The Foreign Account Tax Compliance
Act, is the latest government effort to eliminate financial privacy from the
international banking system. Already provisioned within the law are reporting requirements and penalties, so the intent of
this regulation requisite, seems more intent on closing down foreign bank relations for American citizens.
- FATCA targets tax non-compliance by U.S. taxpayers with foreign accounts
- FATCA focuses on reporting
- By U.S. taxpayers about certain foreign financial accounts and offshore assets
- By foreign financial institutions about financial accounts held by U.S. taxpayers or foreign entities in which U.S.
taxpayers hold a substantial ownership interest
- The objective
of FATCA is the reporting of foreign financial assets; withholding is the cost of not reporting
As FATCA Comes Online July 1,
2014, most foreign banks will be under the gun to make inquires of their customers.
- Were you born in the USA?
- Do or did you ever have a U.S. Passport?
- Do or did
you ever have a U.S. Green Card (Permanent residency status)?
- Do
or did you ever live in the United States and, if so, provide all dates of residing in the U.S.?
- Do or did you ever have a physical address in the U.S.?
- Do
or did you ever have a U.S. mailing address in your name?
- Do
or did you ever have a U.S. mailing address in care of your name?
- Do
or did you ever have legal representation in the U.S.?
If
you answer yes to any one of the above questions, some banks will immediately close your account and forwarded on the balance
to you and other banks sent W-8BEN and/or W-9 IRS forms for completion and mailing back to the bank upon which a possible
30% U.S. tax withholding would be levied upon your accounts.
The
underlying drive to discover the actual ownership of enterprises and their fiduciary principals are the focus in the article,
FATCA's crucial sidekick,
the hunt for 'beneficial owner'.
"Beneficial
ownership as a policy issue is very multifaceted," says Joshua Simmons, a Legal Fellow with advocacy group Global Financial
Integrity. "It's much larger than anti-money laundering. It also ties into corruption, fraud, sanctions and tax evasion
issues. Now, a lot of the focus on it is being driven by international attention on tax evasion."
Tax evasion has no greater case in point than the trade in drugs. Yet, efforts
to curb money laundering have failed miserably. The account, The destructive effort to
combat money laundering, tax evasion and terrorist financing, demonstrates that laws and regulations meant to prevent washing tainted
gains, miss their mark.
"The most recent global
waste of money and life is the "war" on the vague crime of "money-laundering." The anti-money laundering
zealots claim the war is needed to stop global tax evasion, drug dealing and terrorist finance. Despite, again, the hundreds
of billions of dollars spent on the effort and the many lives lost, there is scant evidence that tax evasion, drug dealing,
or terrorism have been significantly reduced, by anti-money laundering regulations."
Take the historic grand daddy of banking houses, built upon the drug trade, the
notorious Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank. The British firm behind the Chinese Drug trade, the bank that would become HBSC, perfected
the Dope, Inc. model, which profited from the Opium Wars. Such experience along with government
protection enabled HSBC’s stunning growth in international deposit relationships.
Wrapping your mind around the sums in the report, Drug Cartel Money Laundering
Accounted for 85 Percent Of Global Economy For 2012, is not easy.
"According to legal documents for the case filed in 2012, HSBC admitted that it failed to apply legally required
money laundering controls to $60 trillion in wire transfers alone, in only a three year period, $670 billion of which came
from Mexico. $60 trillion-that is approximately 85 percent the entire world's GDP in 2012. In a settlement to put an end to
the probe into their money laundering activities in late 2012, HSBC agreed to pay a fine
of $1.9 billion. While HSBC may have been associated with the largest money laundering operation
in U.S. banking history, it is by no means alone."
Paying large fines that are but mere drops in a bucket of nose candy consignments are just part of the cost of business.
No wonder that author, Matt Taibbi says the Outrageous HSBC Settlement
Proves the Drug War is a Joke. Reuters contributor, Brett Wolf in Less drug-money traffic at
HSBC may mean more risk for other banks in U.S. cites the section of the law violated.
"HSBC was vulnerable because it failed to take the steps necessary to know its customers, and because monitoring
of banknotes transactions was conducted manually by one or two compliance officers, according to the statement of facts, which
is the product of a years-long probe by U.S. law enforcement officials. Furthermore, the bank’s U.S. unit did not appropriately
gauge the risks associated with its Mexican counterpart.
The
DPA states that HSBC’s compliance lapses violated two Bank Secrecy Act provisions - subsections of Title 31, US Code, Section
5318 - which address inadequate anti-money laundering programs and the failure
to conduct proper due diligence in correspondent banking relationships."
Now proponents of FATCA will claim that this new requirement will put a severe cramp in the automatic wash cycle.
How silly, the notion that banksters will cease and desist their laundering machine, when government agencies like the DEA,
CBP, ICE, DHS, ATF, and the sure standard bearers, FBI and CIA draw supplementary covert funding from their percentage in
the business of trafficking from drug contraband.
If the State
were truly serious about shutting down the drug trade, putting out of business the major international bank violators would
be the test. Money laundering, not the canal, built the Panama City skyline. Do you think that Manuel Noriega might have to answer questions 4 & 5 of the FATCA query? Probably not,
his bank accounts must have been seized by his partner, George H. Bush.
FATCA remains
an instrument to force repatriation of law-abiding citizen funds, for domestic IRS taxation scrutiny, if they support the
Tea Party. So goes, the phony war on money laundering!
James
Hall – June 18, 2014