"Unintended Consequences: How Small Business Owners in Colorado Could Be Caught by New Money Laundering Law"

A new federal law, the Corporate Transparency Act, requires almost every business entity in Colorado to register with the Treasury Department's Federal Crimes Enforcement Network or face steep penalties, in an effort to catch money launderers. This law applies to LLCs, DBAs, and corporations of any size, and individuals with at least a 25% ownership in a company or who manage a company must file a Beneficial Ownership Information report or face fines and potential prison time. Small business owners, including independent artists, may be caught off guard, but they have until the end of the year to comply if their businesses were established before Jan. 1, and new businesses have 90 days. The database is non-public and only accessible by law enforcement, and while the penalties for noncompliance are steep, they are specifically for willful failure to file.
- New law meant to catch money launderers could catch many small business owners in Colorado off guard CBS Colardo
- ZenBusiness Launches Beneficial Ownership Filing Service for Small Business Customers Yahoo Finance
- The biggest, new reporting law for business that you probably never heard of is ripe for political abuse – Wirepoints Wirepoints
- New US company ownership database faces continued political attacks weeks after launch ICIJ.org
- UPDATE: The Corporate Transparency Act's Impact on Private Fund Managers Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP
Reading Insights
0
1
2 min
vs 3 min read
73%
517 → 139 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on CBS Colardo