77915
(4) A depository institution holding
company applying on behalf of an
individual who will work at the holding
company but also participate in the
affairs of the IDI or who would be in a
position to influence or control the
management or affairs of the IDI, in
accordance with § 303.221(a).
(b) An individual or an institution
may file applications at separate times.
Under either approach, the
application(s) must be filed with the
appropriate FDIC Regional Office, as
required by this subpart.
§ 303.226
filed?
When may an application be
Except for situations in which no
application is required under section 19
and this subpart, an 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 an 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, conditions of
rehabilitation, and probation
requirements, must be completed, and
the case must be considered final by the
procedures of the applicable
jurisdiction. The FDIC’s application
forms as well as additional information
concerning section 19 can be accessed at
the FDIC’s Regional Offices or on the
FDIC’s website.
§ 303.227
De minimis offenses.
(a) In general. Approval is
automatically granted and an
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 two 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 three years or less and/or a
fine of $2,500 or less, and the individual
actually served three days or less of jail
time for each Covered Offense.
(3) Jail time under paragraph (a)(2) of
this section is calculated based on the
time an individual spent incarcerated as
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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:
persons who are restricted to a
substance-abuse treatment program
facility for part or all of the day; or
persons who are ordered to attend
outpatient psychiatric treatment.
(4) If there are two convictions or
program entries for a Covered Offense,
each conviction or program entry was
entered at least three years prior to the
date an application would otherwise be
required, except as provided in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, and
each Covered Offense was not
committed against an IDI or insured
credit union.
(b) Other types of offenses for which
the de minimis exception applies and
no application is required—(1) Age of
person at time of Covered Offense. If
there are two 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 an 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 IDI 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
one 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
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this paragraph (b) 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 IDI or insured credit union;
(iii) The individual has no more than
one other de minimis offense under this
section; and
(iv) If there are two de minimis
offenses under this section, each
conviction or program entry was entered
at least three years prior to the date an
application would otherwise be
required, or at least 18 months prior to
the date an 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 must disclose the
presence of the conviction(s) or program
entry(ies) to all IDIs in the affairs of
which that person 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.
1829(a)(2) can qualify under any of the
de minimis exceptions set out in this
section.
§ 303.228
How to file an application.
Forms and instructions should be
obtained from the FDIC’s website
(www.fdic.gov), and the application(s)
must be filed with the appropriate FDIC
Regional Office. An application may be
filed by an individual and by an IDI or
depository institution holding company
on behalf of an individual. The
appropriate Regional Office for an
institution-sponsored application is the
office covering the state where the
institution’s home office is located. The
appropriate Regional Office for an
individual application is the office
covering the state where the person
resides. States covered by each FDIC
Regional Office can be located on the
FDIC’s website.
§ 303.229
How an application is evaluated.
(a) Criminal-history records. In
reviewing an application, the FDIC
will—
(1) Primarily rely on the criminal
history record of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (rap sheet); and
(2) Provide such record to the
applicant to review for accuracy.
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(b) Certified copies. The FDIC will not
require an applicant to provide certified
copies of criminal history records unless
the FDIC 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) Ultimate determinations. The
ultimate determinations in assessing an
application are whether the person has
demonstrated their fitness to participate
in the conduct of the affairs of an IDI,
and whether the affiliation, ownership,
control, or participation by the person
in the conduct of the affairs of the
institution may constitute a threat to the
safety and soundness of the institution
or the interests of its depositors or
threaten to impair public confidence in
the institution.
(d) Individualized assessment. When
evaluating applications, the FDIC will
conduct an individualized assessment
that will consider:
(1) Whether the conviction or program
entry is subject to section 19, 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 IDI constitutes a threat to the safety
and soundness of the institution or the
interests of its depositors or threatens to
impair public confidence in the
institution;
(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, and 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
IDI to supervise and control the person’s
activities;
(6) The level of ownership or control
the person will have of an IDI;
(7) The applicability of the IDI’s
fidelity bond coverage to the person;
and
(8) Any additional factors in the
specific case that appear relevant to the
application or the applicant including,
but not limited to, the opinion or
position of the primary Federal or State
regulator.
(e) No re-consideration of guilt. The
question of whether a person, who was
convicted of a crime or who agreed to
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a program entry, was guilty of that crime
shall not be at issue in a proceeding
under this subpart or under 12 CFR part
308, subpart M.
(f) Factors considered for enumerated
offenses. The foregoing factors will also
be applied by the FDIC to determine
whether the interests of justice are
served in seeking an exception in the
appropriate court when an application
is made to terminate the ten-year ban
prior to its expiration date under 12
U.S.C. 1829(a)(2) for certain Federal
offenses.
(g) Mandatory conditions of approval.
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 FDIC has approved an application
filed by an individual and has issued a
consent order, the individual must
disclose the presence of the
conviction(s) or program entry(ies) to all
IDIs in the affairs of which they wish to
participate.
(h) Institution-sponsored
applications: work at same employer.
When deemed appropriate by the FDIC,
institution-sponsored 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 FDIC
(which may require a new 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) Work at a different employer after
certain approvals. In situations in
which an approval has been granted for
a person to participate in the affairs of
a particular IDI and the person
subsequently seeks to participate at
another IDI, another application must be
submitted and approved by the FDIC
prior to the person participating in the
affairs of the other IDI.
§ 303.231 Waiting time for a subsequent
application if an application is denied.
§ 303.230 What will the FDIC do if the
application is denied?
The rules and procedures set forth in
this subpart shall apply to an
application filed under section 19 of the
FDI Act, 12 U.S.C. 1829 (section 19),
and 12 CFR part 303, subpart L, by an
insured depository institution (IDI),
depository institution holding company,
or an individual (any of which could be
termed an applicant). Section 19 states
that if an individual has been convicted
of any criminal offense involving
dishonesty, a breach of trust, or money
laundering, or who has agreed to enter
into a pretrial diversion or similar
program in connection with the
prosecution of such offense, the
(a) The FDIC will inform the applicant
in writing that the application has been
denied and summarize or cite the
relevant considerations specified in
§ 303.229.
(b) The denial will also notify the
applicant that a written request for a
hearing under 12 CFR part 308, subpart
M, may be filed with the FDIC Executive
Secretary within 60 days after the
denial. The request for a hearing must
include the relief desired, the grounds
supporting the request for relief, and
any supporting evidence.
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(a) An application under section 19
may be made in writing at any time
more than one year after the issuance of
a decision denying an application under
section 19. If the original denial is
subject to a request for a hearing, then
the subsequent application may be filed
at any time more than one year after the
decision of the FDIC Board of Directors,
or its designee, denying the application.
Unless with the passage of time the
individual is no longer subject to
section 19, the prohibition against
participating in the affairs of an IDI
under section 19 shall continue until
the individual has been granted consent
in writing to participate in the affairs of
an IDI by the Board of Directors or its
designee.
(b) An institution-sponsored
application is not subject to the one-year
waiting period if the application—
(1) Follows the denial of an
individual application; or
(2) Follows the denial of an
institution-sponsored application and
the subsequent application is sponsored
by a different institution or is for a
different position.
PART 308—RULES OF PRACTICE AND
PROCEDURE
3. The authority citation for part 308
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 504, 554–557; 12
U.S.C. 93(b), 164, 505, 1464, 1467(d), 1467a,
1468, 1815(e), 1817, 1818, 1819, 1820, 1828,
1829, 1829(b), 1831i, 1831m(g)(4), 1831o,
1831p–1, 1832(c), 1884(b), 1972, 3102,
3108(a), 3349, 3909, 4717, 5412(b)(2)(C),
5414(b)(3); 15 U.S.C. 78(h) and (i), 78o(c)(4),
78o–4(c), 78o–5, 78q–1, 78s, 78u, 78u–2,
78u–3, 78w, 6801(b), 6805(b)(1); 28 U.S.C.
2461 note; 31 U.S.C. 330, 5321; 42 U.S.C.
4012a; Pub. L. 104–134, sec. 31001(s), 110
Stat. 1321; Pub. L. 109–351, 120 Stat. 1966;
Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376; Pub. L. 114–
74, sec. 701, 129 Stat. 584.
