Did Banks Hand Private Financial Data to the FBI Without Legal Process?
Banks routinely snitch on customers and even deny services to people politicians don’t like.

The House Judiciary Committee is investigating banks for sharing Americans' financial information with the FBI without regard for privacy concerns. In fact, there's no doubt about the threat to civil liberties posed by the government's leverage over the financial industry; that's long established. At question in this investigation is whether the danger to our freedom inherent in that cozy relationship is being wielded in political warfare between the country's political factions. But the larger problem should be fixed no matter what lawmakers discover.
"Today, Chairman Jim Jordan (R-OH) subpoenaed Citibank for documents and communications related to the Judiciary Committee's and Weaponization Select Subcommittee's investigation into major banks sharing Americans' private financial data with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) without legal process for transactions made in the Washington, D.C., area around Jan. 6, 2021," the House Judiciary Committee announced August 17.
The subpoena followed June 12 queries to Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase & Company, PNC Financial Services, Truist, U.S. Bankcorp, and Wells Fargo after testimony by FBI whistleblowers that Bank of America voluntarily handed the FBI records on people who had used its services in the Washington, D.C. area around the time of the January 6 Capitol riot. "Individuals who had previously purchased a firearm with a BoA product were reportedly elevated to the top of the list," according to a May report.
Banks Have Long Been Government Snitches
If the banks in question surrendered private financial information to federal officials based on little more than "please," that's disturbing. It's also believable since financial institutions have long operated as surveillance arms of the state, tracking transactions and movements, making assumptions about what they might mean, then turning that information over to government officials under regulatory pressure.
"The mission of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network is to safeguard the financial system from illicit use, combat money laundering and its related crimes including terrorism, and promote national security through the strategic use of financial authorities and the collection, analysis, and dissemination of financial intelligence," boasts the federal agency, which operates under the umbrella of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. To that end, it administers a host of rules including customer due diligence mandating that banks "identify and verify the identity of customers," larger "know your customer" rules specifying that financial institutions profile clients once they're identified, the misnamed Bank Secrecy Act which requires "financial institutions to, among other things, keep records of cash purchases of negotiable instruments, file reports of cash transactions exceeding $10,000 (daily aggregate amount)," and suspicious activity reports which banks must file on "suspicious or potentially illicit activity."
As it did in many areas, the USA PATRIOT Act tightened the screws of surveillance when it came to financial activity.
"The National Security Letter provision of the Patriot Act radically expanded the FBI's authority to demand personal customer records from Internet Service Providers, financial institutions and credit companies without prior court approval," notes the ACLU.
Regulators Strong-Arm Industry Compliance
The financial industry is heavily regulated by government officials. That gives them the ability to torment private businesses based on idiosyncratic interpretations of vague laws and regulations.
"The SEC staff told us they have identified potential violations of securities law, but little more," Paul Grewal, chief legal officer for the crypto exchange Coinbase, complained in March about a nastygram from the Securities and Exchange Commission. "We asked the SEC specifically to identify which assets on our platforms they believe may be securities, and they declined to do so." Grewal went on to detail his company's efforts to comply with rules and regulators' refusal to respond, except with threats.
Unfortunately (but probably not accidentally), such power creates incentives to over-interpret activity as "suspicious" and to snitch on customers to stay on the good side of federal agencies.
"Government officials can use informal pressure — bullying, threatening, and cajoling — to sway the decisions of private platforms," the Cato Institute's Will Duffield wrote regarding federal efforts to strong-arm tech companies into suppressing disfavored speech. Such "jawboning" is easily applied to any heavily regulated industry, including finance. It can also be used to encourage more than snooping, such as outright denial of service.
"According to our data, nearly 2 out of 3 people who earn money in the adult industry have lost a bank account or financial tool, and nearly 40% have had an account closed in the past year," the Free Speech Coalition, an adult-industry trade group, reported of the results of a survey earlier this year.
While the report didn't speculate as to the cause of the closures, the problem looks very much like a continuation of the Obama administration's Operation Choke Point, under which federal agencies including the Department of Justice and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation leaned on banks to deny services to businesses which government officials just didn't like.
