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The Department of the Treasury and seven federal financial regulators July 17 issued proposed rules that would require certain financial institutions to establish minimum procedures for identifying and verifying the identity of customers seeking to open new financial accounts. Written comments on the proposed rules may be submitted within 45 days of their publication in the Federal Register.|ret||ret||tab|
These proposed rules implement Section 326 of the USA Patriot Act, which directs the issuance of regulations requiring financial institutions to implement reasonable procedures for: verifying the identity of any person seeking to open an account, to the extent reasonable and practicable; maintaining records of the information used to verify the person's identity; and determining whether the person appears on any list of known or suspected terrorists or terrorist organizations.|ret||ret||tab|
Final rules implementing Section 326 must be effective by Oct. 25.|ret||ret||tab|
The proposed rules seek to protect the United States' financial system from money laundering and terrorist financing. Additionally, by requiring identity verification procedures for all new accounts opened after the effective date of the final rules, the rules could also protect consumers against various forms of fraud, including identity theft. |ret||ret||tab|
The proposed rules were developed jointly by the Treasury Department, Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and seven federal financial regulators, including the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, National Credit Union Administration, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Office of Thrift Supervision and Securities and Exchange Commission. |ret||ret||tab|
The proposed rules outline requirements for the following financial institutions: banks and trust companies, savings associations, credit unions, securities brokers and dealers, mutual funds, futures-commission merchants and futures-introducing brokers. |ret||ret||tab|
The financial institutions subject to the proposed rules would be required to establish programs specifying procedures for obtaining identifying information from customers seeking to open new accounts. |ret||ret||tab|
This identifying information would be essentially the same information currently obtained by most financial institutions and for individual customers generally, including the customer's name, address, date of birth and an identification. Customers with signature authority over business accounts would furnish substantially similar information. |ret||ret||tab|
A financial institution's program would also have to contain procedures to verify the identity of customers within a reasonable period of time. |ret||ret||tab|
The proposed rules contemplate that financial institutions will generally use the same forms of identity verification that are already in place, such as examining driver's licenses, passports, credit reports and other similar means. |ret||ret||tab|
While every program must meet these minimum elements, the proposed rules give financial institutions the flexibility to tailor their procedures as appropriate, taking into consideration an individual institution's size, location and type of business. |ret||ret||tab|
In developing these regulations, many factors were taken into account, including the need to guard the United States' financial system against terrorist financing and money laundering, the legitimate privacy interests of customers, and the need for these regulations to be effectively integrated into the daily operations of financial institutions. |ret||ret||tab|
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