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CRIMINAL VIOLATIONSIntroduction- Fraud and embezzlement losses harm individual banks and, through fidelity insurance
premiums, raise overall costs in the banking system- Insider abuse and fraud are major contributing factors in about 1/3 of bank failuresBank Management- Management is responsible for preventing fraud and insider abuse- Banks systems should be designed to detect crimes- Part 353 – requires banks to report apparent crimes to FinCEN within 30 days of their
discovery on a standard form, the Suspicious Activity Report (SAR)- Code of Conduct/Code of Ethics policy should be adopted and approved to govern
each bank officer's dealings and transactions with outside parties. (Code should provide guidance for the receipt of gifts and gratuities and delineate acceptable business practices)
Examiners Role- Responsible for evaluating the bank’s internal controls and management systems- Examiners concerned with internal and external crimesDisclosure of Confidential Information to Law Enforcement Authorities- Examiner may disclose confidential information obtained during an examination to
law enforcement authorities after obtaining permission from the RD- Part 309 – authorizes examiners to appear and testify before a grand jury or at a
criminal trialCriminal Referrals- Banks to report crimes to FinCEN on SAR- FDIC is to prepare and file SAR directly with FinCEN when:
- The referral made by the bank is deemed inadequate OR- The suspected criminal conduct discovered by the FDIC has not been reported by
the bank- Referrals are to be made when the examiner first obtains evidence to support a belief
that a crime has been committed- Copies of documents that prove or support the violation should not be attached to the
referral- Supporting documents should be segregated and stored (……5 years I think……..)Communication- After being authorized by the RD, the examiner may communicate the details of a
SAR directly to federal law enforcement agentsParallel Proceedings- Referral of suspected criminal conduct to other federal agencies does not restrict the
FDIC from continuing its own examination or investigation into the same conduct, unless requested to cease or suspend such activity by the Justice Department
Criminal StatuesBank Bribery- Bank Bribery Act encourages banks to adopt Code of Conduct policies to provide
guidance and alert bank officials to inappropriate activity
Theft, Embezzlement, and Misapplication of Funds- Typically willful, with intent to injure or defraud the bank (intent can be inferred
(reckless disregard))- Embezzlement – unlawful taking of monies by a person or conversion to his or her
own use- Abstraction – wrongful taking or withdrawing of funds with the intent to injure or
defraud the bank or some other person without the knowledge or consent of the bank or its Board
- Misapplication – willful and unlawful misuse of bank funds to the benefit of the wrongdoer or some person other than the bank
False Advertising or Misuse of FDIC Name- Misuse unauthorized words such as national, reserve, federal deposit, or deposit
insurance to convey impression of federal agency affiliationFalse Statements or Entities - Covers oral or written false statements knowingly or willingly made to influence a
determination of any federal department or agencyFalse Entries- False entries and reports or statements (including material omissions) made by a bank
to (intent) injure or defraud the FDIC or other individuals- False answer to a question on an FDIC Officer’s Questionnaire Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Transactions- False statements made to the FDIC in connection with an application- False or misleading statements made to an FDIC examiner during an examinationFalse Statements on a Loan or Credit Application- Covers oral or written false statements (statements must have been capable of
influencing the bank’s credit decision)Fraud and Related Activity in Connection with Access DevicesComputer Fraud- Knowingly access a computer without authorization or who, having accessed a
computer with authorization, use it for unauthorized purposesMail FraudWire FraudBank Fraud- Applies to check kitesRacketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO)- Investment in any enterprise affecting interstate commerce if the funds are derived
from such things as murder, drug dealing, bribery, robbery, extortion, counterfeiting, mail fraud, embezzlement from pension funds, etc.
