Just How Costly Can FinCEN Violations Be? NAFCU Offers Examples

ARLINGTON, Va.—Violating Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) anti-money laundering rules can be costly, NAFCU is reminding credit unions.

“Compliance failures have resulted in some pretty high penalties assessed by FinCEN and other regulators. We know credit unions are serious about BSA compliance. But just in case you need a reminder . . .,” NAFCU stated on its website.

The trade association listed some of the more serious compliance failures under recent BSA and Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) requirements that have exacted heavy costs:

  • In March 2015, Commerzbank AG, a global financial institution based in Frankfurt, Germany, agreed to forfeit $563 million, pay a $79 million fine and enter into a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department, a settlement agreement with the Treasury Department’s OFAC and a consent cease-and-desist order with the Federal Reserve. “This all-hands-on-deck response was prompted by Commerzbank knowingly and willfully moving around $263 million through the U.S. financial system on behalf of sanctioned entities in Iran and Sudan, using a system known as cover payments,” NAFCU stated. “There was even an internal email warning employees to ‘under no circumstances’ tell the New York office about the Iranian connection. BSA violations included poor to no ‘know your customer’ due diligence or reporting of suspicious activity.”
  • In June 2015, FinCEN fined a West Virginia bank $4.5 million after finding it had processed more than $9.2 million in structured and suspicious cash transactions between 2008 and 2012. “The Bank of Mingo, with $94 million in assets, had failed to file 619 currency transaction reports (CTRs) – 438 of which were all related to one corporate customer,” NAFCU reported.
  • In February, FinCEN announced a $4-million civil money penalty against Gibraltar Private Bank and Trust Company, of Coral Gables, Fla. “Despite being warned about its subpar compliance program in 2010, Gibraltar failed to monitor and detect suspicious activity, disregarding repeated red flags, and failed to properly file at least 120 suspicious activity reports (SARs) involving almost $558 million in transactions, between 2009 and 2013,” NAFCU reported. This included transactions related to a $1.2-billion Ponzi scheme led by a Florida-based attorney. In some cases, Gibraltar filed SARs years after the suspicious activity had already occurred.
  • In April, FinCEN fined a Nevada casino $1 million for egregiously and willfully violating AML requirements. FinCEN found that Sparks Nugget Inc. routinely disregarded warnings from the employee responsible for BSA compliance and did not file SARs for activity that she flagged. “Sparks even failed to file a SAR after a county official was convicted of embezzling at least $2.2 million and gambling with half of it at the casino,” NAFCU noted.

NAFCU said that its BSA Seminar in October is sold out, but that additional compliance training is available at the Regulatory Compliance Seminar, set for Oct. 25-28 in New Orleans.

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