WASHINGTON - Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley expressed support for a proposal to clamp down on money laundering and tighten rules designed to prevent terrorists and other criminals from exploiting America's financial system.  Currently, financial institutions are required to verify the identities of customers, but not necessarily the identities of the individuals who control or benefit from a legal entity, such as a corporation, association or partnership.

"White Collar criminals, drug traffickers, and even terrorists can, at this very moment, exploit our financial system and shield their illicit activities behind these anonymous legal entity customers.  This [Notice of Proposed Rule Making] would close the loopholes and require banks to identify the natural person who is the beneficial owner of such an entity," Grassley said in a letter to the Financial Crime Enforcement Network.

The rule, proposed by the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, clarifies and strengthens provisions under the Bank Secrecy Act's customer due diligence requirement by explicitly calling for financial institutions to identify and verify the beneficial owners of legal entity customers. The proposal also includes new requirements regarding the nature and purpose of customer relationships as well as ongoing monitoring of any suspicious transactions.

Grassley has long worked with colleagues in a bipartisan manner to increase transparency of corporate beneficiaries and strengthen laws designed to prevent money laundering and combat terrorist financing. A signed copy of Grassley's letter can be found here. Full text of the letter is available below.

 

June 8, 2015

VIA ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION

 

Ms. Jennifer Shasky Calvery

Director

Financial Crimes Enforcement Network

U.S. Department of the Treasury

P.O. Box 39

Vienna, VA 22183

RE:      Docket No. FINCEN-2014-001; (RIN) 1506-AB25

Customer Due Diligence Requirements for Financial Institutions

Dear Director Shasky Calvery:

I write to express my support for FinCen's efforts to address gaps in the customer due diligence (CDD) requirement for financial institutions through the above referenced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM).  I agree that banks should be required under the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) to identify the beneficial owners of legal entity customers (i.e., corporations, partnerships, and limited liability companies) and this proposed rule would go a long way towards enhancing financial transparency and safeguarding our financial system against illicit use.

Current BSA regulations are helpful to enforcement efforts.  They ensure that banks know their customers and mandate the reporting of suspicious activity to law enforcement.  But certain gaps exist in the current regulatory framework.  In particular, it is unclear to me how banks and other financial institutions can ever truly "know" a legal entity customer if they cannot identify the natural person who ultimately controls it (or otherwise benefits from it).  White collar criminals, drug traffickers, and even terrorists can at this very moment exploit our financial system and shield their illicit activities behind these anonymous legal entity customers.  This NPRM would close the loophole and require banks to identify the natural person who is the beneficial owner of such an entity.

As you may be aware, I have been working with my Senate colleagues for a number of years - on both sides of the aisle - to develop legislation that would strengthen our anti-money laundering laws, combat terrorist financing, and mandate the disclosure of corporate beneficiary information to increase transparency and help our law enforcement and regulatory agencies protect our financial system.  But until these efforts bear fruit, FinCen's NPRM offers one of the most realistic and effective means of advancing these goals.

I would like to thank you for your efforts to ensure the integrity of our financial system.  Please direct any inquiries on this issue to Jeffrey Snyder of my committee staff at (202) 224-5225.

Sincerely,                    

Charles E. Grassley

Chairman

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Good morning.  The Senate has a constitutional duty to conduct oversight of the Executive Branch to ensure that the federal regulatory system remains accountable to the People, and transparent in its operations.  Today's hearing gives us a chance to take a broad look at where things stand.

 

We all remember from civics class that under our constitutional separation of powers, Congress makes the laws, the Executive Branch enforces the laws, and the Judicial Branch interprets those laws.

 

If only it were that straightforward.

 

According to professor of law Jonathan Turley at George Washington University, "Our carefully constructed system of checks and balances is being negated by the rise of a fourth branch, an administrative state of sprawling departments and agencies that govern with increasing autonomy and decreasing transparency."

