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Analyzing Financial Transactions
FinCEN analyzes the transaction reports it receives to identify patterns, trends, and anomalies that could indicate money laundering, tax evasion, terrorist financing or other illicit financial activities. FinCEN experts review transaction histories, network analyses, and other tools to uncover potential financial crimes that would otherwise go undetected.
Sharing Financial Intelligence
When FinCEN identifies suspicious patterns of activity, it shares that financial intelligence with relevant law enforcement and regulatory agencies. This includes the FBI, IRS, Secret Service, ICE, and numerous state and local entities. FinCEN operates a secure network to facilitate real-time information sharing.
Issuing Regulations and Guidance
FinCEN issues regulations requiring financial institutions to file transaction reports, implement anti-money laundering programs and comply with other rules. FinCEN also provides guidance to financial institutions on identifying and reporting potential terrorism financing, weapons proliferation financing, and other threats.
Managing Financial Sanctions
FinCEN manages various financial sanctions programs imposed by the U.S. Treasury Department. This includes:
Working with International Counterparts
FinCEN collaborates and exchanges information with counterparts in over 100 countries. This includes members of the Egmont Group, a global network of financial intelligence units. International cooperation is key to tackling financial crimes that span borders.
The primary function of the CTA is to combat money laundering. In it, lawmakers claim that criminals in the United States try to hide the true identities of the people who own corporations, limited liability companies, and other business structures in order to commit crimes like money laundering, terrorism financing, and tax evasion.
In order to safeguard national interests and facilitate efforts to resist these criminal activities, Congress has determined that federal legislation allowing for the collecting of beneficial ownership information is required.
Beneficial owners are not limited to shareholders of a company’s stock. Instead, it encompasses anyone with significant economic ties to the firm, such as 25%+ ownership (direct or indirect) or voting rights. Corporate officials and directors, LLC management, partners, and similar individuals may be considered “beneficial owners.”
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Our goal in developing FileForms was to cut costs and increase efficiency for businesses and their advisors. The typical filing time on our platform is under 10 minutes, and it features a “central source of truth,” sophisticated process automation, and a streamlined workflow.
We save you time and money by storing user profiles for future filing needs and using automated technologies to populate entity and owner information. Let us help simplify the process of collecting and organizing evidence of entity ownership. FileForms can save you time and headaches.