Skip to comments.
Government Spying on Your Bank Transactions
Newsmax ^
| July 6, 2006
| Newxmax.com Wires
Posted on 07/06/2006 4:06:16 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-31 last
To: observer5
Instituted in 1970. Amended in 1995.
Heil Bush my ass.
To: i_dont_chat
Oh, I get it. I was a bit slow on the uptake. Sorry about that.
Not that there'd be much to find at this stage of my career, but anyway. lol.
22
posted on
07/06/2006 8:02:50 PM PDT
by
mysterio
To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
More treason by the MSM, outing secret government security programs.
23
posted on
07/06/2006 8:21:00 PM PDT
by
balch3
To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
The trigger is $10,000 not $5,000 last I heard. But I seldom spend that type of money. It is not trigger by a single transaction but can be part of a group. This not a secret program. It is well know among those how have these amounts of money. Bank account imforamtion other than these reports must be subpoenaed before a bank a reveal them to a government agency. Rush Limbaugh talked about this on air a few times. Customers will not be told when it is filled out, you can assume it will be. This started as part of the war on drugs and money laundering. It is also why 100 dollar bill is the largest currency in circulation. You can only get about a million dollars in most briefcases now. This hasn't proved inconvenient for me... yet. There are still larger bill out but if they come to a bank they are taken by the Feds and shredded.
To: ThomasThomas
Cash transactions at banks and casinos over 10,000 are subject to a CTR (currency transaction report.)
Multiple Money Orders and Cashier's/Official Checks that are purchased or deposited at banks that total more that $10,000 and are purchased with other money orders or cashiers checks are subject to a MIPR (monetary instrument purchase record/report.)
Cash that is received at a business that is more that 10,000 is subject to IRS Form 8300.
Any transaction that appears to be suspicious at a bank is subject to a SAR (Suspicious Activity Report)
These rules have existed for a long time.
To: Prodn2000
Multiple Money Orders and Cashier's/Official Checks that are purchased or deposited at banks that total more that $10,000 and are purchased with other money orders or cashiers checks are subject to a MIPR (monetary instrument purchase record/report.)
How about a certified check from the sale of a home? I have a rather large one going in tomorrow. Have any idea if this is something that is tracked?
26
posted on
07/06/2006 10:08:15 PM PDT
by
WackySam
("There's room for all God's creatures- right next to the taters")
To: WackySam
As long as no cash is used in the purchase of the check, then it'll be alright for the purchaser. As the recipient, just deposit it, and nothing will be reported. If you were to cash it, or take more than 10,000 out of it in cash (and deposit the rest), then some red-flags might be raised.
To: balch3
More treason by the MSM, outing secret government security programs.Media b*st*rds! :-)
To: WackySam
How about a certified check from the sale of a home? I have a rather large one going in tomorrow. Have any idea if this is something that is tracked?You're obviously a drug dealer who laundered money through home purchasing. Now bend over and take it. /s
To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Business as usual in banks and H-A-W-A-L-A elsewhere.
The fact that this story even shows up tells two things:
1. people are very out of touch with laws passed by their own congress critters, and with banking regulations in general
2. laws already in effect that could create worry among Americans are being portrayed by leftist media as Bush's directives
To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
John Hall, spokesman for the American Bankers' Association, was quoted in the National Law Journal in May 2005 as saying, "Our bank counsel are saying if it smells just the least bit, file. File early and file often."One way to protect the privacy of bank customers without running afoul of the law is to automate the process (not the report, that should be paper if at all possible, and barely legible, but automate the report generation) and file on EVERY customer transaction. Drown the bastards in a tidal wave of paper.
31
posted on
07/07/2006 9:08:20 AM PDT
by
Still Thinking
(Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?)
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-31 last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson