Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Imposing FBAR Civil Penalties on Foreign Financial Institutions

An anonymous poster alerted me to Lynnley Browning's article, Overseas Banks Could Face Novel Penalty From U.S. (New York Times 4/12/11). The poster suggested that I do a blog on the topic of the article -- whether the U.S. could assert the FBAR penalties against the foreign financial institutions ("FFI") in addition to or in lieu, perhaps, of the U.S. taxpayer having foreign financial accounts. I address that issue today, but caution readers that my answer is based on only limited research -- the statute and some additional research in the types of criminal liability that enablers can draw in the context of tax evasion. I plan to have an article on the latter issue in the near future, but that research informs the discussion I present here.

First, I start with the statute. The penalties are found in 31 USC 5321(a)(5)(A) which provides:

(5) Foreign financial agency transaction violation.
(A) Penalty authorized. The Secretary of the Treasury may impose a civil money penalty on any person who violates, or causes any violation of, any provision of section 5314 [31 USCS § 5314].
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