■
4. Revise § 308.156 to read as follows:
§ 308.156
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individual must seek the prior written
consent of the FDIC to: become or
continue as an institution-affiliated
party (IAP) with respect to an IDI; own
or control directly or indirectly an IDI;
or participate directly or indirectly in
any manner in the conduct of the affairs
of an IDI. This subpart shall apply only
after such application has been denied
under 12 CFR part 303, subpart L.
■ 5. Amend § 308.158 by revising
paragraphs (b) and (d) through (f) to
read as follows:
§ 308.158
Hearings.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Burden of proof. The burden of
going forward with a prima facie case
shall be upon the FDIC. The ultimate
burden of proof shall be upon the
applicant seeking the FDIC’s consent for
an individual to: become or continue as
an IAP with respect to an IDI; own or
control directly or indirectly an IDI; or
participate directly or indirectly in any
manner in the conduct of the affairs of
an IDI.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Written submissions in lieu of
hearing. The applicant may in writing
waive a hearing and elect to have the
matter determined on the basis of
written submissions.
(e) Failure to request or appear at
hearing. Failure to request a hearing
shall constitute a waiver of the
opportunity for a hearing. Failure to
appear at a hearing in person or through
an authorized representative shall
constitute a waiver of a hearing. If a
hearing is waived, and if there has not
been a written submission in lieu of a
hearing, the individual shall remain
prohibited under section 19.
(f) Decision by Board of Directors or
its designee. Within 60 days following
the Administrative Officer’s certification
of the record to the Board of Directors
or its designee, the Board of Directors or
its designee shall notify the applicant
whether the individual shall remain
prohibited under section 19. The
notification shall state the basis for any
decision of the Board of Directors or its
designee that is adverse to the applicant.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on October 24,
2023.
James P. Sheesley,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–23853 Filed 11–13–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
E:\FR\FM\14NOP1.SGM
14NOP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 218 (Tuesday, November 14, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 77906-77917]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-23853]
========================================================================
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. 218 / Tuesday, November 14, 2023 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 77906]]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Parts 303 and 308
RIN 3064-AF92
Fair Hiring in Banking Act
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) proposes to
revise its regulations to conform with the Fair Hiring in Banking Act
(FHBA)--which was enacted on and immediately effective as of December
23, 2022. Among other provisions, the FHBA excluded or exempted
categories of otherwise-covered offenses from the scope of statutory
prohibitions on participation in banking. These categories pertain to
certain older offenses, offenses committed by individuals 21 or
younger, and ``certain lesser offenses.'' The FHBA also clarified
several definitions in section 19 and provided application-processing
procedures. The FDIC considers most of the proposed revisions to its
regulations to be required by the FHBA. Other proposed revisions
reflect the FDIC's interpretation of statutory prohibitions in light of
the FHBA.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before January 16, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 3064-AF92, by any
of the following methods:
FDIC Website: https://www.fdic.gov/resources/regulations/federal-register-publications/. Follow instructions for submitting
comments on the agency website.
Email: [email protected]. Include RIN 3064-AF92 on the
subject line of the message.
Mail: James P. Sheesley, Assistant Executive Secretary,
Attention: Comments RIN 3064-AF92, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivery to FDIC: Comments may be hand-delivered to
the guard station at the rear of the 550 17th Street NW building
(located on F Street NW) on business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Please include your name, affiliation, address, email address, and
telephone number(s) in your comment. All statements received, including
attachments and other supporting materials, are part of the public
record and are subject to public disclosure.
Public Inspection: Comments received, including any
personal information provided, may be posted without change to https://www.fdic.gov/resources/regulations/federal-register-publications/.
Commenters should submit only information that the commenter wishes to
make available publicly. The FDIC may review, redact, or refrain from
posting all or any portion of any comment that it may deem to be
inappropriate for publication, such as irrelevant or obscene material.
The FDIC may post only a single representative example of identical or
substantially identical comments, and in such cases will generally
identify the number of identical or substantially identical comments
represented by the posted example. All comments that have been
redacted, as well as those that have not been posted, that contain
comments on the merits of this document will be retained in the public
comment file and will be considered as required under all applicable
laws. All comments may be accessible under the Freedom of Information
Act.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Timothy Schuett, Senior Review
Examiner, 763-614-9473, [email protected]; Brian Zeller, Review
Examiner, 571-345-8170, [email protected], Division of Risk Management
Supervision; or Graham Rehrig, Counsel, 703-314-3401, [email protected],
Legal Division.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 19 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (section 19) \1\
prohibits, without the prior written consent of the FDIC (the FDIC
refers to applications for such consent as ``consent applications''),
the participation in banking by any person who has been convicted of a
crime involving dishonesty or breach of trust or money laundering or
who has agreed to enter into a pretrial diversion or similar program in
connection with the prosecution for such an offense (collectively,
covered offenses). Further, this law forbids an insured depository
institution (IDI) from permitting such a person to engage in any
conduct or to continue any relationship prohibited by section 19.
Section 19 also imposes a separate ten-year ban for a person convicted
of certain crimes enumerated in Title 18 of the United States Code,
which can be removed only upon a motion by the FDIC and approval by the
sentencing court.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 1829.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
From 1998 until 2020, the FDIC had a Statement of Policy that was
issued related to section 19, occasionally revised, and published in
the Federal Register.\2\ The purpose of the Statement of Policy, as
amended through the years, was ``to provide the public with guidance
relating to section 19 and the FDIC's application thereof.'' \3\ In
2020, following notice and comment, the FDIC revised and codified the
Statement of Policy into the FDIC's Filing Procedures under 12 CFR part
303, subpart L, and Rules of Practice and Procedure under part 308,
subpart M (2020 Final Rule).\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See 63 FR 66177 (Dec. 1, 1998); 72 FR 73823 (Dec. 8, 2007)
with correction issued at 73 FR 5270 (Oct. 13, 2008); 76 FR 28031
(May 13, 2011); 77 FR 74847 (Dec. 18, 2012); 83 FR 38143 (Aug. 3,
2018).
\3\ See 84 FR 68353.
\4\ See 85 FR 51312 (Aug. 20, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On December 23, 2022, the President signed into law the Fair Hiring
in Banking Act FHBA,\5\ which significantly revised section 19 and was
effective immediately. The FHBA created several categories of
exceptions or exemptions to the prohibition on participating in
banking, including the following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The FHBA appears at section 5705 of the James M. Inhofe
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023, Public Law
117-263, 136 Stat. 2395, 3411.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certain older offenses: (1) if it has been 7 years or more
since the offense occurred; (2) if the individual was incarcerated with
respect to the offense and it has been 5 years or more since the
individual was released from incarceration; or (3) for individuals who
committed an offense when they were 21 years of age or younger, if it
has been
[[Page 77907]]
more than 30 months since the sentencing occurred.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ These exceptions do not apply to the offenses described
under 12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offenses for which an order of expungement, sealing, or
dismissal has been issued in regard to the conviction in connection
with such offense and it is 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 record to be considered for certain character and fitness
evaluation purposes.
``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 FDIC
may designate), if 1 year or more has passed since the applicable
conviction or program entry.
Misdemeanor criminal offenses involving dishonesty, if the
offense was committed more than one year before the date on which an
individual files a consent application,\7\ excluding any period of
incarceration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Under the FHBA, a ``consent application'' ``means an
application filed with [the FDIC] by an individual (or by an insured
depository institution or depository institution holding company on
behalf of an individual) seeking the written consent of the [FDIC]
under [12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(1)].'' 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A criminal offense involving dishonesty that also
``involv[es] the possession of controlled substances.''
The FHBA clarifies several terms in section 19, including
``criminal offense involving dishonesty'' and ``pretrial diversion or
similar program.'' It also provides conditions regarding de minimis
offenses, to the extent the FDIC provides de minimis exemptions by
rule.
The FHBA codifies procedures for consent applications filed with
the FDIC. It requires the FDIC to make all forms and instructions
related to consent applications available to the public, including on
the FDIC's website. It requires the FDIC to primarily rely on the
criminal history record of the Federal Bureau of Investigation when
evaluating consent applications and to provide such records to the
applicant to review for accuracy. Further, it requires the FDIC to
assess evidence of an individual's rehabilitation including: the
applicant's age at the time of the conviction or program entry; the
time that has elapsed since conviction or program entry; and the
relationship of an individual's offense to the responsibilities of the
applicable position. Other information, including an individual's
employment history, letters of recommendation, certificates documenting
participation in substance abuse programs, successful participation in
job preparation and educational programs, other relevant evidence, and
any additional information the FDIC determines necessary for safety and
soundness shall also be considered.