 

The Federal Register indicates there are over 430 departments, agencies, and sub-agencies in the federal government.  And the pronouncements of this ever-expanding administrative state impact nearly every aspect of Americans' daily lives.

 

The data support that fact.  The 113th Congress, for example, enacted just under 300 laws.  Over the same two-year period, the federal bureaucracy finalized over 7,000 regulations.  Just looking at these numbers, there's no denying that unelected bureaucrats are the real law-making force in this country.

 

In 1946, Congress recognized the growing power of the federal bureaucracy and enacted the Administrative Procedure Act (or "APA") to help ensure that regulations are crafted in an open, accountable and transparent manner?and that agency actions are reviewable by the courts to ensure compliance with the law.

 

Among the protections built into the APA is the public notice-and-comment rulemaking process, whereby Americans can weigh-in on proposed regulations, and agencies must objectively take those concerns into account when crafting a final rule.  This process is supposed to provide a meaningful opportunity for the public to hold regulators accountable, and to help insure that regulations are crafted in the public interest?rather than tailored to special interests.  The Judiciary Committee has primary jurisdiction over the APA, and we need to improve our oversight of it.

 

Unfortunately, we see repeated efforts today by agencies to undermine the public's role in the rulemaking process?and tactics that render the notice-and-comment process a mere formality.

Some agencies are resorting to litigation tactics, known as sue-and-settle, to speed up the rulemaking process and to keep affected members of the public?and even the States?away from the table when key regulatory decisions are negotiated behind closed doors.

 

These tactics often result in consent decrees or settlement agreements between an agency and like-minded interest groups, committing the agency to actions that haven't been publicly scrutinized.  In February, I introduced the Sunshine for Regulatory Decrees and Settlements Act, a bill that would shine light on these tactics and provide much-needed transparency before regulatory decisions are finalized.

 

But that's just one part of the issue.

 

We also see agencies going through the motions of notice-and-comment rulemaking, yet the public's role in the process appears to be anything but meaningful.  The EPA's recently finalized Waters of the U.S. (or "WOTUS") rule stands out as a sweeping example of this problem.

 

Instead of attempting to address the legitimate concerns raised during the open comment period, the EPA and its allies in the professional advocacy community pushed a narrative that portrayed critics of the rule as misinformed, nutty, or in favor of water pollution.

 

Agencies are supposed to remain objective during the notice-and-comment period.  But EPA's efforts to drive support for its own rule?while belittling the concerns of the public?indicate that it had a clear end-goal in mind, regardless of public opinion or the rule's impact.

 

According to a recent New York Times article, "the EPA's tactics in supporting the rule are clearly designed to move public opinion, at a time when Congress was considering legislation to block the agency from putting the rule into effect."

 

I share the concerns of folks across Iowa with the WOTUS rule.  Its sweeping scope has left farmers in limbo about what they can and cannot do on their own land.  And the indifferent attitude the EPA took toward agriculture is a real concern for my constituents who understand the impact that agriculture has on the state's economy.

 

More broadly, it's a real concern for just how unaccountable our regulatory system has become.

 

Congress recognized early on the threat of agency overreach.  And accordingly, the APA provides for judicial review over the administrative state.

 

However, as the influence and reach of the administrative state has grown, it seems like the ability and willingness of the federal courts to hold it accountable has diminished.  Over 30 years ago, the Supreme Court articulated the now-famous Chevron doctrine, whereby federal courts largely defer to an agency's legal interpretation of a statute it administers.

 

And recently, the Supreme Court determined that such heavy deference extends even to an agency's interpretation of the scope of its own jurisdiction.

 

Placing such questions of law into the hands of those who also write and enforce laws raises serious concerns.  As James Madison correctly observed, "the accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many... may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny."

 

So it's important that we consider these issues carefully, taking into account both the practical realities of our modern system of government and the separation of powers in our Constitution.

