By Michael Kohn
on May
9, 2016
Posted in Corporate Whistleblowers, International, News, Tax
Whistleblowers
In response to the Panama
Papers — the more than ten million leaked documents from the Panamanian law
firm, Mossack Fonseca, that exposed illicit financial activity and tax evasion
through the use of anonymous offshore shell companies — the White House
announced on May 6th that it would end the use of anonymous
corporations in the United States and require disclosure of beneficial owners
when foreigners deposit money or buy assets in the United States.
The White House announced that
it plans to:
·
Issue the Treasury Department’s final rule to require
financial institutions to obtain and verify the identity of beneficial owners
of a company, including individuals who control or own more than 25 percent.
·
Support a bill to require U.S.-formed companies to
disclose the beneficial owners at the time of formation or ownership transfer.
·
Require single-member limited liability companies and
other foreign-owned U.S. entities to obtain a tax identification number and
share ownership and transaction data with the Internal Revenue Service.
·
Expand jurisdiction of prosecutors to pursue money
launderers for acts committed in other countries.
·
Allow use of high-speed administrative subpoenas in
money-laundering cases rather than grand jury subpoenas.
·
Increase access to U.S. bank records located abroad
and expand admissibility rules for the records.
According to the White House,
“these efforts are critical to preventing criminals from using the global
financial system to launder proceeds from corruption or other illegal
activities, finance criminal activity or even terrorism, evade international
sanctions regimes, or evade taxes.”
“The United States remains the
world leader in the fight against dirty-money from drug traffickers,
terrorists, and corrupt politicians only because we have laws that work in the
real world, said Michael Kohn, President of the National
Whistleblower Center, adding that “the trick to our success are laws that grant
whistleblower confidentiality and offer rewards to the whistleblowers who
provide information that expose fraudulent transactions.”
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