Current US Law.....
8. Reportable Transactions
The CIP Rule does not require financial institutions to report your dealings to the government. However, sections of the Bank Secrecy Act do require transactions over a certain dollar amount to be either reported to the Financal Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), a branch of the U.S. Department of the Treasury, or documented by the bank. Reporting requirements may vary depending on the type of financial institution. FinCin provides the following general examples of transactions that should be reported.
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Any transaction over $2,000 if the bank is suspicious. The company must file a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR).
•All cash-in or cash-out transactions over $10,000 with the same customer in the same day. The company must file a Cash Transaction Report (CTR).
•Money orders or travelers checks of $3,000 to $10,000 to the same customer in the same day. The bank will keep a record. Transactions over $10,000 would trigger a CTR.
•Money transfers of $3,000 or more to the same customer in the same day. The company must keep a record.
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Currency exchanges of more than $1,000 to the same customer in the same day.The U.S. Office of Comptroller of Currency, the agency that oversees national banks, notes that reporting is required "...at specified thresholds, or transactions over $5,000 that they suspect involve money laundering ..." Rules that apply to SAR Reports for national banks can be found at 12 CFR 21.11. Reporting requirements for other depository institutions such as credit unions and state chartered banks may vary depending on the rules adopted by the oversight agency.
National banks and other depository institutions are not the only "financial" companies required to file SAR Reports. SAR reporting requirements also apply to the following:
•Casinos
•Money services businesses (dealing in e.g. transactions in money orders, travelers checks, money transmissions, check cashing, currency exchange.)
•Insurance
•Securities/futures
•Precious metals/jewelry
•Mortgage company/broker
FinCEN provides information and guidance for all financial industries subject to SAR reporting.
Cash payments of $10,000 or more must also be reported to the IRS on Form 8300,
www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f8300.pdf. The person or business that receives the cash is the one responsible for filing the form. However, if you are the purchaser, you will also have to supply some personal information.
If, for example, you purchase a car for over $10,000 in cash, you will be asked to provide certain information, either to a dealer or another individual such as the loan officer. The form requires that certain personal information be obtained from you. This includes:
•Name
•Address
•Date of birth
•Social Security number
•Occupation
The company reporting to the IRS must also verify your identity and report a description of the documents that were used.
Reporting on IRS Form 8300 is required for a number of different transactions, including:
•Personal or real property purchased.
•Personal services provided.
•Business services provide.
•Intangible property purchased.
•Debt obligations paid.
•Exchange of cash.
•Escrow or trust funds.
•Bail received by court clerks.
Cash means U.S. and foreign currency, a cashier’s check, money order, bank draft, or travelers checks. IRS Form 8300 states: “Cash does not include a check drawn on the payer’s own account such as a personal check, regardless of the amount.”
Source:
https://www.privacyrights.org/customer- ... ansactions