 

It's equally important that Congress recognize its own responsibility in the expansion of the administrative state.  For too long, Congress has delegated in broad strokes, asking the agencies to sort out the details.  If Congress is going to ask courts to tackle the tough questions, it needs to be willing to do so itself by reasserting its lawmaking power?and by speaking clearly and precisely when it chooses to use that power.

 

What's clear is that the status quo is not acceptable.  Today, small businesses and entrepreneurs operate in a regulatory environment that provides little relief from excessive red-tape, and one that offers little certainty upon which to base risk and investment.  Agencies are falling far short of their duties to weigh the costs and benefits of new regulations, and there's little the courts can do to hold them to account.  And regulations with hundreds of millions?and even billions?of dollars in impact are being imposed on the U.S. economy, all without a sufficient check by Congress.

 

In order to promote job growth and the American economy, we all must do better.

 

Today we're going to take a closer look at these and other concerns that have been raised.  And we're going to ask what Congress can do to restore accountability and transparency in the federal regulatory system.

 

Now, I'll turn to the Ranking Member for his opening remarks.

 

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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - For the third time in less than a month, Illinois House Republicans refused to support legislation to freeze property taxes statewide. This time, one of the measures included the exact property tax language Gov. Bruce Rauner has proposed.
"I'm disappointed that House Republicans would again turn their backs on middle-class families and homeowners who struggle to pay their property taxes," said state Rep. John Bradley, D-Marion, who sponsored one of the tax relief measures. "The record is clear: House Republicans have rejected freezing property taxes not once, not twice, but three times in less than one month's time."
On Tuesday, the House debated two measures to freeze property taxes statewide, including House Bill 691 proposed by Bradley. Even though Bradley's proposal was identical to property tax relief language proposed by Gov. Bruce Rauner, the failure of House Republicans to support the measure led to its defeat.
"House Republicans don't want compromise, they don't want to help struggling homeowners and they don't want to strengthen Illinois' middle class," Bradley said. "Three times within a month the House voted to freeze property taxes, and all three attempts were overwhelmingly opposed by House Republicans, including a bill that included Governor Rauner's own proposal."
Bradley said he expects the House to continue debating property tax relief for Illinois homeowners, hoping at some point House Republicans will find a proposal they can support.
"The simple question to House Republicans is: are you loyal to your political party, or are you going to vote for taxpayers and homeowners?," Bradley said.
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DEKALB, IL (06/09/2015)(readMedia)-- Northern Illinois University announces the awarding of graduate and undergraduate degrees at the conclusion of the spring 2015 session. The following local students are recent graduates of Northern Illinois University (NIU), joining 227,000 alumni who are putting the university's promise of student career success into action:

Tyler Scannell of Silvis, IL. Scannell graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.

Lindsey Williams of Geneseo, IL. Williams graduated with a Master of Science in Education degree.

Kiran Surapaneni of Davenport, IA. Surapaneni graduated with a Master of Science degree.

Andrew Palm of Rock Island, IL. Palm graduated with a Master of Science degree.

Clifford Hight of Geneseo, IL. Hight graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.

Alysha Rogers of Moline, IL. Rogers graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.

Angela Versluis of Silvis, IL. Versluis graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.

Jacob Blair of Silvis, IL. Blair graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.

Courtney Eacker of Rock Island, IL. Eacker graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree.

Nicholas Jansen of East Moline, IL. Jansen graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.

Jennifer Paxton of Port Byron, IL. Paxton graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree.

Sarah Pearce of Silvis, IL. Pearce graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree.

Kayleigh Sanchez of East moline, IL. Sanchez graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.

Alexander Buzzell of Bettendorf, IA. Buzzell graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree.

Terrance Gray of East Moline, IL. Gray graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.

Chelsea Ortiz of Port Byron, IL. Ortiz graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.

James Wynes of Port Byron, IL. Wynes graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.

Chartered in 1895, NIU first opened its doors as the Northern Illinois State Normal School in 1899 as a teachers college. The university has grown since into a world-class, research-focused public institution that attracts students from across Illinois, the country and the world.

