Financial institutions will be asked to:
* Designate a bank officer to monitor for named persons and entities;
* Block named persons and entities from access to accounts;
* Block unaffiliated shell banks from access to accounts;
* Disclose customer and account information within 120 hours of initial request by government agency, without notifying the accountholder;
* Identify a U.S. resident authorized to accept subpoena of correspondent account with foreign bank;
* Terminate correspondent relationships upon government request;
* Increase supervision of "concentration" accounts that mask the originator and beneficiary of a transfer;
* Use highly secure network of FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) to file reports and receive alerts on suspicious activities;
* Work with FinCEN to cut down the number of unnecessary alerts, to ease burden on law enforcement.
Other provisions:
* Securities broker-dealers have to file suspicious activity reports;
* Nonfinancial businesses have to meet currency reporting requirements;
* Government can seize laundered funds deposited in foreign bank by going after interbank accounts located in the U.S.;
* Treasury or Attorney General may issue summons or subpoena to foreign bank with correspondent account in the U.S.;
* Foreign governments will be encouraged to require wire transfers to include name of originator, and carry that information all the way through to final disbursement;
* Increased vigilance planned against bulk cash smugglers;
* "Analog, digital, or electronic images" included in definition of counterfeiting;
* Offenses committed abroad involving an "access device issued, owned, managed or controlled" by a U.S. financial institution are now subject to U.S. laws and sanctions.






BS&T's Elite CIOs Report: Technology Leadership in Banking
