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Explained: The Corporate Transparency Act

What does the landmark anti-corruption measure – passed by U.S. Congress on 1 January – do and does not do?

Image: Sean Pollock / Unsplash

Posted on: 25 January 2021

Scott Greytak Advocacy Director, Transparency International U.S. Office

When Pablo Escobar ran the Medellin drug cartel in the 1980s, he had a money problem: bales of US$100 bills that the organisation kept in warehouses were being chewed through by rats. But today, even drug traffickers hoard and move their money as electronic signals. What makes that possible? Corporate secrecy.

Forming a company in most U.S. states typically takes “less information […] than is required to obtain a bank account,” as the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) – passed by Congress on 1 January – puts it. More often than not, even the owner or beneficiary’s name is absent. Escobar could have set up a company, and that company could have made investments in the U.S. – and his cash would have been safe. In other words, corrupt officials, terrorists, tax evaders, traffickers in humans or drugs, fraudsters and other hostile actors can exploit America’s own laws to endanger Americans and American institutions.

In a few hours and for a few hundred dollars, a person can erect a maze of linked anonymous corporations that are subject to different state laws. The result is an impenetrable obstacle course that stymies law enforcement and intelligence agencies as they try to identify threats to the United States or to track down the perpetrators of some of the most heinous crimes – including international kleptocracy. U.S. laws in this regard are among the most lax in the world.

What the CTA does to address the problem

The CTA requires anyone forming a company in the U.S. to provide the name, date of birth, current address, and unique identification number (from a passport or driver’s license, for example) of the company’s beneficial owner(s) to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), a bureau of the U.S. Treasury Department. If changed, this information must be updated every year.

A beneficial owner is defined as a human being who exercises substantial control over the entity, or owns or controls 25 per cent or more of its ownership interests.

FinCEN is an intelligence and regulatory enforcement body that reports to the Under-Secretary of Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence and whose role is to “promote national security through the collection, analysis and dissemination of financial intelligence.”

The reporting requirement applies to existing corporations, LLCs, and other similar entities, as well as to new such entities when they are formed. Under the CTA, this information may only be released to:

  • A federal agency engaged in law enforcement, intelligence, or national security;
  • A state, local, or tribal law enforcement agency conducting an active investigation;
  • A federal agency making the request on behalf of a foreign law enforcement agency under mutual legal assistance protocols or other agreement; and
  • A financial institution conducting due diligence per U.S. law – with customer consent.

The information may only be used for law enforcement, national security or intelligence purposes.

Detailed data security protections are clearly spelled out, including that users must be trained and certified and must undergo a background check. All searches must be done as part of an ongoing investigation and every file that is reviewed is logged so that there is a record of who accessed what information. Misuse of the information is a criminal act.

The reported information will be kept for five years after dissolution of the entity.

Deliberate false statements or wilful evasion of its requirements will constitute a federal crime subject to a prison sentence of three years and/or a fine. Negligence is not punishable.

What the CTA does not do

The Corporate Transparency Act does not make beneficial ownership information open to the public at large, or allow it to be queried under the Freedom of Information Act.

Larger companies, heavily regulated companies and companies that already provide information to a relevant government agency are exempt. The Act explicitly exempts such entities as:

  • Companies that employ more than 20 people, report revenues of more than US$5 million on tax returns, and have a physical presence in the U.S.;
  • Most financial services institutions, including investment and accounting firms, securities trading firms, banks, and credit unions that report to and are regulated by government agencies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency or the FDIC;
  • Churches, charities and other non-profit organisations.

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