-
WASHINGTON The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s inspector general has cleared a senior attorney for the agency who had been accused of giving false testimony to lawmakers over the agency's role in "Operation Choke Point."
September 21 -
WASHINGTON The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s involvement in the Justice Department's Operation Choke Point was minor, the agency's inspector general said Thursday.
September 17 -
Contrary to the results of a recent internal investigation, the Justice Department's Operation Choke Point circumvents due process in attempt to shutter lawful businesses like payday lenders and ammunitions dealers.
August 13 -
Four Oaks Bank & Trust in Four Oaks, N.C., said its May 2011 enforcement action has been replaced with a more lenient agreement that requires it to address governance issues and other matters.
August 4 -
The Department of Justice's Office of Professional Responsibility said it found no support for allegations that federal lawyers wrongly pursued legal online payday lenders and forced banks to cut ties with legitimate businesses.
July 10 -
Created under the guise of a program to root out fraud and illegal activity, this initiative has been used by Obama administration bureaucrats to pressure banks to end relationships with businesses they consider objectionable or "high risk."
May 4
In recent years, the global phenomenon of derisking has stripped hundreds of thousands of individuals and businesses of bank accounts, robbed communities of bank branches, and forced banks to close.
Banamex USA, for example,
Disturbingly, the U.S. Department of Justice and the primary regulator of more than 4,700 U.S. banks, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., together operated what was effectively a
You might think this is all history now. In mid-2014, a steady stream of criticism pressured the FDIC into retracting a list of more than 30 "high-risk" (but mostly legal) businesses, ending the supposed "misperception" that these "merchant categories were prohibited or discouraged." (Although that list had been published about two years before Operation Choke Point, it was closely associated with the campaign because it was included in a Justice Department
But did Operation Choke Point truly end?
Certainly, as the Office of Professional Responsibility letter admits, some Operation Choke Point investigations continue.
On a more fundamental level, however, Operation Choke Point continues at full force. The gist of Operation Choke Point is that regulators threatened investigations and ruinous fines against banks that continued to service "high-risk" customers in disfavored industries. U.S. regulators have continued applying this policy, even if "Operation Choke Point" is officially over.
One industry targeted by Operation Choke Point (listed as a "high-risk" category on the FDIC website) was "Money Transfer Networks." Regulators have continued tacitly encouraging, if not forcing, banks to abandon money transfer customers as an industry.
In February 2015, California Merchants Bank
In March 2015, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network labeled Banca Privada d'Andorra a money laundering concern, effectively destroying the bank. Part of Fincen's justification for branding the bank a "money laundering concern" was the bank's interactions with "high-risk" business customers. Fincen
Another "high-risk" area is correspondent banking. At the 33rd Cambridge Symposium on Economic Crime in September in the U.K., the chief legal officer of one of the world's largest banks stated that he had recently finished directing the closure of 146 correspondent bank accounts. He estimated that this represented roughly 20% of all of his bank's correspondent bank accounts, and also noted that his bank had closed all four correspondent banks in one European nation. Here, too, regulatory risk leads to mass derisking that devastates communities.
The regulators claim to want an individualized approach to high-risk customers. But in actual practice, the regulators continue to pressure and punish banks with customers in legitimate industries that the regulator labels "high-risk."
The choking continues.
Geoffrey Sant is special counsel at Dorsey & Whitney LLP and teaches banking litigation at Fordham Law School. Bailey Williams has years of experience working at an investment bank and in the financial industry.