"Operation Choke Point was created by the Justice Department to 'choke out' companies the Administration considers a 'high risk' or otherwise objectionable, despite the fact that they are legal businesses," summarized a 2014 House Oversight Committee report. "The sheer breadth of industries affected – including firearms and ammunition sales, adult entertainment, check cashing, and payday lending – has generated significant concern with the objectives and scope of Operation Choke Point."
While Operation Choke Point officially ended in 2017, the Free Speech Coalition survey is only part of the evidence that government still cuts off disfavored individuals and industries from financial services. And if the feds are willing to lean on banks to deny service to targeted customers, they're certainly willing to use their tools to conscript bankers as informants.
Rein In Regulators, No Matter What
So, did the FBI squeeze banks for information on people who were present in Washington, D.C. on the day of a riot, without providing evidence that they participated in the violence or even went near the related and perfectly legal election protests? That would certainly be a dangerous escalation in the abuse of government officials' leverage over the financial industry. If House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan finds evidence to support his allegations, heads should roll.
But even if he finds no evidence to support those charges, government regulatory power is too intrusive and arbitrary, and easily abused. Just as politicians have leaned on the tech sector to muzzle speech, they have long pressured banks to spy on customers and deny services to people whose existence offends officialdom. That power is a problem in itself, no matter what this investigation uncovers.
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Passive-aggressive environmental protesters should know better than to annoy Burning Man attendees:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8fDM60MS84
I remain unconvinced of the moral and intellectual superiority, or even distinction, of either side. Is there a chance that they all killed each other and I didn't hear about it?
At first I though this was a Babylon Bee sketch.
The environmental protesters are clearly morally and intellectually inferior to the Burning Man people, and that, perhaps, is not a high hurdle to clear.
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If Trump doesn't decapitate every single one of the 3-letter executive branch agencies on Day One, he's a fool and a traitor and a fat-headed, do-nothing blowhard. Fire absolutely everyone you can, offer generous retirement packages to the rest, assign those who don't take early retirement to broom closet inventory duty at the North Pole.
Everyone within fifteen feet of the top has to go, even the good ones. They can reapply later.
The US Marshalls are capable of filling any role which falls under the headings of national security and law enforcement that might be necessary during the interim. They can provide any function necessary until a complete sweep/full gutting of the the aforementioned agencies and appointed positions can be ordered and implemented.
Whoever enters the office of President MUST go full scorched earth, from the top down. MUST. Nothing less than the complete dismantling of all IC, federal law enforcement, and national defense agencies will be either adequate or acceptable at this point.
Once vacated, the decision making as to what agencies/offices/positions are redundant, unnecessary, unconstitutional, or too powerful can be determined and they will simply no longer exist. Once that's done, a restructuring of the few which would remain could begin.
Trump needs to decapitate every Democrat in Washington D.C. and outlaw the party.
Go fuck yourself, sarcasmic.
"Welcome to you new position in our brand new Prudhoe Bay location..."
Fire every single government SES.
That's what I was expecting him to do in his first term. Comey should have been fired on Inaguration Day for his decision to let Hillary get away with a massive violation of the statutes for handling classified documents, not six months later when he offended Trump. Each further discovery about the FBI's part in promoting fake stories about him in the election and covering for Democrats should have been reason to fire another whole layer of the hierarchy. Every person in the Dept of Education who had any part in the letter threatening colleges for allowing due process to men accused of rape should have been fired, with the DOJ investigating whether to try them for civil rights violations. The best thing would be to abolish this and several other departments entirely, but that takes Congressional action; the most Trump could do was to fire everyone there was any reason to fire, and put a freeze on hiring replacements. Everyone at the IRS who was involved in Lois Lerner's targeting of conservative organizations should have been fired - and imprisoned. Everyone at BATFE or other federal agencies involved in Operation Fast and Furious should have been fired and some of them charged with felony murder. Everyone who lied to Congress under oath when it investigated these scandals, or who ignored Congressional subpoenas should have fired and on their way to prison.
And I'm sure I forgot several scandals...
