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Federal Court Blocks Enforcement of Beneficial Ownership Reporting Rule
Federal Court Blocks Enforcement of Beneficial Ownership Reporting Rule
Posted:
Dec 04 2024
Less than a month before a Jan. 1 deadline for businesses to report their beneficial owners to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, a federal judge in Texas has issued a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the requirement. The order states that covered companies nationwide do not need to comply with the Jan. 1 reporting deadline, unless a higher court reverses the order.
The lawsuit, brought by the National Federation of Independent Business and several of its members, challenged the constitutionality of the Corporate Transparency Act, the 2021 bill that established a beneficial ownership information, or BOI, registry and the requirement for businesses to report. The plaintiffs argued that the CTA exceeded Congress’s authority to regulate interstate commerce, that it violates the First Amendment by compelling speech and infringing freedom of association and that it violates the Fourth Amendment by forcing the disclosure of private information.
By mid-November, as the initial Jan. 1 reporting deadline approached, only about a quarter of the estimated 32.5 million covered businesses had registered. According to newly released poll data from Wolters Kluwer, 37% of firms were waiting until closer to the deadline and 12% said they had insufficient resources to do the filing. Meanwhile, 9% of businesses believed they were not covered by the rule, and 32% were unsure whether the rule applied to them.
To view the order, visit:
https://polsinelli.gjassets.com/content/uploads/2024/12/cta-v-garland-district-court-opinion-preliminary-injunction.pdf