II. Discussion of Proposed Amendments
The proposed amendments to the FDIC's section 19 regulations are
primarily intended to align the regulations with the FHBA's provisions.
The proposed amendments address, among other topics, the types of
offenses covered by section 19, the effect of the completion of
sentencing or pretrial-diversion program requirements in the context of
section 19, and the FDIC's procedures for reviewing applications filed
under section 19. Furthermore, in developing these proposed amendments,
the FDIC has consulted and coordinated with the National Credit Union
Administration, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
(FRB), and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency ``to promote
consistent implementation [of the FHBA] where appropriate.'' \8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(9) (``In carrying out this section,
the [FDIC] shall consult and coordinate with the National Credit
Union Administration as needed to promote consistent implementation
where appropriate'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Significant proposed revisions \9\ include the following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The proposed rule would also make a number of non-
substantive, technical edits to the section 19 regulations that are
not discussed in this section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Revised Provisions of 12 CFR Part 303, Subpart L
1. Section 303.220 What is section 19 of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act?
The FDIC proposes revising paragraph (b) of this section to clarify
that IDIs must make a reasonable, documented inquiry to verify an
applicant's history to ensure that a person who has a covered offense
on the person's record is not hired or permitted to participate in its
affairs without the written consent of the FDIC.
2. Section 303.221 Who is covered by section 19?
The FDIC proposes to revise paragraph (d) of this section to more
closely align its restrictions with the analogous FRB regulations under
12 CFR 225.41 and 238.31 and the FDIC's regulations under 12 CFR part
303, subpart E, concerning Change in Bank Control applications. A
person will be deemed to exercise ``control'' if that person: (1) has
the ability to direct the management or policies of an IDI; (2) has the
power to vote 25 percent or more of the voting shares of an IDI; or (3)
has the power to vote 10 percent of the voting shares of an IDI if: (a)
no other person owns, controls, or has the power to vote more shares;
or (b) the institution has registered securities under section 12 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.\10\ Under the same standards, a
person will be deemed to ``own'' an IDI if that person owns: (1) 25
percent or more of the institution's voting stock; or (2) 10 percent of
the voting shares if: (a) no other person owns more; or (b) the
institution has registered securities under section 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Paragraph (d) retains language
concerning individuals acting in concert with others so as to have such
ownership or control.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 15 U.S.C. 78l.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Section 303.222 Which offenses qualify as ``Covered Offenses'' under
section 19?
The proposed revisions to paragraph (a) of this section would
reflect the new statutory definition of ``criminal offense involving
dishonesty.'' \11\ The FHBA excludes from the scope of such offenses
``an offense involving the possession of controlled substances.'' \12\
The FDIC interprets this phrase concerning controlled substances to
exclude, 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 from court determinations that the statutory provisions of
the offenses do not involve dishonesty, breach of trust, or money
laundering. Potential applicants may contact their appropriate FDIC
Regional Office if they have questions about whether their offenses are
covered under section 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2).
\12\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2)(C)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This revised regulatory language would mark a shift from the FDIC's
current section 19 regulations, which require an application for all
convictions and pretrial diversions concerning the illegal manufacture,
sale, distribution of, or trafficking in controlled substances. The
FDIC believes that this proposed revision would be consistent with the
text and purposes of the FHBA, would align the FDIC's interpretation of
section 19 as to offenses involving controlled substances
[[Page 77908]]
more closely with other Federal banking regulators, and continue to
recognize that a drug-related offense could potentially involve
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering. The FDIC also notes
that this proposed revision to its section 19 regulations would not
affect the FDIC's ability to consider drug-related offenses, as they
pertain to the suitability of an individual, under other statutory
provisions, including the Change in Bank Control Act and section 32 of
the FDI Act.
The FHBA also states that the term ``criminal offense involving
dishonesty'' does not include ``a misdemeanor criminal offense
committed more than one year before the date on which an individual
files a consent application, excluding any period of incarceration.''
\13\ The FDIC interprets the term ``offense committed'' to mean the
``last date of the underlying misconduct,'' based on the plain text of
the statute. In instances with multiple offenses, ``offense committed''
means the last date of any of the underlying offenses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2)(C)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised paragraph (c) would include new language reflecting the
statute's exception of certain older offenses from the scope of section
19.\14\ Among other exceptions, the FHBA states that section 19's
restrictions will not apply to an offense if ``it has been 7 years or
more since the offense occurred.'' \15\ The FDIC considers the phrases
``offense committed''--noted above--and ``offense occurred'' to be
substantially similar. Accordingly, the FDIC 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. Revised
paragraph (c) contains another FHBA exception: section 19's
restrictions would not apply to an offense if ``the individual was
incarcerated with respect to the offense and it has been 5 years or
more since the individual was released from incarceration.'' \16\ While
the language of the statute is clear, the FDIC notes that there could
be situations in which an individual who was incarcerated with respect
to an offense would be permitted to work at a bank before a similarly
situated individual who was not incarcerated in connection with an
offense. Revised paragraph (c) also tracks 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 19 shall
not apply to the offense if it has been more than 30 months since the
sentencing occurred.\17\ The FDIC 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, revised
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.
1829(a)(2).\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1).
\15\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(A)(i).
\16\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(A)(ii).
\17\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(B).
\18\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised paragraph (d) excludes ``designated lesser offenses'' (for
example, using fake identification), as specified in 12 U.S.C.
1829(c)(3)(D), if one year or more has passed since the applicable
conviction or program entry.
Revised paragraph (e) adds language to codify 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, breach
of trust, or money laundering in foreign jurisdictions are subject to
section 19, unless the offense is otherwise excluded by 12 CFR part
303, subpart L. For example, if an IDI has operations outside the
United States, the IDI could conduct a reasonable, documented inquiry
to verify an applicant's history, in accordance with 12 CFR 303.220, by
inquiring about potential covered offenses that may have occurred in
that foreign country (or countries) in which the IDI conducts
operations, as well as in the United States. As another example of such
an inquiry, if an IDI plans to hire someone in the United States who is
from a foreign country, the IDI could inquire about potential covered
offenses that may have occurred in the United States and in that
foreign country.
4. Section 303.223 What constitutes a conviction under section 19?
Paragraph (c) of this section has been revised to reflect statutory
language related to the treatment of orders of expungement, sealing, or
dismissal of criminal records.\19\ 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
19. 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 record to be considered for certain character and
fitness evaluation purposes.'' \20\ The statute does not address
expungements, sealings, or dismissals by operation of law, and the FDIC
has sought to harmonize its current regulations concerning expunged and
sealed records with the statutory language to provide a more
comprehensive framework as to such records. The FDIC has also added
language to the second (intent) prong of the expungement framework to
encompass the language in the expungement order itself, the legislative
provisions under which the order was issued, and other legislative
provisions. This proposed revision also seeks to harmonize the FDIC's
current regulations concerning expungements with the FHBA's provisions.
The FDIC believes that all of the additional language is consistent
with the purposes of the statute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(2).
\20\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised paragraph (d) clarifies that it encompasses the terms
``youthful offender'' and ``juvenile delinquent'' and similar terms,
since a court does not have to specifically use these terms in an
adjudication in order for paragraph (d)'s provisions to apply.
5. Section 303.224 What constitutes a pretrial diversion or similar
program (program entry) under section 19?
This section has been revised to reflect the statutory definition
of ``pretrial diversion or similar program.'' \21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Section 303.225 What are the types of applications that can be
filed?
