They Are Slowly Making
Cash Illegal
By Michael Snyder, on March 23rd, 2015 he move to a cashless society won’t happen
overnight.
stead, it is being implemented very slowly and systematically in a
series of incremental steps. All over the planet, governments are starting to
place restrictions on the use of cash for security reasons. As citizens, we are
being told that this is being done to thwart criminals, terrorists, drug
runners, money launderers and tax evaders. Other forms of payment are much
easier for governments to track, and so they very much prefer them. But we are
rapidly getting to the point where the use of cash is considered to be a
“suspicious activity” all by itself. These days, if you pay a hotel bill with
cash or if you pay for several hundred dollars worth of goods at a store with
cash you are probably going to get looked at funny. You see, the truth is that
we have already been trained to regard the use of large amounts of cash to be
unusual. The next step will be to formally ban large cash transactions like
France and other countries in Europe are already doing.
Starting in September, cash transactions of more
than 1,000 euros will be banned in France. The following comes from a recent Zero Hedge
article which detailed what these new restrictions will do…
Prohibiting French residents from making cash payments of more
than 1,000 euros, down from the current
limit of 3,000 euros.
Given the parlous
state of the stagnating French economy the limit for foreign tourists on currency
payments will remain higher, at 10,000 euros down from the current limit of
15,000 euros.
The threshold below
which a French resident is free to convert euros into other currencies without having to show
an identity card will be slashed from the current level of 8,000 euros to 1,000
euros.
In addition any cash deposit or
withdrawal of more than 10,000 euros during a single month will be reported to
the French anti-fraud and money laundering agency Tracfin.
French authorities will also have to be notified of any freight
transfers within the EU
exceeding 10,000 euros, including checks, pre-paid cards, or gold.
Of course Spain has already banned cash
transactions of more than 2,500 euros and Italy has already banned cash
transactions of more than 1,000 euros.
We don’t have these kinds of outright bans in
the United States just yet, but what we do have are some very strict reporting
requirements.
For example, if you regularly deposit large
amounts of cash, there is a very good chance that you have been the subject of
a “suspicious activity report”. In 2013, approximately 1.6 million suspicious
activity reports were submitted to the federal government.
*****
Banks, bank holding companies, and their
subsidiaries are required by federal regulations53 to file a SAR
with respect to:
- Criminal violations involving
insider abuse in any amount.
- Criminal violations aggregating
$5,000 or more when a suspect can be identified.
- Criminal violations aggregating
$25,000 or more regardless of a potential suspect.
- Transactions conducted or
attempted by, at, or through the bank (or an affiliate) and aggregating
$5,000 or more, if the bank or affiliate knows, suspects, or has reason to
suspect that the transaction:
- May involve potential money
laundering or other illegal activity (e.g., terrorism financing).54
- Is designed to evade the BSA
or its implementing regulations.55
- Has no business or apparent
lawful purpose or is not the type of transaction that the particular
customer would normally be expected to engage in, and the bank knows of
no reasonable explanation for the transaction after examining the
available facts, including the background and possible purpose of the
transaction.
*****
Most people don’t realize this, but there are
minimum quotas for suspicious activity reports that banks must meet. If they do
not submit enough suspicious activity reports, they can be fined (or worse).
And now the Obama administration is saying that
just filling out suspicious activity reports may not be good enough.
According to the Wall Street
Journal, banks are actually being encouraged to directly contact
law enforcement if they see something that does not look right…
The U.S. Justice
Department’s criminal head said banks may need to go beyond filing suspicious
activity reports when they encounter a risky customer.
“The vast majority of
financial institutions file suspicious activity reports when they suspect that
an account is connected to nefarious activity,” said assistant attorney general
Leslie Caldwell in a Monday speech, according to prepared remarks. “But, in appropriate
cases, we encourage those institutions to consider whether to take more action:
specifically, to alert law enforcement authorities about the problem.”
The remarks indicate
that banks may be expected to do more than just file SARs, a responsibility
that itself can be expensive and time-consuming.
That should send a chill up your spine.
In a recent piece, Simon Black
imagined a future scenario in which some unsuspecting American citizen goes to
the bank to withdraw a large amount of cash…
Imagine going to the
bank to withdraw some cash.
Having some cash on
hand is always a prudent strategy, and especially today when more and more bank
deposits are creeping into negative territory, meaning that you have to pay the
banks for the privilege that they gamble with your money.
You tell the teller
that you’d like to withdraw $5,000 from your account. She hesitates nervously
and wants to know why.
You try to politely
let her know that that’s none of the bank’s business as it’s your money.
The teller disappears
for a few minutes, leaving you waiting.
When she returns she
tells you that you can collect your money in a few days as they don’t have it
on hand at the moment.
Slightly irritated
because of the inconvenience, you head home.
But as you pull into
your driveway later there’s an unexpected surprise waiting for you: two police
officers would like to have a word with you about your intended withdrawal
earlier…
Perhaps you don’t think that anything like that
could ever happen to you.
A widow’s bank account
was seized by the IRS and she now faces criminal charges for depositing her legal inheritance money in
lumps instead of all together.
Janet Malone, 68, had
$18,775 seized from her — money that was legally earned and was legally
bestowed to her by her late husband, Ronald Malone. The problem, according to
the government, was the fact that she deposited it in several lumps instead of
all at once.
According to the
Associated Press, Mrs. Malone deposited the cash in increments between $5,800
and $9,000. The widow’s private financial affairs evidently set off red flags
under the watchful gaze of the federal government.
Remember, she was not guilty of committing any
crime other than depositing cash in lumps instead of all at once.
If this is how ruthless the feds will be with an elderly widow, how would they treat you under similar circumstances?
So why are they doing this?
The truth is that they want to discourage the
public from using cash. Our government, just like governments all over the
planet, is not being shy about the fact that it does not like cash. If they can
make people afraid to use cash, that suits their purposes very well.
And with each passing year the restrictions on
the use of cash globally will just get tighter and tighter and the role that
cash plays in our lives will just become smaller and smaller.
In the end, a transition to an almost entirely
cashless society will seem almost natural. Cash is being killed off one slow
step at a time, and at this point hardly anyone is objecting.
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