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3/19/2020

Remarks of Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin FATF Plenary Session Orlando, Florida | U.S. Department of the Treasury

Remarks of Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin FATF Plenary Session
Orlando, Florida
June 21, 2019

Delegates and guests,
I am pleased to join you today to close the 2019 Orlando Plenary of the Financial Action Task
Force (FATF), and to help mark the important 30-year anniversary of this important body. FATF
President Marshall Billingslea informs me that the FATF has had a productive week tackling
some of the most pressing illicit finance challenges facing the international financial system.

HOLDING HIGH-RISK JURISDICTIONS TO ACCOUNT
The FATF continues to take concrete steps to combat illicit financing by criminals, terrorists,
rogue nations, and other actors who actively attempt to exploit any weak links.
However, the FATF Standards are only e ective if jurisdictions around the world actually take
measures to implement them. Failure to enforce well-defined consequences for inaction could
undermine the credibility of the FATF’s peer review process and of the organization as a whole.
The FATF responded to Iran’s willful failure to address its systemic money laundering and
terrorist financing deficiencies by requiring increased supervisory examination for branches and
subsidiaries of financial institutions based in Iran and calling for additional counter-measures to
be re-imposed if Iran does not make further progress.
The United States calls on all nations to join us in ensuring the FATF’s standards are
implemented globally, and standing together against those who threaten the security of the
international financial system.

PROGRESS MADE UNDER U.S. PRESIDENCY
As we gavel the end of the U.S. Presidency of the FATF, I would like to briefly discuss the
progress the organization has made over the last year to address existing and emerging
vulnerabilities. Under the U.S. Presidency, we have prioritized three critical areas:
1. illicit financing risks associated with virtual assets;
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Remarks of Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin FATF Plenary Session Orlando, Florida | U.S. Department of the Treasury

2. strengthening international counter-financing of terrorism e orts; and
3. enhancing work on countering weapons of mass destruction and proliferation financing.

VIRTUAL ASSETS
One of the most valuable contributions of this plenary is the regulation of all virtual assets,
especially cryptocurrencies. I commend e orts by the FATF to address the growing misuse of
cryptocurrencies and other virtual assets by money launderers, terrorist financiers, and other
illicit actors. I am proud to note that under the co-chairmanship of Spain and Singapore, you
have delivered on the ambitious goal of addressing these risks in a number of ways.
The Interpretive Note adopted this week includes virtual asset standards that are binding to all
countries. By issuing updated guidance, the FATF is enhancing financial transparency and
setting expectations. This will enforce a level playing field for virtual asset service providers,
including cryptocurrency providers, and traditional financial institutions.
Under these new measures, virtual asset service providers will be required to implement the
same AML/CFT requirements as traditional financial institutions. They will need to:
Identify who they are sending funds on behalf of, and who is the recipient of those funds;
Develop processes where they are required to share that information with other providers
of virtual assets, and law enforcement;
Know their customers and conduct proper due diligence to ensure they are not engaging in
illicit activity; and,
Develop risk-based programs that account for the risks in their particular type of business.
By adopting the standards and guidelines agreed to this week, the FATF will make sure that
virtual asset service providers do not operate in the dark shadows. This will enable the
emerging FinTech sector to stay one-step ahead of rogue regimes and sympathizers of illicit
causes searching for avenues to raise and transfer funds without detection.
We will not allow cryptocurrency to become the equivalent of secret numbered accounts.
We will allow for proper use, but we will not tolerate the continued use for illicit activities.
In the U.S., I have convened a working group with the Federal Reserve and other regulators
to make sure we keep the use of digital assets for legitimate use only.
I encourage you to do the same in your markets.

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Remarks of Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin FATF Plenary Session Orlando, Florida | U.S. Department of the Treasury

We must work together to ensure that virtual assets are no longer a safe haven for illicit actors to
end-run around established AML/CFT safeguards.
The United States welcomes responsible innovation, including new technologies that may
improve the e iciency of the financial system and expand access to financial services. Yet we
must maintain our financial system’s integrity and protect it from abuse. That is why the United
States has in place a comprehensive AML/CFT framework for regulating, supervising, and taking
enforcement actions relating to virtual currency and other digital assets.
The United States subjects the same AML/CFT controls to covered providers and activities as any
other U.S. financial institution. For example, service providers must register with FinCEN. They
must also institute an AML program, and recordkeeping and reporting measures, including filing
suspicious activity reports.

COUNTERING THE FINANCING OF TERRORISM
Another U.S. focus during our FATF presidency has been on practical e orts to dismantle
terrorist financing networks. I am proud that we are working to train prosecutors and judges to
more e ectively investigate and prosecute terrorist financing, and that we adopted new
guidance on assessing terrorist financing risks. We are moving beyond simply establishing legal
frameworks to ensuring that these laws are actually disrupting the financing of terrorist groups.

COUNTERING WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION (WMD)
PROLIFERATION FINANCING
Finally, under the U.S. Presidency, the FATF examined ways in which the standards could more
e ectively address the threat of WMD proliferation financing. Rogue nations, terrorists, and
international criminal syndicates have become increasingly sophisticated in evading sanctions,
and other preventive measures, in order to continue to develop WMDs. I encourage this
organization to build upon the work that was done here to ensure that the FATF Global
Network’s policies and controls e ectively counter this evolving threat.

CONCLUSION
While illicit finance threats continually evolve, I am confident that successful e orts to counter
emerging threats will be developed here, by this body, and by its Global Network. On behalf of
the United States, it has been an honor for the U.S. to serve as the FATF President. We look
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Remarks of Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin FATF Plenary Session Orlando, Florida | U.S. Department of the Treasury

forward to continuing this critical work with our partners here to realize a more secure future for
the United States and our friends, our partners, and our allies around the world.

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