This section has been revised to reflect the updated statutory
filing procedures. The statute removes the FDIC's former policy that an
institution sponsor a consent application or that an individual seek a
waiver of the institution filing requirement. Moreover, the statute
enables a depository institution holding company to file an application
on behalf of an individual (previously, only IDIs could file such
sponsored applications).\22\ In order to avoid duplication of
applications filed with the FRB and the FDIC, revised paragraph (a)
states that the FDIC will accept applications from: an individual; an
IDI applying on behalf of an
[[Page 77909]]
individual; a depository institution holding company applying on behalf
of an individual with respect to a depository institution subsidiary of
the holding company; and a depository institution holding company
applying on behalf of an individual who will work at the holding
company but also participate in the affairs of the IDI or who would be
in a position to influence or control the management or affairs of the
IDI, in accordance with 12 CFR 303.221(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised paragraph (b), consistent with the FHBA, states that an
individual or an institution may file applications at separate times.
Under either approach, the application(s) must be filed with the
appropriate FDIC Regional Office.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. Section 303.226 When may an application be filed?
This revised section notes that, before an 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.''
The FDIC proposes to include this revised language to accord with
several of the FHBA's exclusions from section 19 that are not tied to
the completion of sentencing requirements.
Furthermore, the FHBA requires the FDIC to ``make all forms and
instructions related to consent applications available to the public,
including on the website of the Corporation.'' \24\ These forms and
instructions ``shall provide a sample cover letter and a comprehensive
list of items that may accompany the application, including clear
guidance on evidence that may support a finding of rehabilitation.''
\25\ While the FDIC has not explicitly mentioned these requirements in
its regulations, the agency will comply with them.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(5)(A).
\25\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(5)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. Section 303.227 De minimis Offenses
The FDIC proposes to retitle this section to avoid confusion
between ``designated lesser offenses'' and ``de minimis offenses.''
This section's current title is, ``When is an application not required
for a covered offense or program entry (De minimis offenses)?'' The
FHBA includes ``designated lesser offenses,'' which offenses are
excluded from the scope of section 19 (that is, they are not considered
de minimis offenses--which offenses are considered covered offenses for
which no application is required because the application is deemed
automatically granted). The FDIC believes that the current title would
cause confusion for a reader and therefore proposes retitling this
section.
The FHBA removed the use of fake identification from the scope of
section 19, and revised paragraphs (a)(1) and (b)(4) reflect this
exclusion.\26\ Revised paragraph (a)(2) would reflect the FHBA's
confinement criteria as to the FDIC's determination of de minimis
offenses.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(3)(D).
\27\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(3)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC proposes to revise the de minimis requirement related to
the aggregate total face value of all ``bad'' or insufficient funds
checks in paragraph (b)(2)(i) from $1,000 to $2,000 to conform with the
statute.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(3)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
9. Section 303.228 How To File an Application
This revised section would eliminate the institution filing
requirement and waiver process and indicate that an ``institution''--an
IDI or a depository institution holding company--could file an
application on behalf of an individual, rather than just an IDI. Both
of these proposed revisions are due to the updated statutory
language.\29\ This revised section would also clarify that the
appropriate FDIC Regional Office for an institution-sponsored
application would be the office covering the state where the
institution's home office is located and that the appropriate FDIC
Regional Office for an individual application would be the office
covering the state where the person resides.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
10. Section 303.229 How an Application Is Evaluated
Revised paragraph (a) would reflect new statutory requirements
related to the FDIC's review process, including the requirement that
the FDIC primarily rely on the criminal history record of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation in the FDIC's review and provide such record to
the applicant to review for accuracy.\30\ The FDIC interprets the term
``criminal history record'' to mean ``identity history summary
checks,'' which are commonly known as ``rap sheets.'' Under revised
paragraph (a)--and in accordance with the FHBA--the FDIC, in reviewing
a consent application, would provide a copy of the rap sheet to an
applicant to review for accuracy.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(6)(A)(i).
\31\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(6)(A)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised paragraph (b) would state that the FDIC will not require an
applicant to provide certified copies of criminal history records
unless the FDIC 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
(that is, the rap sheet).\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(6)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised paragraph (d) would clarify how the FDIC will evaluate
evidence of rehabilitation and other evidence, as required by the
FHBA.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(7). 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 19 applications, and the use of both terms in
these regulations may create confusion. Therefore, the proposed rule
uses the term rehabilitation not mitigating.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revised paragraph (g) would eliminate references to the former
application-waiver requirement.
Finally, revised paragraph (h) would incorporate statutory language
explaining when a new institution-sponsored application would be
necessary due to changes in the scope of an applicant's employment.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(f)(8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
11. Section 303.231 Waiting Time for a Subsequent Application if An
Application Is Denied
This section, as currently written and among other provisions,
requires a one-year waiting period to file a consent application,
following the issuance of a decision denying such an application. The
proposed rule would retain the existing regulatory text as paragraph
(a) and create a new paragraph (b)--which would note that an
institution-sponsored application is not subject to the one-year
waiting period if the application (1) follows the denial of an
individual application, or (2) follows the denial of an institution-
sponsored application and the subsequent application is sponsored by a
different institution or is for a different position.
B. Revised Provisions of 12 CFR Part 308, Subpart M
The proposed rule would make several technical amendments to
Sec. Sec. 308.156 and 308.158 to encompass applications that are
sponsored by depository institution holding companies, clarify two
sentences concerning hearing procedures, and use more consistent
terminology.
[[Page 77910]]
III. Expected Effects
As previously discussed, the proposed rule would align the FDIC's
regulations with the FHBA's provisions, make additional changes to
further clarify the FDIC's regulations related to section 19, more
closely align the FDIC's section 19 regulations with those of other
Federal financial regulators, and make a number of non-substantive,
technical edits. As of the quarter ending June 30, 2023, there were
4,654 FDIC-insured depository institutions, all of which are covered by
the rule and therefore could be affected.\35\ Additionally, the rule
will apply to persons covered by the provisions of section 19,
including those who are or wish to become employees, officers,
directors, or controlling shareholders of an IDI or who otherwise are
or wish to become an institution-affiliated party (IAP) of an IDI.
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\35\ FDIC Call Report data, March 31, 2023.
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To estimate the number of institutions and individuals affected by
the rule, the FDIC counted the number of section 19 applications it has
received between 2020 and 2022. Over this period, the FDIC received 27
bank-sponsored section 19 applications, an average of 9 per year.
Additionally, the FDIC received 202 individual section 19 applications
during the same period, an average of approximately 67 per year.\36\
Therefore, the FDIC estimates that the proposed rule could affect at
least 9 FDIC-insured depository institutions and 67 individuals per
year. Assuming that each application involves a different institution,
approximately 2 percent of insured institutions, or 76, could be
affected per year on average.\37\
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\36\ FDIC Application Tracking System.
\37\ (76/4,654) * 100 = 1.6 percent.
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As previously described, the proposed rule would align the FDIC's
regulations with the FHBA's provisions. In particular, the FHBA created
several categories of exceptions or exemptions to the prohibition on
participating in banking. The proposed rule would incorporate these
categories of exemptions and exceptions. The FDIC believes that the
additional categories for exceptions or exemptions to the prohibition
on participating in banking established by the FHBA could benefit
certain individuals and IDIs by reducing the number of applications
they would otherwise be required to file under section 19.
Additionally, the categories of exceptions or exemptions to the
prohibition on participating in banking established by the FHBA could
benefit IDIs by marginally expanding the supply of labor available.
However, these changes were created by the FHBA and were effective
immediately upon passage, and the proposed rule aligns the FDIC's
regulations with these elements of the FHBA; therefore, the associated
changes in the proposed rule will have no direct effect on individuals
or IDIs.
The proposed rule would amend the FDIC's existing section 19
application-procedure regulations to incorporate the FHBA's provisions.
The FDIC's current section 19 regulations contain references to
existing application procedures that are similar in substance to those
established by FHBA. However, the FHBA, among other requirements,
compels the FDIC to primarily rely on the criminal history record of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation when reviewing consent
applications. It is the current practice of the FDIC to consider all
relevant information when evaluating a section 19 application. However,
the establishment of a common source of criminal history, together with
only requiring certified copies of criminal history records if there
exists clear and compelling justification for doing so, could benefit
certain individuals and IDIs by marginally reducing the volume of
information they need to supply to the FDIC. The FDIC believes that,
while these proposed changes to the application procedures will
directly affect certain individuals and institutions that file section
19 applications, they may not have a substantial effect on potential
applicants. Finally, these changes were created by the FHBA and were
effective immediately upon passage, and the proposed rule aligns the
FDIC's regulations with these elements of the FHBA; therefore, the
associated changes in the proposed rule will have no direct effect on
individuals or IDIs.
