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FinCEN Rule Update

By Marilyn C. Maloney & Leon H. Rittenberg III on February 8, 2024
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Since 2016, the Financial Crimes Network of the Treasury Department (“FinCEN”) has issued orders requiring title insurance companies to report certain non-financed residential real estate transactions to entities and trusts above a certain price threshold. These “Residential Real Estate Geographic Targeting Orders” or “GTOs” are limited to certain locations in the United States.  They have been expanded since 2016 and currently address certain metropolitan areas in California, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, Nevada, New York, Texas, and Washington.  The reason for the reporting requirements is the determination by FinCEN that cash transactions of residential real estate are a popular means of laundering illegal moneys. 

On Wednesday, FinCEN published notice of proposed rule making for a nationwide order that would require attorneys, title companies, brokers, and other real estate professionals (“Reporting Persons”) to report certain sales and donations to entities and trusts without regard to size of the purchase price.  Like the GTOs, this regulation would not address transactions that are financed by financial institutions that are required to have established anti-money laundering procedures and that are required to file suspicious activity reports.  However, loans by private lenders that are not subject to those regulatory requirements would not exempt the Reporting Person from the obligation to report transactions.

Notably, the proposed rule would require filing a “Real Estate Report” on a form that has not yet been published. It would require submission of beneficial ownership information for the legal entity or trust, not unlike the information required under the Corporate Transparency Act.  The rule would include a wide list of exceptions for transferee entities, including large, regulated entities.  Certain types of transfers, including those that result from the death of a property owner, a divorce, or a transfer to a bankruptcy estate, would also be excluded.  Notably not excluded are other types of common estate planning transfers, such as creation of family management trusts and transfers of real property to those trusts.

The proposed rules, as applied to the common estate planning transactions, will create a substantial burden on practitioners and their clients.

Links to the proposed rule, as well as explanatory details, are listed below.  Comments to the rule may be made for 60 days after the rule is published in the Federal Register.

News Release

Fact Sheet

Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

Contact Liskow attorneys Marilyn Maloney and Leon Rittenberg III for further questions regarding this topic and visit our Real Estate and Tax practice pages.

Disclaimer: This Blog/Web Site is made available by the law firm of Liskow & Lewis, APLC (“Liskow & Lewis”) and the individual Liskow & Lewis lawyers posting to this site for educational purposes and to give you general information and a general understanding of the law only, not to provide specific legal advice as to an identified problem or issue. By using this blog site you understand and acknowledge that there is no attorney-client relationship formed between you and Liskow & Lewis and/or the individual Liskow & Lewis lawyers posting to this site by virtue of your using this site. The Blog/Web Site should not be used as a substitute for legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state regarding a particular matter.

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Photo of Marilyn C. Maloney Marilyn C. Maloney

Marilyn Maloney is a Houston-based business lawyer helping clients with commercial lending, energy deals, real estate, intellectual property, mergers and acquisitions, corporate trust and other commercial transactions. Marilyn, who was founding chair of the firm’s Houston office, has years of experience throughout Texas…

Marilyn Maloney is a Houston-based business lawyer helping clients with commercial lending, energy deals, real estate, intellectual property, mergers and acquisitions, corporate trust and other commercial transactions. Marilyn, who was founding chair of the firm’s Houston office, has years of experience throughout Texas, Louisiana, the region and the U.S.

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Photo of Leon H. Rittenberg III Leon H. Rittenberg III

Leon Rittenberg III is a New Orleans native. His practice focuses on serving the needs of small and mid-sized businesses and their owners; including philanthropy and non-profit law, taxation, finance, private equity, estate planning, probate, real estate, mergers and acquisitions and related matters.

Leon Rittenberg III is a New Orleans native. His practice focuses on serving the needs of small and mid-sized businesses and their owners; including philanthropy and non-profit law, taxation, finance, private equity, estate planning, probate, real estate, mergers and acquisitions and related matters. Leon represents the interests of a number of private investors, oil service businesses, marine transportation companies and physician groups. He is a Board Certified Tax Specialist and Board Certified Estate Planning & Administration Specialist, as certified by the Louisiana Board of Legal Specialization. He frequently lectures in areas such as taxation, estate planning and maritime transactions.

Leon is a Fellow of the American College of Tax Counsel. He has been recognized by Chambers USA (Louisiana Marine Finance – 2021; Louisiana Corporate/M&A: Tax section – 2017), Louisiana Super Lawyers (Tax, Estate Planning & Probate and Business/Corporate), and the Best Lawyers in America (Non-Profit/Charities Law and Trusts & Estates) since 2007, and by New Orleans Magazine as one of their “Top Lawyers of New Orleans” for his work in Equipment Finance Law, Mergers & Acquisitions Law and Tax Law. New Orleans City Business selected him for their Leadership in Law class of 2014, which “identifies and honors 50 outstanding legal professionals whose successes in law and contributions to the community have set the pace for the legal community.”

Read more about Leon H. Rittenberg IIIEmail
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  • Posted in:
    Corporate & Commercial
  • Blog:
    Gulf Coast Business Law Blog
  • Organization:
    Liskow & Lewis
  • Article: View Original Source

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