Citation?Pottapaug1938 wrote:I would agree as well.
31 CFR 103.53 is entitled "Availability of information", not "Counts of indictments".Paths of the Sea wrote:I still think some of y'all are wrong.
I think the law and regulations make it clear that one transaction, which could be less than $10,000 and intended to evade the reporting rules, can represent one violation justifying one charge and one conviction.
See:
31 CRF (sic) 103.11
Title 31: Money and Finance: Treasury
Subtitle B: Regulations Relating to Money and Finance
PART 103: FINANCIAL RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING OF CURRENCY AND FOREIGN TRANSACTIONS
Subpart A: Definitions
103.11 - Meaning of terms.
(excerpts)
(gg) Structure (structuring).
For purposes of section 103.53
Try this one:
United States v. Nall, 949 F.2d 301 (10th Cir. 1991) (emphasis supplied).Nall made three deposits at the same bank, Sunwest, over the course of nine days. The source of each deposit was the same lump sum of some $24,000 (or $26,000) which McIntosh had paid to Nall. Each of these three deposits was charged in a separate count, identical except for the date of the deposit. We are convinced that the government has improperly charged one structuring violation of 31 U.S.C. § 5324(3) by multiplicitous counts. As in Dashney and Davenport, Nall committed one structuring violation respecting the $26,000 lump sum payment, comprised of these three individual deposits, and there should have been only one structuring count addressing the 1989 cash deposits made on June 9, June 12, and June 15, 1989 for, respectively, $9,000, $9,000, and $6,000. Therefore, we uphold the conviction on Count II but vacate the convictions on Counts III and IV