Finally, in seeking to align its section 19 regulations with the
provisions of the FHBA, the FDIC used its discretion to marginally
increase the scope of certain terms so as to better reflect the
purposes of the FHBA. In particular, the FDIC has provided broader
language as to the scope of expunged, sealed, or dismissed offenses.
This aspect of the proposed rule could potentially benefit persons
covered by the provisions of section 19, including individuals who are
or wish to become employees, officers, directors, or controlling
shareholders of an IDI, or who otherwise are or wish to become an IAP
of an IDI. However, given that most of the proposed amendments are
focused on aligning the FDIC's regulations with the FHBA, the marginal
effect of this aspect of the proposed rule is likely to be small.
The FDIC invites comments on all aspects of this analysis. In
particular, would the proposed rule have any costs or benefits that the
FDIC has not identified?
IV. Alternatives
As discussed above, almost all of the proposed substantive changes
stem from the FHBA's revisions to section 19. The FDIC does not have
discretion in considering alternatives to those statutory revisions.
The FDIC has, however, proposed several clarifications and
interpretations to its section 19 regulations. For example, the FDIC
has provided broader language as to the scope of expunged, sealed, or
dismissed offenses. The FDIC considered whether to simply provide the
statutory definition for such offenses. The FDIC chose to propose the
inclusion of more expansive language, in the interest of harmonizing
the FDIC's existing regulations with the revisions to section 19, and
under the belief that this language would be consistent with the
purposes of the FHBA. The FDIC invites comments on its consideration of
alternatives. In particular, are there other alternatives that the FDIC
should consider?
V. Request for Comments
1. The FDIC seeks comments on all aspects of its approach to
section 19 and more specifically on the questions that follow.
2. Offense date. As revised, section 19 provides for an exception
for an offense if ``it has been 7 years or more since the offense
occurred.'' \38\ There is a similar provision that removes from the
definition of ``criminal offense involving dishonesty'' ``a misdemeanor
criminal offense committed more than one year before the date on which
an individual files a consent application, excluding any period of
incarceration[.]'' \39\ Historically, the FDIC's position has been that
actions do not amount to a covered ``offense,'' for section 19
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.\40\ However, for purposes
[[Page 77911]]
of evaluating whether the seven-year or one-year exception applies, the
FDIC must evaluate if it has been seven years or more since the
``offense occurred'' or whether the ``offense [was] committed more than
one year before the date on which an individual files a consent
application, excluding any period of incarceration.'' The FDIC 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 FDIC acknowledges that there may
be other, supportable interpretations of this phrase. For example, the
FDIC 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 only begins with conviction or program entry,
rather than the date of their misconduct. As such, the FDIC seeks
public comment on the following topic: Is the FDIC's interpretation of
the phrases ``offense occurred'' and ``offense committed'' as the
``last date of underlying misconduct'' appropriate or are there other
interpretations the FDIC should consider? What support do commenters
have for other interpretations given the language of the statute?
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\38\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1).
\39\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2)(C)(i).
\40\ See 12 CFR 303.223(a) (2020). (``There must be a conviction
of record. Section 19 does not cover arrests or pending cases not
brought to trial, unless the person has a program entry as set out
in Sec. 303.224.''). The FDIC's current section 19 regulations only
focus on underlying misconduct in the context of de minimis offenses
for individuals who were 21 years of age of younger when the
``actions that resulted in [the] conviction[ ] or program entr[y]
all occurred.'' See 12 CFR 303.227(b)(1).
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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.\41\ However, the statute does not
define the phrase ``sentencing occurred.'' The FDIC 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 FDIC seeks public comment on the
following topic: Is the FDIC's proposed interpretation of the phrase
``sentencing occurred'' appropriate?
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\41\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(1)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Foreign convictions and pretrial diversions. Section 19 applies
to ``any person who has been convicted of any criminal offense
involving dishonesty or a breach of trust or money laundering, or has
agreed to enter into a pretrial diversion or similar program in
connection with a prosecution for such offense.'' \42\ 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).\43\ The statute does not define ``offense involving . . .
breach of trust or money laundering.'' The FDIC's position has been
that foreign convictions and pretrial diversions are included within
the scope of section 19. There are strong public policy rationales for
prohibiting persons who have been convicted of certain foreign criminal
offenses (or entered into a pre-trial diversion program in connection
with such an offense) from becoming or continuing as an IAP or owning,
controlling, or otherwise participating in the affairs of an insured
depository institution. However, the FDIC acknowledges that there may
be caselaw, statutory construction, and other arguments that support a
reading of section 19 that would exclude foreign convictions and
pretrial diversions from the scope of section 19. As such, the FDIC
seeks public comment on the following topic: Does section 19 encompass
foreign convictions and pretrial diversions? What support do commenters
have for their position?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(1).
\43\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Expungements, sealings, and dismissals. The FHBA established a
new statutory exemption for expunged, sealed, and dismissed convictions
(collectively, ``expungements'').\44\ The FDIC's current regulations
contain more expansive language concerning expungements than the
statutory text. Notably, the FDIC's expungement provisions encompass
all convictions that had been expunged--whether by court order or
otherwise by operation of law. 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 maintains the FDIC's broad interpretation of ``expungement'' to
encompass covered offenses that have been expunged by operation of law.
The FDIC seeks public comment on the following topic: Given the new
statutory exemption for expunged offenses, is the FDIC's more expansive
proposed interpretation of expungement--which term includes records
that have been expunged by application of law--appropriate?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ See 12 U.S.C. 1829(c)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Offenses involving controlled substances. The FHBA states that
``offenses involving the possession of controlled substances'' are not
included within the definition of ``criminal offense involving
dishonesty'' and, therefore, are not subject to section 19's
prohibition.\45\ The proposed rule includes this definitional exclusion
and notes that the FDIC 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 the FDIC's current section 19 regulations,
which only provide an exclusion for the simple possession of controlled
substances. 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 with intent to
distribute controlled substances. The FDIC seeks public comment on the
following topic: Is the FDIC'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?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ 12 U.S.C. 1829(g)(2)(C)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. De minimis offenses. The FHBA states that the FDIC may exempt by
rule certain de minimis offenses from section 19's prohibition. The
FDIC considers de minimis offenses to be covered offenses for which an
application is not required because the FDIC deems the application
automatically granted. The FDIC has previously promulgated rules that
specified de minimis offenses under section 19.\46\ However, given this
new statutory language, the FDIC is reevaluating its current approach
to de minimis offenses. Accordingly, the FDIC seeks public comment on
the following topic: Is the FDIC's current approach to de minimis
offenses appropriate? Are there additional offenses that the FDIC
should consider de minimis under section 19? Please provide support for
such a designation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ See 12 CFR 303.227.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. Written comments must be received by the FDIC no later than
January 16, 2024.
VI. Regulatory Analysis and Procedure
A. The Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA),\47\ the FDIC may not conduct or sponsor, and the respondent is
not required to respond to, an information collection unless it
displays a currently
[[Page 77912]]
valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC is revising its section 19 application form to conform
with the changes to section 19 under the FHBA. These changes will amend
the FDIC's existing information collection associated with this
proposed rule, entitled ``Application Pursuant to Section 19 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act'' (3064-0018). For this reason, the
information-collection requirements contained in this proposed rule
will be submitted by the FDIC to OMB for review and approval under
section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) and Sec. 1320.11 of the
OMB's implementing regulations (5 CFR part 1320). Based on available
data, the number of respondents and the estimated annual burden
associated with the information collection will decrease. Comments are
invited on:
(a) Whether the collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the FDIC's functions, including whether the
information has practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the estimate of the burden of the information
collection, 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 collection 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 will become a matter of public record. Comments on the
collection of information should be sent to the address listed in the
ADDRESSES section of this document. A copy of the comments may also be
submitted to the OMB desk officer: By mail to U.S. Office of Management
and Budget, 725 17th Street NW, #10235, Washington, DC 20503, or by
facsimile to 202-395-6974; or email to [email protected],
Attention, Federal Banking Agency Desk Officer.
Information Collection
Title: ``Application Pursuant to Section 19 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act''.
OMB Number: 3064-0018.
