FinCEN Looks to Rewrite AML Rules, Shifting the Focus From Paperwork to What Actually Works
There has long been an unspoken tension at the heart of anti-money laundering compliance. Banks file more reports, build more controls, document more processes, and yet the question lingers. Is any of it actually stopping bad actors? The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) took a direct swing at that question, proposing a rule that would fundamentally reshape how financial institutions are expected to approach AML and counter-terrorist financing programs under the Bank Secrecy Act.
