https://www.coincenter.org/a-midnight-rule-for-cryptocurrency-transaction-reports/
A Midnight Rule for Cryptocurrency Transaction Reports
FinCEN rulemaking announces a rushed, mostly technology-neutral reporting requirement
by
Peter Van Valkenburgh
December 18, 2020
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FINANCIAL SURVEILLANCE
Over the last year we’ve watched as Switzerland, Singapore, and the Netherlands have taken a technology-specific approach to regulating transactions involving so-called “unhosted” wallets. We’ve seen the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) identify potential future measures to address “peer-to-peer transactions” including banning or severely limiting access to certain wallets altogether. These are the proposals that have been in the air throughout 2020. As U.S. policymakers continue to review their options with respect to cryptocurrencies and anti-money laundering rules, those are the proposals on the table. Those options are bad. They are drags on innovation, they unnecessarily limit the rights of citizens, and they are not technology neutral. Fortunately, these are not the policies proposed by the Treasury today. However, there are issues with this proposal, it’s rushed and has complicated new counterparty identification requirements that may be infeasible and innovation-killing in the context of cryptocurrency networks.
Coin Center strongly prefers no change to the currency state of AML policy whatsoever. We are, nonetheless, gratified that the U.S. has not chosen to repeat the mistakes made overseas, and, instead, policymakers have primarily proposed an extension of rules that already apply to traditional financial institutions dealing in cash, albeit with complications.
The proposal announced today is that transactions from regulated exchanges to individual wallets not subject to regulation (as well as unregulated foreign exchanges) should be subject to an existing automatic reporting requirement: Currency Transaction Reports (CTR) for cash transactions. Make no mistake, CTRs are a form of warrantless search and seizure of private financial records. Fifty years ago, the Supreme Court narrowly upheld the constitutionality of these reporting requirements, arguing that Americans lose their right to a warrant with individual suspicion when they hand their private information over to third parties. We’ve written extensively why the continued constitutionality of these policies is in doubt.
That said, CTRs have been required for financial institutions since the 1970s whenever a customer withdraws large amounts of cash or cash-like instruments. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are best analogized to electronic cash, and therefore applying these same reporting requirements to cryptocurrency withdrawals has, at least, the benefit of technological neutrality and parity with longstanding obligations placed on traditional financial institutions. If a report is required when I take $10,000 in cash from my bank and put it in a suitcase, then it’s not unreasonable that a similar report would be required when I move $10,000 from my cryptocurrency exchange and put it into my hardware wallet. Unlike the so-called “Swiss rule,” this approach does not create a double standard between legacy financial services and cryptocurrency companies. And unlike the options listed by the FATF, this approach does not ban or otherwise limit citizens’ rights to hold their own crypto.
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