Affected Public: Insured depository institutions and individuals.
Summary of Estimated Annual Burdens
[OMB No. 3064-0018]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
IC Description Type of burden Frequency of response Number of responses/ Hours per Annual burden
(obligation to respond) respondents respondent response (hours)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application Pursuant to Section 19 Reporting (Required to On occasion.............. 76 1 16 1,216
of the Federal Deposit Insurance obtain or retain
Act. benefits).
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total Annual Burden Hours: ....................... ......................... .............. .............. .............. 1,216
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: FDIC.
B. The Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires an agency,
in connection with a proposed rule, to prepare and make available for
public comment an initial regulatory flexibility analysis that
describes the impact of the proposed rule on small entities.\48\
However, an initial regulatory flexibility analysis is not required if
the agency certifies that the proposed rule will not, if promulgated,
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The Small Business Administration (SBA) has defined ``small
entities'' to include banking organizations with total assets of less
than or equal to $850 million.\49\ Generally, the FDIC considers a
significant economic impact to be a quantified effect in excess of 5
percent of total annual salaries and benefits or 2.5 percent of total
noninterest expenses. The FDIC believes that effects in excess of one
or more of these thresholds typically represent significant economic
impacts for FDIC-supervised institutions.
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\48\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\49\ The SBA defines a small banking organization as having $850
million or less in assets, where an organization's ``assets are
determined by averaging the assets reported on its four quarterly
financial statements for the preceding year.'' See 13 CFR 121.201
(as amended by 87 FR 69118, effective December 19, 2022). In its
determination, the ``SBA counts the receipts, employees, or other
measure of size of the concern whose size is at issue and all of its
domestic and foreign affiliates.'' See 13 CFR 121.103. Following
these regulations, the FDIC uses an IDI's affiliated and acquired
assets, averaged over the preceding four quarters, to determine
whether the insured depository institution is ``small'' for the
purposes of the RFA.
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As discussed further below, the FDIC certifies that the proposed
rule, if adopted, will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of FDIC-supervised small entities.
As of the quarter ending June 30, 2023, the FDIC insured 4,654
depository institutions, of which 3,373 are defined as small banking
organizations for the purposes of the RFA.\50\ In the period from 2020
through 2022, the FDIC received 9 bank-sponsored section 19
applications from small, FDIC-insured institutions, an average of 3 per
year. Additionally, the FDIC received 202 section 19 applications from
individuals during the same period, an average of about 67 per
year.\51\ To determine the maximum number of small, FDIC-insured
institutions that could be affected by the proposed rule, this analysis
assumes that each applicant is seeking employment at a different bank
and that each bank is a small, FDIC-insured institution. Based on these
assumptions, 70 (2.1 percent of) small, FDIC-insured institutions, on
average, annually, could be affected by the proposed rule.\52\ Section
19 applications from individuals are compelled by the applicant's
intent to seek employment at FDIC-insured institutions, many of which
are not small. Therefore, the FDIC believes that the number of small,
FDIC-insured institutions affected by the proposed rule is likely to be
less than 70.
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\50\ FDIC Call Report, March 31, 2023.
\51\ FDIC Application Tracking System.
\52\ (70/3,433) * 100 = 2.04 percent.
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As discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the proposed
rule would align the FDIC's regulations with the FHBA's provisions,
make additional
[[Page 77913]]
changes to further clarify the FDIC's regulations related to section
19, more closely align the FDIC's section 19 regulations with those of
other Federal financial regulators, and make a number of non-
substantive, technical edits. Most of the proposed changes were
precipitated by the FHBA--which was effective immediately upon
passage--and the proposed rule aligns the FDIC'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 IDIs.
Further, since the FDIC estimates that a maximum of 70 small, FDIC-
insured institutions could be affected by the proposed rule, on
average, annually, any direct affects realized as a result of the
proposed rule are likely to be small and affect a relatively small
number of entities.
In light of the foregoing, the FDIC certifies that the proposed
rule would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The FDIC invites comments on all aspects of
the supporting information provided in this RFA section. In particular,
would this proposed rule have any significant effects on small entities
that the FDIC has not identified?
C. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act \53\ requires each
Federal banking agency (FBA) to use plain language in its proposed and
final rules published after January 1, 2000. The FDIC has sought to
present the proposed rule in a simple and straightforward manner. The
FDIC invites comments on whether the proposal is clearly stated and
effectively organized, and how the FDIC might make the proposal easier
to understand. For example:
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\53\ Public Law 106-102, sec. 722, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (1999),
12 U.S.C. 4809.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Has the FDIC organized the material to suit your needs? If
not, how could it present the rule more clearly?
Have we clearly stated the requirements of the rule? If
not, how could the rule be more clearly stated?
Does the rule contain technical jargon that is not clear?
If so, which language requires clarification?
Would a different format (grouping and order of sections,
use of headings, paragraphing) make the regulation easier to
understand? If so, what changes would make the regulation easier to
understand?
What else could we do to make the regulation easier to
understand?
D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Under section 302(a) of the Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act (RCDRIA),\54\ in determining the effective
date and administrative compliance requirements for new regulations
that impose additional reporting, disclosure, or other requirements on
IDIs, each FBA must consider, consistent with principles of safety and
soundness and the public interest, any administrative burdens that such
regulations would place on depository institutions, including small
depository institutions, and customers of depository institutions, as
well as the benefits of such regulations. In addition, section 302(b)
of the RCDRIA requires new regulations and amendments to regulations
that impose additional reporting, disclosures, or other new
requirements on IDIs generally to take effect on the first day of a
calendar quarter that begins on or after the date on which the
regulations are published in final form.\55\ The FDIC invites comments
that further will inform its consideration of RCDRIA.
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\54\ 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
\55\ 12 U.S.C. 4802.
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List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 303
Administrative practice and procedure, Bank deposit insurance,
Banks, banking, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations.
12 CFR Part 308
Administrative practice and procedure, Bank deposit insurance,
Banks, banking, Claims, Crime, Equal access to justice, Fraud,
Investigations, Lawyers, Penalties, Savings associations.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the preamble and under the authority of
12 U.S.C. 1819 (Seventh and Tenth), the FDIC proposes to amend 12 CFR
parts 303 and 308 as follows:
PART 303--FILING PROCEDURES
0
1. The authority citation for part 303 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 378, 1464, 1813, 1815, 1817, 1818, 1819(a)
(Seventh and Tenth), 1820, 1823, 1828, 1829, 1831a, 1831e, 1831o,
1831p-1, 1831w, 1835a, 1843(l), 3104, 3105, 3108, 3207, 5414, 5415,
and 15 U.S.C. 1601-1607.
0
2. Revise subpart L, consisting of Sec. Sec. 303.220 through 303.231,
to read as follows:
Subpart L--Section 19 of the FDI Act (Consent to Service of Persons
Convicted of, or Who Have Program Entries for, Certain Criminal
Offenses)
Sec.
303.220 What is section 19 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act?
303.221 Who is covered by section 19?
303.222 Which offenses qualify as ``Covered Offenses'' under section
19?
303.223 What constitutes a conviction under section 19?
303.224 What constitutes a pretrial diversion or similar program
under section 19?
303.225 What are the types of applications that can be filed?
303.226 When may an application be filed?
303.227 De minimis offenses.
303.228 How to file an application.
303.229 How an application is evaluated.
303.230 What will the FDIC do if the application is denied?
303.231 Waiting time for a subsequent application if an application
is denied.
Sec. 303.220 What is section 19 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act?
(a) This subpart covers applications under section 19 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act), 12 U.S.C. 1829. The FDIC
refers to such applications as ``consent applications.'' Under section
19, any person who has been convicted of any criminal offense involving
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering, 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 depository institution (IDI); own or control,
directly or indirectly, any IDI; or otherwise participate, directly or
indirectly, in the conduct of the affairs of any IDI without the prior
written consent of the FDIC.