STEM for Girls

Girls in STEM luncheon
MEET IOWA LT. GOVERNOR KIM REYNOLDS
JUNE 25, 2015 from 12:00 - 1:30 PM
AT THE PUTNAM MUSEUM AND SCIENCE CENTER

Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM)

careers are growing at nearly twice the rate of all others and provide high satisfaction and high salaries. It is very important that girls have ample opportunity to experience STEM in a variety of ways. Join us to learn more about Putnam initiatives for girls in STEM!

$50 per ticket or table of 8 for $360.

Luncheon ticket proceeds will focus on opportunities for girls to explore and advance their interests in STEM.

Hosted by Genesis Health System VP, Ken Croken.

 

Questions? Please contact Betsy Matt Turner at (563) 336-7303

The Mississippi Valley Blues Society announces that Daddy Mack will be playing at The Muddy Waters, 1708 State Street, Bettendorf, IA on Sunday, June 21 starting at 7:00 p.m. The cost to see this performance will be $5 if you are a Mississippi Valley Blues Society member, or $7 if you are have not joined the Blues Society (applications will be available at the door).

Mack Orr developed his talents sitting in with the Fieldstones at Green's Lounge, one of the most popular juke joints in Memphis, TN.  He leads this four-piece group with his guitar and vocals in a down-home traditional blues sound. Teaming up with brothers Harold and James Bonner, drummer William Faulkner, and keyboardist Charlie Wood, their raw approach to blues is something too often missing in contemporary blues.

Since 1998, they have been the house band at the Center for Southern Folklore on Beale Street, where thousands of tourists from all corners of the world have experienced their natural and soulful musical blend.  At a Blues Foundation party in April of 1999, Rolling Stones Keith Richards and Ron Wood sat in with the band and, as the story goes, they were able to keep up musically, but no one was shouting to hear "Jumpin' Jack Flash" either.

For more than a decade the Daddy Mack and his band have experienced playing for a broad spectrum of audiences.  The band has played London, Paris, Las Vegas, and before a crowd of thousands at the 2006 Chicago Blues Festival.  Mack isn't too shy to play a party for a gathering of governors from all across the United States or to walk right into the middle of a crowd with his wireless and play guitar licks while his sweat drips right onto the shoes of hollerin' blues fans.

Mack is not only doing his part to keep the blues alive for the 21st Century, he's not compromising what he thinks blues is supposed to be - fun, and with the right balance of showmanship and good music.

This event is being presented by The Mississippi Valley Blues Society. The objective of the Society is to educate the general public about the native art form of blues-related music through performance, interpretation and preservation, thus enhancing appreciation and understanding.

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WASHINGTON - The Federal Trade Commission has committed to carefully consider information on potentially deceptive third-party hotel booking websites to determine whether enforcement or other actions is appropriate, following a recent inquiry by Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley.

"I share the Federal Trade Commission's desire to protect consumer confidence and ensure a robust online marketplace for travel services. Consumers should have a variety of options when planning their trips, but third-party services should be upfront about who they are and what they are selling. Given the FTC's history of consumer protection in similar situations within the online ticket reseller industry, I encourage the FTC to ensure that consumers are not being deceived or misled with respect to booking hotel rooms with certain third-party websites," Grassley said.

Consumers who have been harmed should contact the FTC as the agency looks into this matter. The FTC's response to Grassley's inquiry is available here.

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EFFECTIVE JULY 1

The Scott County Recorder's office will be suspending their Passport Services until September 1, 2015.  Due to staffing needs we are not able to provide passport acceptance services on a consistent base.  We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

Rita Vargas, Scott County Recorder

The Mississippi Valley Blues Festival is the proud recipient of River Action's Eddy Award for Art for 2015.  The Eddy Award acknowledges "those who act as an eddy, 'going against the current' to accomplish excellence on the Mississippi River."