Laundering of Monetary Instruments- Illegal to conduct or attempt to conduct a financial transaction knowing that the
property involved in the transaction represents the proceeds of some form of illegal activity
- Avoid a transaction reporting requirement under state or federal lawEngaging in Monetary Transactions in Property Derived from Specified Unlawful Activity- (Value of over $10M)
Bank Robbery and Incidental CrimesForeign Corrupt PracticesSecurities LawsCurrency Transactions/BSAStructuring Transactions to Evade Reporting RequirementsAiding and AbettingMisprison of Felony- Covers the failure to report a felonyBribery of Public OfficialsConspiracy to Defraud- Defraud the US or any agency thereofFictitious Name or AddressTransportation of Stolen Goods, Securities, etc.Sale or Receipt of Stolen Goods, Securities, etc.Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971- Prohibits banks from making any contributions to or expenditures on behalf of any
candidate for federal elective office- HOWEVER, banks may make on behalf of candidates or committees for state or local
elective offices- (A loan is not a contribution if it is made in accordance with applicable banking laws
and is made in the ordinary course of business)Criminal Referrals- Part 353 – banks to report, on a SAR, criminal violations that involve or affect the
assets or the affairs of such banks to FinCEN- SAR shall be filed when:
- Employee, officer, director, agent or other IAP is suspected of committing or aiding in the commission of a crime involving the institution
- Known or suspected crime is committed against the institution, there is actual or potential loss to the institution of $5M or more, and a possible suspect or group of suspects can be identified
- Known or suspected crime is committed against the institution, there is actual or potential loss to the institution of $25M or more, and a potential suspect or group of suspects cannot be identified
- Financial transaction of $5M or more was conducted or attempted using the institution as a conduit for criminal activity. Funds involved in the transaction were derived from illicit activity, the purpose of the transaction was to hide or disguise funds from illicit activities, or the purpose of the transaction was to evade the BSA requirements
Reporting by Examiners- Apparent criminal violations that are detected by examiners should be brought to the
bank’s attention for reporting by bank management- HOWEVER, if senior management is being implicated, examiner may not want to
report findings to the Board because of the possibility of evidence being destroyed. In these cases, the examiner should complete a SAR and consult the RO
- Examiners may be called to prepare SAR where:
- The examiner suspects that a criminal statue has been violated but bank management disagrees and elects not to submit a SAR, OR
- The bank’s report has been prepared inadequatelyNotifying the Bank’s Board- With the concurrence of the RO, the examiner should report the discovery of a
significant apparent criminal violation directly to the bank’s BoardReporting Promptly to Law Enforcement Officials- SAR should be completed, processed, reviewed by the RO and forwarded to FinCEN
as soon as possible (do not hold to end of exam or hold till report is finalized in RO)Preparing and Filing the SAR- Management responsible for preparing and filing SARs- Form requires information on the suspected violation(s), the suspect(s), any
witness(es), and the individual(s) authorized to discuss the referral with authorities- Information is requested in two forms: statistical and detailed explanation (narrative)- Banks are required to file the SAR within 30 days of detecting the criminal activity
HOWEVER if management is unable to identify a suspect within 30 days, reporting may be delayed an additional 30 days or until a suspect is identified, whichever is sooner (never exceed 60 days)
- Management must notify the Board of any SAR filed- Board must record such notification in the minutes of the directors meetings- Copies of related supporting documentation must be maintained by the institution and
made available to law enforcement authorities upon request- Copy of SAR and supporting documentation should be retained for 5 yearsSafeguarding and Documenting Evidence- Photocopy evidence - Copies should be initialed and dated by the examiner in case the originals are
misplaced or destroyed- Document the flow of funds, approvals and employees responsible for handling each
transactionNotification To The Bonding Company- Bank must notify its fidelity insurer when SARs are filed on employees- Bank may not provide a copy of the SAR to the insurer- Standard financial institutions bond contains a termination clause which
automatically cancels coverage of any employee as soon as there is knowledge of any dishonest or fraudulent act on the part of such employee
- If bank does not terminate employee, must receive assurance that employee is covered under insurance
Other Matters of Importance- When allegations of wrong doing come to the attention of an examiner during the
course of an examination, the examiner should immediately notify the RO. All investigations of allegations should be well documented
- If informants wish to remain anonymous, examiner should explain will try to keep identify anonymous but,- Inquiry into situation may cause employees to deduce the informants identity - Information may be referred to another agency which may request the informants
identity
- Court may order disclosure of the informants identity to the defendant