I think "fat-headed, do-nothing blowhard" sums it up nicely. He accomplished precisely jack in the way of swamp draining the first time around. There's no earthly reason to believe he'd do any better the second time around. You can't learn from mistakes if you won't even admit to making them. Plus, he's long since alienated anyone remotely competent among his allies and advisors. The amateur hour sycophants surrounding him talk big, but their alleged "plans" read more like intellectually deficient masturbation fantasies than effective strategies.
Really gives you a warm fuzzy about the idea of a Central Bank Digital Currency doesn't it.
if you are a swamp creature or related to one, you can tally 170 suspicious activity reports and no one will bat an eye
Must we all remember George Washington's (collaborative) letter telling us not to have political parties because it:
"serves always to distract the public councils and enfeeble the public administration. It agitates the community with ill-founded jealousies and false alarms, kindles the animosity of one part against another, foments occasionally riot and insurrection."
https://www.mountvernon.org/george-washington/the-first-president/political-parties/
As founder of the Federalist Party, he had some insight on the matter.
Hamilton and Adams were the founders of the Federalists.
One of the many Nazi-blessings of the Nazi written Federal Reserve Act as well as the Great Depression ?blessing? that followed.
This nation would be so awesome if it just would've stayed on track as the USA was defined. Instead, aggressive gov-gun power-mad freaks had to destroy it (Democrats) and their [Na]tional So[zi]alist "New Deal" / conquering of the USA had to happen.
BOA..started by an Italian American to provide credit to often Italian Americans whom the wasp banks would not give loans to for small business and homes. Now an arm of the bolshies who run DC..wow what happened?
Being private corporations, this is just a business decision, and you don't "own" your banking information anyway.
Hut hum; The federal reserve isn't a private corporation.
Duh. Banks are an essential element in the regime.
I found this, so it apparently hasn't been redacted. Right?
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
Finally, a libertarian issue worth discussing.
Thank you for actually bringing this shit up. It's far more pertinent to most of us than the Jones act or butt sex or whatever other Reason hobby horses get endless coverage. These sorts of issues are the real deal, that will eventually affect all of us.
There should have been daily apologies from every Libertarian when their favored Biden and Democrat congress announced lowering reporting standards or any account doing $600 in business, you know, to catch those top 1%ers evading their taxes.
Unless your last name is Biden. In that case, the banks will go to the ends of the Earth and beyond to keep your financial shenanigans secret.
I managed a community bank for 40 years before I retired. The standard regulatory tactic is to cite a violation and tell banks to do what they think should be done to mitigate the issue. They won't tell us what they expect, they'll just criticize what we do, then we try something else, then they criticize it, this time threatening a C&D, or worse. It's a horrible way to make a living and I'd never recommend anyone to go into it. And that's just as small community bank...I can only imagine how they treat the big banks where the real risk is. The system is completely corrupt.
YES completely corrupt!! They probably were harder on you because you were not a big bank giving them big donations and because the big banks want your business!
This is how "free democracies" are viewed as "better" morally. They regulate to death as opposed to kicking down the door. Is it any better?
I think this crap would fall under the "business record" exclusion.
Just like phone logs.
Regulations concerning police (FBI, DOJ) access to personal financial information SHOULD be among the most-strictly-observed regulations of all. Choking off people’s access to or control over their money is just as effective as physically choking a person to death, and possibly leads to a slower, more-painful death.
And isn't that the plain truth.
I guess "regulation" and "fascism" are synonyms now?
It has been in the politicians circle of the world for quite sometime.
"Vote for my big-fascism gov plans." - is what they're selling.
Where have you been ? 🙂
Why else have they been working on making "fascism" such a meaningless insult for so long? Now they can actually imitate Mussolini and few people realize it's actual Fascism.
I work for a G-SIFI bank and while I am not an expert in regulation, I know from my experience with regulation that rules are often loose and vague. I believe this has much to do with Chevron deference. Vague and poorly written rules give latitude to the alphabet soups that administer said rules. This looseness allows the regulators to interpret at will, but can also be weaponized to scare companies into compliance with illegal requests. I'm sure some regulators wish the rules were clearer too, but if Congress can't write good laws, then we need a better standard than "because the SEC/FINRA thinks this is what the law meant."