Money transfers of $200 or more, if conducted through a money service business in more than two dozen ZIP codes across California and Texas, will soon have to be reported to the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Unit (FinCEN). The new rule significantly expands the scope of warrantless searches of Americans’ financial activity in what officials say is an effort to fight Mexican drug cartels.
It reduces the reporting threshold from the prior level of $10,000, and no warrant or evidence of a crime is required.
The new rule has raised concerns regarding warrantless surveillance of law-abiding Americans, however.
“This takes a financial surveillance system that is already enormous and intrusive and burdensome, and it expands that system enormously,” Rob Johnson, senior attorney at the Institute for Justice, told The Epoch Times.
Transactions covered under the new ruling will include deposits, withdrawals, currency exchanges, and other payments or transfers by a money service provider in these ZIP codes. According to the GTO, transactions covered by the new rule include transactions “in currency, of more than $200 but not more than $10,000.”
Companies that provide these services will be “essentially spying on their own customers and filling out reports on the activities of their customers to file with the federal government,” Johnson said. “It’s going to take away the financial privacy of people who use those businesses.”
The changes were announced on March 11 by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Unit (FinCEN).
“As part of a whole-of-government approach to combatting the threat, Treasury remains focused on leveraging all our available tools and authorities to better identify and counter these criminal activities.”
According to USA Facts, fentanyl, which is often shipped across America’s southern border, was responsible for more than 250,000 deaths in the United States between 2018 and 2023.
As a result of FinCEN’s new order, more than one million Americans will have their transactions caught up in this surveillance net, according to Nicholas Anthony, a policy analyst at the Cato Institute’s Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives.
“Most Americans believe their financial information is private and protected by the Fourth Amendment,” he said. “What we really have, however, is the illusion of financial privacy.
“The Bank Secrecy Act, the third-party doctrine, and other policies have given the government sweeping insights into our financial lives.”
When the BSA was passed in 1970, however, $10,000 was the equivalent of more than $83,000 today. And because the reporting threshold was never indexed to inflation, the volume of transactions captured under this law expanded continuously over time.
“In the 1970s, you could buy two new Corvettes for $10,000,” Anthony said. “It’s hard to imagine they [judges] would still be okay with it now, seeing the threshold was lowered to just $200 today.”
The Supreme Court ultimately ruled that the BSA could proceed, but circumstances have changed since 1974. Not only has the scope of the BSA broadened, but it has become increasingly difficult for Americans to live outside of the financial payments system or without a bank account, undermining the third-party doctrine.
In March 2023, Rep. John Rose (R-Tenn.), a member of the House Financial Services Committee, reintroduced the Bank Privacy Reform Act, which was first submitted in October 2022.
The courts may also revisit the 1974 decision.
“In some ways, this development [the FinCEN GTO] is bad for the Fourth Amendment because it takes away what’s left of peoples’ financial privacy,” Johnson said. “But there’s another sense in which this could just be exactly what the Fourth Amendment needs.
One question that remains unanswered is whether the BSA, for all its intrusions and costs, has provided material help in fighting crime.
In a 2020 hearing with then-Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.), ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee, repeatedly asked the Treasury Department and FinCEN for evidence that warrantless surveillance of Americans’ financial activity contributed significantly to prosecuting crimes.
The FinCEN GTO applies to the following ZIP codes in California and Texas: Imperial County, California: 92231, 92249, 92281, 92283; San Diego County, California: 91910, 92101, 92113, 92117, 92126, 92154, 92173; Cameron County, Texas: 78520, 78521; El Paso County, Texas: 79901, 79902, 79903, 79905, 79907, 79935; Hidalgo County, Texas: 78503, 78557, 78572, 78577, 78596; Maverick County, Texas: 78852; and Webb County, Texas: 78040, 78041, 78043, 78045, 78046.