Tag: cash reporting requirement

Detroit Airport Currency Report Sign

Prepaid Card Seizure & CBP Reporting Requirement

On Forbes the other day, I read an interesting article about prepaid debit cards getting seized.The story is about Oklahoma police, but it discusses how they benefited from some technology developed for use by U.S. Customs & Border Protection in seizing prepaid debit cards. The interesting part of the story is that criminals are increasingly moving money across the border by means of prepaid debit cards; moreover, that these the information contained on the prepaid debit card can also be stored on any card with a magnetic stripe, including a hotel room key.

Truly fascinating, ingenious, and in hindsight, obvious. The story also says that detecting what is stored on these electronic debit cards used to take weeks, but some company called ERAD came up with a better way allowing customs to access the information in seconds. According to ERAD Group:

Even with probable cause, [customs officials] had no way of identifying the card value, freezing the funds or seizing the money at the point of arrest. ERAD-Prepaid™ solved that problem by condensing a process that takes many days, weeks or months into one that takes a few seconds.

This shed some light on to an increasing number of customs seizure press releases that I’ve read that involve people importing things CBP has sometimes called “fradulent gift cards” that contain “personal identity information”. One such story appeared the other day:

On Saturday, CBP officers arrested Ramzi Kadir, a 22-year old male, Mouad Benameur, a 21-year old male, and Abdelhakim Zaier, a 22-year old male, all citizens of Canada, after 13 fraudulent gift cards containing personal identity information were discovered in their possession.  The men and cards were turned over to New York State Police.

So, perhaps cash was not stored on the magnetic stripes but some other personal information was stored. Something nefarious enough to cause CBP to arrest these individuals.

The Forbes piece caused me to wonder, if you’re traveling across the border with a prepaid debit card does it count toward the $10,000 threshold reporting requirement? Do prepaid cards with more than $10,000 have to be reported to CBP to avoid seizure? I think, yeah, probably. Most likely. Certainly, if the law isn’t clear whether it counts or not — to be on the safe side, you should report it to CBP to avoid a potential prepaid card seizure.

For the time being, I do not have time to look into this and provide a definitive legal answer; I’ll save that for paying clients. I can say that the definition of monetary instruments does not explicitly list “prepaid cards” as a category, but it certainly seems to be more like a “bearer instrument,” which is required to be reported.

Recall that things like credit cards and debit cards attached to a traditional bank account do not have to be reported under 31 USC 5316. But the prepaid cards are unique in that they are not attached to a bank account; basically, the money exists on the card and can be accessed at an ATM.

Have you had prepaid cards seized by CBP?

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U.S. Money Seized by Customs (CBP) Stacked on a Table with Envelopes

CBP Confiscated Cash of $18,000 at Dulles

CBP confiscated cash of $18,000 at Dulles Airport from a family bound for Lebanon. The family verbally reported $12,000 cash to customs, then completed a FinCEN 105 form for $14,100.
Upon inspection, CBP discovered they actually had the equivalent of approximately $18,000, consisting of Euros and U.S. dollars. ((The story notes that money was in “several white envelopes”, which could lead to allegations of bulk cash smuggling. We’ve talked about bulk cash smuggling in depth; and be forewarned, if Dulles alleges bulk cash smuggling after CBP confiscated cash, you are going to permanently lose a substantial amount of your money. Read about it at $16k Dulles Airport Currency Seizure by CBP or at Cash seized at Dulles airport by CBP or at Dulles Airport Cash Seizure Nets CBP $40K or at Dulles Airport Money Seizure by Customs of $43,015, just to name a few.))
The real issue we want to address in this CBP cash confiscation story is the “verbal report” the family made. The CBP cash reporting regulations state that the cash report shall be filed “at the time of entry into the United States or at the time of departure . . . . with the Customs officer in charge”.
So, if you are stopped and make an accurate report of cash to Customs without filing a written report of cash on FinCEN 105, you’ve already violated the law. So even assuming the verbal report by the Lebanese family was accurate, there would still be a violation of the currency reporting requirement. A report of cash to CBP must be accurate, in writing, and on time! Otherwise, you’ll next person from who CBP confiscated cash.

Here’s the story about how CBP confiscated cash at Dulles:

CBP officers seized $18,592 on Thursday from a Lebanon-bound family for failure to comply with federal currency reporting regulations. A CBP currency canine alerted to the family on the jetway. The family verbally reported $12,000, and then reported $14,100 on a U.S. Treasury Department currency reporting form after a CBP officer explained the law. A baggage inspection revealed several white envelopes that contained a total of $17,428 in U.S. dollars and 1,164 Euros. CBP officers seized the U.S. currency, released the Euros to the family, and then released the family to continue their trip.
If CBP confiscated cash from you, you can learn more from our trusted customs money seizure legal guide and can contact us for a free currency seizure consultation by clicking the contact buttons on this page.