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Home News Markets

US govt faces FATCA lawsuit

A litigation suit has been filed against the US federal government arguing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) is “unconstitutional” and violates privacy rights.

by Staff Writer
July 27, 2015
in Markets, News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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The complaint was officially filed in a federal court in Dayton, Ohio on Tuesday, and names the Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service as co-defendants.

Senator Rand Paul, a 2016 presidential candidate, is listed among the plaintiffs and has long advocated against the initiatives of the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) regarding its monitoring and oversight of financial institutions. 

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“[FATCA] imposes enormous economic costs on individuals and financial institutions,” said the official complaint.

“On the most fundamental level, FATCA deprives individuals of the right to the privacy of their financial affairs. On a practical level, FATCA is severely impinging on the ability of US citizens to live and work abroad.”

The suit’s lead lawyer, James Bopp Jr – a former adviser to the Republican National Committee and Mitt Romney’s failed 2012 presidential campaign – said FATCA results in an unconstitutional invasion of civil liberties.

“The president can only rely upon his authority and he has no authority in the Constitution for this,” Mr Bopp told Bloomberg. “We don’t think this has to do with taxes. This has to do with disclosing private, personal information.”

The controversial tax legislation – which was introduced by the Obama Administration in 2010 – requires foreign financial institutions to report details of bank accounts held by US citizens and imposes additional reporting obligations on American expatriates.

Australia entered into an inter-governmental agreement with the US on FATCA in April 2014, with Treasurer Joe Hockey stating at the time that the deal would assist financial institutions in meeting their new compliance requirements. 

However, Harry New, a partner at commercial law firm Hall & Wilcox has warned that many Australian financial services firms are unprepared for FATCA compliance. 

“Australian fund managers with US-sourced income may also need to register with the IRS to avoid FATCA withholding being charged on US-sourced income,” Mr New said.

Aleks Vickovich is Contributing Editor at InvestorDaily based in Washington, DC.

 

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