Feds
Expand Definition of 'Cash' to Include Stored Value Cards
by
Mark
Nestmann
The
Nestmann Group, Ltd.
Recently
by Mark Nestmann: Uour
Money Isn’t Safe in Any U.S. Financial Institution
For the last
three days, Ive been in bustling downtown Panama City, Panama,
speaking at an offshore conference. Panama is as dynamic as ever,
and Ive made considerable progress filing my application for
permanent residence.
My exit from
the United States was relatively hassle-free, other than the mandatory
scan of my genitalia by the TSA before I boarded my flight. However,
Ive now learned that the Treasurys Financial Crimes
Enforcement Network (FinCEN) plans to add another
obstacle to leaving (or entering) the United States: declaring
the value of any tangible prepaid access devices. In
case youre wondering, TPADs are otherwise known as stored
value cards.
U.S. law has
long required you to declare the value of cash or other monetary
instruments you carry across a U.S. border if the value exceeds
$10,000. FinCEN Form 105 is used for this purpose. While theres
the possibility of a five-year prison sentence for failing to comply
with the law, along with forfeiture of the monetary instruments,
enforcement of these requirements is inconsistent.
Entering the
United States, you must complete Customs Form 6059B, which explicitly
asks if you are carrying more than $10,000 in cash or monetary instruments.
Leaving the United States, Ive only seen one or two warnings
red-flagging this requirement.
However, one
time several years ago, I was boarding a flight in Baltimore bound
for Paris. On the jet way, several men in poorly fitting suits confronted
me. They identified themselves as Treasury agents and asked me how
much cash I was transporting. I told them I wasnt sure but
that it was less than $200. They insisted on rifling through my
carry-on, presumably to search for undeclared cash, and going through
my wallet. After a relatively brief interlude, they allowed me to
board my flight.
To enforce
the new rules to declare TPADs, the Department of Homeland Security
is developing high-tech card readers to deploy at U.S. ports of
entry. The readers will identify whether the cards in your wallet
are credit cards, debit cards, or TPADs. Only the value stored on
a TPAD need be declared, assuming the total value of monetary instruments
carried across the U.S. border exceeds $10,000.
As is usual
in efforts of this type, FinCENs efforts to expand the definition
of cash will only inconvenience law-abiding travelers. A real criminal
or anyone seeking financial privacy will use the brainwallet
concept to silently move value across increasingly irrelevant national
frontiers. (A brainwallet requires that you memorize a unique passphrase
to gain access to an online store of value, such as Bitcoin.) Indeed,
The Department of Homeland Security has proposed to FinCEN that:
[B]order
declaration should not apply to codes, passwords and other intangibles
The
structure of the currency and monetary instruments declaration regime,
hinges on the existence of a physical object. The language requires
something that can be passed from one individual to another in order
to be presented to a third party for execution/payment.
Bitcoin and
similar digital currencies make FinCENs currency reporting
rules, and their expansion to encompass TPADs, obsolete before theyre
even finalized. But dont think for a minute that technological
innovation will prevent these rules from coming into effect. After
all, Boobus Americanus must believe the government is doing something
anything to fight the wars on drugs, terrorism, money
laundering, immigration fraud, etc. Whether the initiative actually
accomplishes anything is much less important than whether it appears
to be accomplishing something. And its simply inconceivable
to ask whether the wars are worth fighting at all, and if we should
simply allow individuals to move their assets anywhere in the world,
as they see fit, without government imposed restrictions.
November
19, 2012
Mark
Nestmann [send him mail]
is a journalist with more than 20 years of investigative experience
and is a charter member of The
Sovereign Society’s Council of Experts. He has authored over
a dozen books and many additional reports on wealth preservation,
privacy and offshore investing. Mark serves as president of his
own international consulting firm, The
Nestmann Group, Ltd. The Nestmann Group provides international
wealth preservation services for high-net worth individuals. Mark
is an Associate Member of the American Bar Association (member of
subcommittee on Foreign Activities of U.S. Taxpayers, Committee
on Taxation) and member of the Society of Professional Journalists.
In 2005, he was awarded a Masters of Laws (LL.M) degree in international
tax law at the Vienna (Austria) University of Economics and Business
Administration.
Copyright
© 2012 Mark
Nestmann
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