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Saving Privacy Act

Weekly Crypto Policy Brief 10.4.24

George Leonardo

Good morning and happy October. With Congress out of session, a short and sweet edition this week highlighting a new financial privacy bill, an imminent SEC departure, and a few updates from DC and the campaign trail.

Top Points

  • Senators Mike Lee (R-UT) and Rick Scott (R-FL) introduced the Saving Privacy Act - a bill to drastically reduce federal agencies' access to Americans' financial information without first obtaining a warrant.

  • SEC Enforcement Director Gurbir Grewal is leaving the agency on October 11.

The Saving Privacy Act

On September 25th, Senators Mike Lee (R-UT) and Rick Scott (R-FL) introduced the “Saving Privacy Act.”

In short, the bill would significantly limit federal agencies’ access to Americans’ personal financial information by amending the Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978 and the Bank Secrecy Act.

For example, the bill would:

  • Repeal various reporting provisions under the Bank Secrecy Act, including Suspicious Activity Reports and Currency Transaction Reports, while keeping certain recordkeeping requirements. See § 101(b)(3) (striking 31 U.S.C. §§ 5313, 5314, 5315, 5316, 5317, 5318A, 5324, 5326, 5331, 5332, and 5336).

  • Amend the Right to Financial Privacy Act to narrow circumstances under which federal agencies can access U.S. citizens' financial information without a warrant. See §§ 101(a), 201.

  • Repeal the Corporate Transparency Act, which requires businesses to report information about their ownership to FinCEN. § 101.

  • Repeal the SEC’s Consolidated Audit Trail database, which has already sparked privacy concerns and a legal challenge from the DeFi Education Fund and Blockchain Association. § 301.

  • Prohibit federal agencies from creating a database of personally identifiable information of U.S. citizens in the future without clear Congressional authorization. Id.

  • Impose penalties on federal employees who illegally seek constitutionally protected financial information. Title VI.

As for CBDCs, the bill would:

  • Prohibit the Fed, Treasury, or any other agency from minting or issuing a CBDC directly to individuals or indirectly through an intermediary. § 401.

The bill also aims to broadly rein in federal agencies' power by:

  • Requiring Congressional review and approval of any regulations determined to be a major rule, and an opportunity for Congress to disapprove of any non-major rules. § 502.

    • Major rules would be those likely to result in an annual economic impact of $100 million or more; a major increase in costs/prices for consumers, industries, or governments; significant adverse effects on U.S. businesses; or an increase in mandatory vaccinations.

So What?

The bill has been referred to the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

It is unlikely to move this year, but serves as a marker of financial privacy advocates' priorities/wish list heading into next Congress.

Enforcement Director To Leave SEC

On Wednesday, the SEC announced that Gurbir Grewal, the Director of Enforcement, is leaving the SEC on October 11.

Sanjay Wadhwa will replace Grewal by serving as Acting Director.

In its press release announcing the sudden departure (less than two weeks notice), the SEC specifically recognized Grewal's “leadershipon recommending over 100 enforcement actions in the crypto space, citing ongoing cases against Binance and Coinbase:

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Chair Gensler's statement:

Members of Congress react:

House Republican Whip Tom Emmer (R-MN)

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Rep. French Hill (R-AR) - HFSC Digital Asset Subcomm Chair

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Look Ahead


A message from the Coinbase Institute

Join us for the DC Privacy Summit!

Explore the future of privacy online with leading technologists, privacy advocates, and policy-minded professionals.

Thursday - October 24, 2024

USC Capital Campus - Washington, D.C.

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- RSVP Required -

​Produced by the journalism team at Project Glitch and presented by PGP* for Crypto, this first-of-its kind privacy summit brings together an elite lineup of technologists, researchers, and policy experts to explore the intersection of decentralized networks, advanced cryptography, and the law.


Quick Hits

Congress

Bring Tigran Home

Strategic Bitcoin Reserve

  • Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) embraces idea of a strategic bitcoin reserve, telling Sam Lyman of Forbes:

GOP Majority Whip Tom Emmer

DePIN Fly In

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2024 Election

Polling

Articles

SEC

  • The SEC will appeal Judge Torres's final judgement in SEC v. Ripple Labs; precise issues to be appealed tbd.

Bitcoin Mining

  • The U.S. Energy Information Administration published a report examining energy demand by data centers and cryptocurrency miners in Texas.

Combatting Illicit Finance

Geofencing

Trivia

Last Week's A: Nebraska and Maine do not follow a winner-take-all electoral college model. Instead:

  • Maine allocates two electoral votes to the statewide winner and one electoral vote to the winner of each congressional district.

  • Nebraska also allocates two electoral votes to the statewide winner and one electoral vote to the winner of each of its three congressional districts.

This Week's Q: The first vice-presidential debate was held between which two candidates?

Thanks for reading,

-GSL

Saving Privacy Act