U.S. senators launch bill to broaden
shell companies' disclosures
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[June 11, 2019]
By Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bipartisan group
of U.S. senators on Monday announced they were introducing a bill to
toughen U.S. laws requiring shell companies to disclose their true
owners' identity.
Two Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee, Tom Cotton and Mike
Rounds, and Democratic committee members Mark Warner and Doug Jones said
their proposed new law would improve corporate transparency, strengthen
national security and make it easier for investigators to crack down on
illicit financial activity by terrorists, drug dealers and other
criminals.
The senators said one of the principal aims of the new law would be to
require shell companies, which the senators said were "often used as
fronts for criminal activity" to disclose their ultimate, real owners to
the U.S. Treasury Department.
The senators said the bill would also update outdated federal anti-money
laundering laws by improving communications between law enforcement and
regulatory agencies and the financial industry and "facilitating" the
adoption by the industry and regulators of advanced technology.
In the House of Representatives, meanwhile, Democratic representative
Carolyn Maloney said the Financial Services Committee intended this week
to consider a bill introduced by a bipartisan group of members which
contains similar requirements.
The House bill would require companies to disclose their true owners to
federal authorities at the time the company is formed and would require
such owners to provide their names, dates of birth, current addresses
and drivers license or valid passport numbers.
Senators sponsoring their newly-introduced bill said they had named it
the Improving Laundering Laws and Increasing Comprehensive Information
Tracking of Criminal Activity in Shell Holdings (ILLICIT CASH) Act.
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Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR) arrives for a Senate Intelligence
Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., May 16, 2018.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
"As a former U.S. Attorney, I am all too familiar with criminals
hiding behind shell corporations to enable their illegal behavior,"
Jones said, noting U.S. anti-money laundering laws had not kept pace
with increasingly sophisticated efforts by criminals and terrorist
groups to move illicit funds around the world.
"Our draft bill makes it easier for law enforcement to track
ill-gotten gains without burdening legitimate businesses," Cotton
said.
One key provision of the proposed Senate legislation would be to
create federal reporting requirements that "all beneficial ownership
information" of U.S. registered corporations would be maintained in
a "comprehensive federal database" accessible to both federal and
local investigators, the senators said.
The bill also contains provisions to improve the effectiveness of
the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, the Treasury agency which
is currently supposed to take the lead in monitoring suspicious
financial transactions. It also would compel foreign banks to comply
with U.S. agencies' subpoenas and authorize contempt sanctions
against banks which fail to comply.
(Reporting By Mark Hosenball; Editing by Chris Reese)
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