Business owners should pay close attention to the various rulings and implications in this case involving the CTA.
What is the CTA?
The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) is a federal law designed to prevent money laundering and financial crimes. It requires most small businesses to divulge to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) the true owners of their companies.
The CTA’s key provisions include:
- Companies must reveal the names of their “beneficial owners.” That means anyone who owns or controls 25% or more of the business.
- Companies must provide certain of the owners’ demographics, including names, birthdates, addresses, and identification.
- These provisions of the CTA govern most small businesses, LLCs, and corporations.
- Some larger companies, banks, and nonprofit entities are exempt.
As we reported last month, some companies raised constitutional concerns about the CTA. These include:
- The right to privacy: The opposition claims the CTA invades the privacy of business owners.
- Federal overreach: Critics say that Congress overstepped its authority by regulating local business formation.
- Organizational burden: Opponents argue that small companies cannot afford the expense and the time to meet the reporting requirements.
The Conflict
The CTA’s reporting rules are one of the biggest changes to business ownership transparency requirements in recent U.S. history. Supporters say it will help fight financial crime; critics view it as overly burdensome regulation.
The Various Rulings
During the month of December and early January (prior to this blog going to press), a battle over the CTA’s constitutionality ensued with a flurry of court filing and rulings. As a result, FinCEN made the following announcement on its Beneficial Ownership Information Reporting (BOI) webpage:
“In light of a recent federal court order, reporting companies are not currently required to file beneficial ownership information with FinCEN and are not subject to liability if they fail to do so while the order remains in force. However, reporting companies may continue to voluntarily submit beneficial ownership information reports. More information is available on our website.”
After more litigation, FinCEN postponed most reporting deadlines.
Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar on behalf of the federal government filed an appeal with the United States Supreme Court. No further information was available at the time of this writing.
What That Means for Business Owners
No filings under the CTA were required by law at the time of this writing. That includes the Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI) reports. However, companies may file voluntarily. Business owners should keep close watch on the outcome of the Supreme Court’s decision and be prepared to meet filing deadlines if the injunction is lifted.
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