(b) In addition, the law prohibits an IDI from permitting such a
person to engage in any conduct or to continue any relationship
prohibited by section 19. IDIs must therefore make a reasonable,
documented inquiry to verify an applicant's history to ensure that a
person who has a Covered Offense under section 19 is not hired or
permitted to participate in its affairs without the written consent of
the FDIC issued under this subpart. FDIC-supervised IDIs may extend a
conditional offer of employment contingent on the completion of a
background check satisfactory to the institution to determine if the
applicant is prohibited under section 19, but the
[[Page 77914]]
applicant may not work for, be employed by, or otherwise participate in
the affairs of the IDI until the IDI has determined that the applicant
is not prohibited under section 19.
(c) If there is a conviction or program entry covered by the
prohibitions of section 19, an application under this subpart must be
filed seeking the FDIC's consent to become, or to continue as, an IAP;
to own or control, directly or indirectly, an IDI; or to otherwise
participate, directly or indirectly, in the affairs of the IDI. The
application must be filed, and consented to, prior to serving in any of
the foregoing capacities unless such application is not required under
the subsequent provisions of this subpart. The purpose of an
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 IDI without posing a risk to its
safety and soundness or impairing public confidence in that
institution. The burden is upon the applicant to establish that the
application warrants approval.
Sec. 303.221 Who is covered by section 19?
(a) Persons covered by section 19 include IAPs, as defined by 12
U.S.C. 1813(u), and others who are participants in the conduct of the
affairs of an IDI. Therefore, all directors, officers, and employees of
an IDI who fall within the scope of section 19, including de facto
employees, as determined by the FDIC based upon generally applicable
standards of employment law, will also be subject to section 19.
Whether other persons are covered by section 19 depends upon their
degree of influence or control over the management or affairs of an
IDI. For example, section 19 would apply to an officer or director of
an IDI's holding company to the extent that they have the power to
define and direct the management or affairs of an IDI. Similarly,
directors and officers of affiliates, subsidiaries, or joint ventures
of an IDI or its holding company will be covered if they participate in
the affairs of the IDI or are in a position to influence or control the
management or affairs of the IDI. Typically, an independent contractor
does not have a relationship with the IDI other than the activity for
which the institution has contracted. However, an independent
contractor who influences or controls the management or affairs of the
IDI would be covered by section 19.
(b) The term person, for purposes of section 19, means an
individual, and does not include a corporation, firm, or other business
entity.
(c) Individuals who file an application with the FDIC under the
provisions of section 19 who also seek to participate in the affairs of
a bank holding company or savings and loan holding company may have to
comply with any filing requirements of the Board of the Governors of
the Federal Reserve System under 12 U.S.C. 1829(d) and (e).
(d) Section 19 specifically prohibits a person subject to its
provisions from owning or controlling, directly or indirectly, an IDI.
The terms control and ownership under section 19 shall have the meaning
given to those terms in subpart E of this part (including the
rebuttable presumptions stated in subpart E).
(1) A person will be deemed to exercise ``control'' if that
person--
(i) Has the ability to direct the management or policies of an IDI;
(ii) Has the power to vote 25 percent or more of the voting shares
of an IDI; or
(iii) Has the power to vote 10 percent of the voting shares of an
IDI if--
(A) No other person owns, controls, or has the power to vote more
shares; or
(B) The institution has registered securities under section 12 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78l).
(2) Under this paragraph (d), a person will be deemed to ``own'' an
IDI if that person owns--
(i) 25 percent or more of the institution's voting stock; or
(ii) 10 percent of the voting shares if--
(A) No other person owns more; or
(B) The institution has registered securities under section 12 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78l).
(3) The standards in this paragraph (d) would also apply to an
individual acting in concert with others so as to have such ownership
or control. Absent the FDIC's consent, persons subject to the
prohibitions of section 19 must divest their control or ownership of
shares above the foregoing limits.
Sec. 303.222 Which offenses qualify as ``Covered Offenses'' under
section 19?
(a) Categories of Covered Offenses. The conviction or program entry
must be for a criminal offense involving dishonesty, breach of trust,
or money laundering.
(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 one 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 do not involve dishonesty, breach of trust, or money
laundering, as noted in paragraph (b) of this section. Potential
applicants may contact their appropriate FDIC Regional Office if they
have questions about whether their offenses are covered under section
19.
(iv) The term offense committed in paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(A) of this
section 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) Elements of the offense. Whether a crime involves dishonesty,
breach of trust, or money laundering will be determined from the
statutory elements of the offense itself or from court determinations
that the statutory provisions of the offense involve dishonesty, breach
of trust, or money laundering.
(c) Certain older offenses excluded--(1) Exclusions for certain
older offenses. Section 19 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 term offense occurred means 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.
[[Page 77915]]
(2) Offenses committed by individuals 21 year of age or younger.
For individuals who committed an offense when they were 21 years of age
or younger, section 19 does not apply to the offense if it has been
more than 30 months since the sentencing occurred. The term sentencing
occurred means 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) does not apply to an offense
described under 12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(2).
(d) Designated lesser offenses excluded. Section 19 does not apply
to the following offenses, if one year or more 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. Individuals who are convicted of or enter
into a pretrial diversion program for a criminal offense involving
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering in any foreign
jurisdiction are subject to section 19, unless the offense is otherwise
excluded by this subpart.
Sec. 303.223 What constitutes a conviction under section 19?
(a) Convictions requiring an application. There must be a
conviction of record. Section 19 does not cover arrests or pending
cases not brought to trial, unless the person has a program entry as
set out in Sec. 303.224. Section 19 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 an application. A conviction for which a
pardon has been granted will require an application.
(b) Convictions not requiring an application. When an individual is
charged with a Covered Offense and, in the absence of a program entry
as set out in Sec. 303.224, is subsequently convicted of an offense
that is not a Covered Offense, the conviction is not subject to section
19.
(c) Expungement, dismissal, and sealing. A conviction is not
considered a conviction of record and does not require an 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'' (or similar term) by any court having
jurisdiction over minors as defined by State law, does not require an
application. Such an adjudication does not constitute a matter covered
under section 19 and is not a conviction or program entry for
determining the applicability of Sec. 303.227.
Sec. 303.224 What constitutes a pretrial diversion or similar program
under section 19?
(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 FDIC on a case-by-case basis. Program entries prior to November
29, 1990, are not covered by section 19.
(b) When a Covered Offense either is reduced by a program entry to
an offense that would otherwise not be covered by section 19 or is
dismissed upon successful completion of a program entry, the offense
remains a Covered Offense for purposes of section 19. The Covered
Offense will require an application unless it is de minimis as provided
by Sec. 303.227.
(c) Expungements, dismissals, or sealings of program entries will
be treated the same as those for convictions.
Sec. 303.225 What are the types of applications that can be filed?
(a) The FDIC will accept applications from--
(1) An individual;
(2) An IDI applying on behalf of an individual;
(3) A depository institution holding company applying on behalf of
an individual with respect to an IDI subsidiary of the holding company;
and
(4) A depository institution holding company applying on behalf of
an individual who will work at the holding company but also participate
in the affairs of the IDI or who would be in a position to influence or
control the management or affairs of the IDI, in accordance with Sec.
303.221(a).
(b) An individual or an institution may file applications at
separate times. Under either approach, the application(s) must be filed
with the appropriate FDIC Regional Office, as required by this subpart.
Sec. 303.226 When may an application be filed?
Except for situations in which no application is required under
section 19 and this subpart, an 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 an 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, conditions of rehabilitation, and probation
requirements, must be completed, and the case must be considered final
by the procedures of the applicable jurisdiction. The FDIC's
application forms as well as additional information concerning section
19 can be accessed at the FDIC's Regional Offices or on the FDIC's
website.
Sec. 303.227 De minimis offenses.
(a) In general. Approval is automatically granted and an
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 two 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 three
years or less and/or a fine of $2,500 or less, and the individual
actually served three days or less of jail time for each Covered
Offense.
(3) Jail time under paragraph (a)(2) of this section is calculated
based on the time an individual spent incarcerated as
[[Page 77916]]
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: persons who are restricted to a
substance-abuse treatment program facility for part or all of the day;
or persons who are ordered to attend outpatient psychiatric treatment.
(4) If there are two convictions or program entries for a Covered
Offense, each conviction or program entry was entered at least three
years prior to the date an application would otherwise be required,
except as provided in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, and each
Covered Offense was not committed against an IDI or insured credit
union.