In his remarks at the ceremony April 24, River Action President Joe Chambers noted that:  "The Blues Fest draws a national crowd to the Quad Cities to hear world class musicians playing the blues.  The Fest and its spin-off performances expand the QC's cultural offerings, and help make the Quad Cities a cool place to live."

Mississippi Valley Blues Society President Scott Klarkowski and director Karen McFarland were on hand to accept the award, a stunning abstract trophy of an eddy swirling against the Mississippi current.  It joins the 2014 award to MVBS from the Blues Foundation for Keeping the Blues Alive?U.S. Festival.

"MVBS is so thrilled to receive the Eddy!" said McFarland.  "This award confirms that the music we present at the Blues Festival in LeClaire Park makes a difference in the community."

The Eddy Awards recognize "tenacity and perseverance," said Chambers.  "The blues were born out of hard times and pain.  The blues sing the feelings of those who suffer in the low points of life, who overcome adversity, and at the same time the blues celebrate life.  So, the Mississippi Valley Blues Fest must be recognized for surviving five floods!"

The floods occurred in 1993, 2001, 2008, 2013, and 2014.  The cumulative effect of the last three floods in addition to rain days prompted the MVBS Board of Directors to move the 31st annual BluesFest to the traditionally dryer (cross your fingers) Labor Day Weekend this year, on September 5 and 6.

River Action is also celebrating its 31st year of stewardship of the Mississippi River.  Perhaps best known for Ride the River and installing lights on the Centennial Bridge framing LeClaire Park, River Action has been awarding the Eddy since 2000 and is currently fundraising for a bike and footpath across River Drive where the first train bridge once stood.

 

 

WASHINGTON - Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley of Iowa made the following statement regarding the announced resignation of U.S. Marshals Service Director Stacia Hylton:

"News of Ms. Hylton's decision to resign comes as the Marshals Service faces serious allegations of misconduct within its senior ranks. The Justice Department has referred whistleblower claims I've raised to the Inspector General for further investigation, and the Office of Special Counsel is pursuing separate inquiries following charges of whistleblower retaliation.  It's never good news when the head of an agency needs to step aside in the midst of these kinds of allegations, and it also doesn't mean the investigations are complete.  The Committee's inquiry into the broad range of whistleblower allegations will continue alongside the inquiries by the Inspector General and Special Counsel.  Accountability and transparency are the best tools to restore trust in an organization that is supposed to be setting an example of respect for the rule of law.

"As the Marshals Service moves forward, the next director must be committed to bringing real, positive change to what appears to be a culture corroded by unethical hiring practices, misuse of funds and retaliation against whistleblowers."

For several months, Grassley has been investigating claims by dozens of whistleblowers across multiple divisions of the Marshals Service, ranging from hiring quid pro quos involving Hylton to misuse of funds within the Asset Forfeiture Division to nepotism. Grassley's inquiries have led the Justice Department to call for an independent investigation into the claims.

Grassley sent a letter to the Hylton on March 18 regarding alleged misuse of the Asset Forfeiture Fund, including claims that officials used the Fund to purchase extravagant office furnishings.  However, the agency's response was incomplete and contained several discrepancies, requiring a greater explanation.

Grassley also sent a letter to the Justice Department on March 19 relating to allegations of an inappropriate exchange of favors that led to the hiring of a highly-paid yet unqualified contractor and Hylton's promotion of another Marshals Service official.  Grassley followed up on his letter regarding the alleged hiring quid pro quo on April 7, after the Justice Department failed to dispel these concerns. The Justice Department later stated on April 17 that it may have provided the Committee with incomplete or inaccurate information and is continuing its investigations. In this letter, the Justice Department supplied email records supporting the claims of a quid pro quo.

These exchanges have prompted other whistleblowers to come forward to raise new concerns and corroborate some of the earlier allegations. Unfortunately, senior leadership at the Marshals Service has a sordid track record of misconduct and lack of cooperation with federal investigations. Therefore, Grassley intends to continue his own investigation, which may continue into the tenure of Hylton's replacement.

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