S-4338-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Sponsored by Ron Wyden (D-OR)
What it does
This bill would require the Director of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), a bureau of the Treasury Department, to conduct an investigation into whether financial institutions — including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America — violated the Bank Secrecy Act by failing to properly screen and report suspicious transactions linked to Jeffrey Epstein and his associates. Within 100 days of enactment, FinCEN would be required to submit a report to Congress on its findings, including information drawn from suspicious activity reports (SARs) filed in connection with Epstein-related accounts. Where warranted, FinCEN would refer individual employees suspected of willful violations to the Attorney General for potential prosecution.
Who benefits
Victims of Jeffrey Epstein's crimes, who may gain greater public accountability for the financial institutions that processed his transactions. Congressional oversight bodies seeking a fuller record of how anti-money laundering laws were applied. Law enforcement agencies that could receive referrals enabling new prosecutions. The general public, which would gain transparency into whether major banks complied with existing financial crime reporting laws. Competing financial institutions that did comply with Bank Secrecy Act requirements and may have been at a competitive disadvantage relative to those that did not.
Who is hurt
Financial institutions named in the bill — specifically JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America — which face reputational and potential legal exposure from the investigation and public report. Individual bank employees whose conduct would be scrutinized and potentially referred for prosecution. Senior bank executives whose decisions regarding Epstein's accounts would be examined. Shareholders of named institutions, who could see stock value affected by findings. Individuals named in the bill as Epstein clients — including Leon Black and Les Wexner — whose financial dealings with Epstein would be subject to examination.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche Bank have already paid a combined $365 million in civil settlements related to their handling of Epstein's accounts, suggesting that financial institutions had reason to know about suspicious activity and failed to act. They contend that Congress has a legitimate oversight interest in determining whether existing Bank Secrecy Act requirements were willfully ignored, and that mandating a FinCEN investigation — using the agency's existing statutory authority — is a proportionate and targeted response to documented failures in the anti-money laundering system.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill directs a law enforcement investigation at specific named private parties — JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Leon Black, and Les Wexner — raising due process concerns about Congress using its legislative power to target individuals before any judicial finding of wrongdoing. They contend that FinCEN and the Department of Justice already possess authority to investigate Bank Secrecy Act violations without a congressional mandate, and that the 100-day reporting deadline may compromise investigative thoroughness or pressure the agency to reach conclusions before the evidence is fully developed.