Comment on What if a billionaire wants to help you?
cattywampas@midwest.social 1 day agoIn the USA banks most definitely scrutinize the source of money and why it’s being transferred.
Comment on What if a billionaire wants to help you?
cattywampas@midwest.social 1 day agoIn the USA banks most definitely scrutinize the source of money and why it’s being transferred.
spongebue@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Emphasis on “generally” in my statement. Of course there are exceptions where they would, but if I had a multi-million dollar check from Warren Buffett for replacing a few light bulbs in his house, the bank isn’t going to call him and make sure that’s a reasonable price or anything.
litchralee@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
Banks can and do get into hot water if they’re found to have handled – inadvertently or not – funds which ends up with banned entities, like DPRK or terrorist groups, or are the product of fraud AND that they ignored reasonable suspicions.
The classic example is the so-called “703 account” of fraudster Bernie Madoff, held at JP Morgan Chase bank. Although a humble checking account, it saw huge money inflows and outflows, with one reference showing a single withdrawal of $1.3 billion. For their wilful disregard of the obvious red flags, the bank was fined $461 million of their own money, separate from the seizure of the account to pay the victims.
spongebue@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Those are all extreme cases unlikely to be relevant to OP’s question.
mimic_dev@lemmy.world 1 day ago
The general rule is anything over 10,000 gets flagged and investigated if there’s additional suspicious activity. Same as when there are multiple deposits just under 10,000
spongebue@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Emphasis on this part. Either way, what you’re describing is generally for tax purposes. Going back to the original question of the thread, if I had billions of dollars and wrote a stranger a check, the bank is highly unlikely to make sure I meant it. At most they may report it to the government to make sure I pay gift taxes (which are paid by the giver, not the recipient, and even they apply far above $10,000 but you still need to report it at that level)
hddsx@lemmy.ca 23 hours ago
The receiver pays taxes over a given tax years allowance in addition to the tax paid by the giver.
litchralee@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) in the USA are made to track both potential tax evasion and money laundering. This is where the $10k cash “limit” comes from, but SARs can/should be filed for higher amount that create suspicion.
Someone depositing a check for multiple times their lifetime transactions total would absolutely create suspicion on themselves, especially if it was a personal check. But if it were a business check from “ABC Mortgage Escrow”, that’s probably legit but a bank clerk is well within their rights to flag it.