(b) Other types of offenses for which the de minimis exception
applies and no application is required--(1) Age of person at time of
Covered Offense. If there are two 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 an 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 IDI 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 one 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 paragraph (b) 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 IDI or insured credit
union;
(iii) The individual has no more than one other de minimis offense
under this section; and
(iv) If there are two de minimis offenses under this section, each
conviction or program entry was entered at least three years prior to
the date an application would otherwise be required, or at least 18
months prior to the date an 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
must disclose the presence of the conviction(s) or program entry(ies)
to all IDIs in the affairs of which that person 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. 1829(a)(2) can qualify under any of the de minimis exceptions
set out in this section.
Sec. 303.228 How to file an application.
Forms and instructions should be obtained from the FDIC's website
(www.fdic.gov), and the application(s) must be filed with the
appropriate FDIC Regional Office. An application may be filed by an
individual and by an IDI or depository institution holding company on
behalf of an individual. The appropriate Regional Office for an
institution-sponsored application is the office covering the state
where the institution's home office is located. The appropriate
Regional Office for an individual application is the office covering
the state where the person resides. States covered by each FDIC
Regional Office can be located on the FDIC's website.
Sec. 303.229 How an application is evaluated.
(a) Criminal-history records. In reviewing an application, the FDIC
will--
(1) Primarily rely on the criminal history record of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (rap sheet); and
(2) Provide such record to the applicant to review for accuracy.
(b) Certified copies. The FDIC will not require an applicant to
provide certified copies of criminal history records unless the FDIC
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) Ultimate determinations. The ultimate determinations in
assessing an application are whether the person has demonstrated their
fitness to participate in the conduct of the affairs of an IDI, and
whether the affiliation, ownership, control, or participation by the
person in the conduct of the affairs of the institution may constitute
a threat to the safety and soundness of the institution or the
interests of its depositors or threaten to impair public confidence in
the institution.
(d) Individualized assessment. When evaluating applications, the
FDIC will conduct an individualized assessment that will consider:
(1) Whether the conviction or program entry is subject to section
19, 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 IDI constitutes a
threat to the safety and soundness of the institution or the interests
of its depositors or threatens to impair public confidence in the
institution;
(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, and 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 IDI to supervise and control
the person's activities;
(6) The level of ownership or control the person will have of an
IDI;
(7) The applicability of the IDI's fidelity bond coverage to the
person; and
(8) Any additional factors in the specific case that appear
relevant to the application or the applicant including, but not limited
to, the opinion or position of the primary Federal or State regulator.
(e) No re-consideration of guilt. The question of whether a person,
who was convicted of a crime or who agreed to
[[Page 77917]]
a program entry, was guilty of that crime shall not be at issue in a
proceeding under this subpart or under 12 CFR part 308, subpart M.
(f) Factors considered for enumerated offenses. The foregoing
factors will also be applied by the FDIC to determine whether the
interests of justice are served in seeking an exception in the
appropriate court when an application is made to terminate the ten-year
ban prior to its expiration date under 12 U.S.C. 1829(a)(2) for certain
Federal offenses.
(g) Mandatory conditions of approval. 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 FDIC has
approved an application filed by an individual and has issued a consent
order, the individual must disclose the presence of the conviction(s)
or program entry(ies) to all IDIs in the affairs of which they wish to
participate.
(h) Institution-sponsored applications: work at same employer. When
deemed appropriate by the FDIC, institution-sponsored 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 FDIC (which may require a new 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) Work at a different employer after certain approvals. In
situations in which an approval has been granted for a person to
participate in the affairs of a particular IDI and the person
subsequently seeks to participate at another IDI, another application
must be submitted and approved by the FDIC prior to the person
participating in the affairs of the other IDI.
Sec. 303.230 What will the FDIC do if the application is denied?
(a) The FDIC will inform the applicant in writing that the
application has been denied and summarize or cite the relevant
considerations specified in Sec. 303.229.
(b) The denial will also notify the applicant that a written
request for a hearing under 12 CFR part 308, subpart M, may be filed
with the FDIC Executive Secretary within 60 days after the denial. The
request for a hearing must include the relief desired, the grounds
supporting the request for relief, and any supporting evidence.
Sec. 303.231 Waiting time for a subsequent application if an
application is denied.
(a) An application under section 19 may be made in writing at any
time more than one year after the issuance of a decision denying an
application under section 19. If the original denial is subject to a
request for a hearing, then the subsequent application may be filed at
any time more than one year after the decision of the FDIC Board of
Directors, or its designee, denying the application. Unless with the
passage of time the individual is no longer subject to section 19, the
prohibition against participating in the affairs of an IDI under
section 19 shall continue until the individual has been granted consent
in writing to participate in the affairs of an IDI by the Board of
Directors or its designee.
(b) An institution-sponsored application is not subject to the one-
year waiting period if the application--
(1) Follows the denial of an individual application; or
(2) Follows the denial of an institution-sponsored application and
the subsequent application is sponsored by a different institution or
is for a different position.
PART 308--RULES OF PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
0
3. The authority citation for part 308 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 504, 554-557; 12 U.S.C. 93(b), 164, 505,
1464, 1467(d), 1467a, 1468, 1815(e), 1817, 1818, 1819, 1820, 1828,
1829, 1829(b), 1831i, 1831m(g)(4), 1831o, 1831p-1, 1832(c), 1884(b),
1972, 3102, 3108(a), 3349, 3909, 4717, 5412(b)(2)(C), 5414(b)(3); 15
U.S.C. 78(h) and (i), 78o(c)(4), 78o-4(c), 78o-5, 78q-1, 78s, 78u,
78u-2, 78u-3, 78w, 6801(b), 6805(b)(1); 28 U.S.C. 2461 note; 31
U.S.C. 330, 5321; 42 U.S.C. 4012a; Pub. L. 104-134, sec. 31001(s),
110 Stat. 1321; Pub. L. 109-351, 120 Stat. 1966; Pub. L. 111-203,
124 Stat. 1376; Pub. L. 114-74, sec. 701, 129 Stat. 584.
0
4. Revise Sec. 308.156 to read as follows:
Sec. 308.156 Scope.
The rules and procedures set forth in this subpart shall apply to
an application filed under section 19 of the FDI Act, 12 U.S.C. 1829
(section 19), and 12 CFR part 303, subpart L, by an insured depository
institution (IDI), depository institution holding company, or an
individual (any of which could be termed an applicant). Section 19
states that if an individual has been convicted of any criminal offense
involving dishonesty, a breach of trust, or money laundering, or who
has agreed to enter into a pretrial diversion or similar program in
connection with the prosecution of such offense, the individual must
seek the prior written consent of the FDIC to: become or continue as an
institution-affiliated party (IAP) with respect to an IDI; own or
control directly or indirectly an IDI; or participate directly or
indirectly in any manner in the conduct of the affairs of an IDI. This
subpart shall apply only after such application has been denied under
12 CFR part 303, subpart L.
0
5. Amend Sec. 308.158 by revising paragraphs (b) and (d) through (f)
to read as follows:
Sec. 308.158 Hearings.
* * * * *
(b) Burden of proof. The burden of going forward with a prima facie
case shall be upon the FDIC. The ultimate burden of proof shall be upon
the applicant seeking the FDIC's consent for an individual to: become
or continue as an IAP with respect to an IDI; own or control directly
or indirectly an IDI; or participate directly or indirectly in any
manner in the conduct of the affairs of an IDI.
* * * * *
(d) Written submissions in lieu of hearing. The applicant may in
writing waive a hearing and elect to have the matter determined on the
basis of written submissions.
(e) Failure to request or appear at hearing. Failure to request a
hearing shall constitute a waiver of the opportunity for a hearing.
Failure to appear at a hearing in person or through an authorized
representative shall constitute a waiver of a hearing. If a hearing is
waived, and if there has not been a written submission in lieu of a
hearing, the individual shall remain prohibited under section 19.
(f) Decision by Board of Directors or its designee. Within 60 days
following the Administrative Officer's certification of the record to
the Board of Directors or its designee, the Board of Directors or its
designee shall notify the applicant whether the individual shall remain
prohibited under section 19. The notification shall state the basis for
any decision of the Board of Directors or its designee that is adverse
to the applicant.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on October 24, 2023.
James P. Sheesley,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023-23853 Filed 11-13-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714-01-P