TD Bank just paid $1.8 billion to resolve Bank Secrecy Act and money laundering conspiracy violations – the largest penalty ever assessed against a depository institution in U.S. Treasury and FinCEN history. The bank “willfully failed to monitor trillions of dollars of transactions,” allowing hundreds of millions from drug trafficking networks to flow through undetected. DOJ’s settlement includes a four-year independent monitorship, enhanced compliance obligations, and admission that the bank’s AML program was deliberately inadequate. That’s not regulatory oversight – that’s federal prosecutors treating BSA compliance failures as criminal conspiracies.
Thanks for visiting Federal Lawyers, a second generation law firm managed by our lead attorney with over 40 years of combined experience. We defend financial institutions, executives, and compliance officers facing DOJ, FinCEN, OCC, FDIC, and Federal Reserve investigations for Bank Secrecy Act violations, sanctions evasion, and money laundering. This article explains how federal banking investigations work in 2025, why BSA enforcement has shifted from regulatory compliance to criminal prosecution, and what to do when examiners find deficiencies that trigger referrals to law enforcement.
The Regulatory Framework That Became Criminal Liability
The Bank Secrecy Act requires financial institutions to assist government agencies in detecting and preventing money laundering. That means filing Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) when transactions suggest criminal activity, implementing anti-money laundering programs, conducting customer due diligence, and maintaining transaction records accessible to law enforcement. Sounds like regulatory compliance – file reports, keep records, implement controls.
But BSA violations aren’t just civil penalties assessed by banking regulators. They’re federal crimes under 31 U.S.C. § 5322, carrying criminal fines and prison time for individuals. Willful violations – where institutions or executives knowingly fail to implement required AML controls – elevate civil compliance failures into felony prosecutions. DOJ’s Bank Integrity Unit has imposed over $25 billion in penalties since 2010, and those figures don’t include the collateral consequences: deferred prosecution agreements, multi-year monitorships, and compliance overhauls costing hundreds of millions beyond the fines.
Here’s the constitutional problem. BSA requires financial institutions to surveil their customers and report “suspicious” activity to FinCEN. What’s suspicious? Structuring transactions to avoid reporting thresholds. Rapid movement of funds through multiple accounts. Large cash deposits by businesses operating in cash-intensive industries. The statute doesn’t define suspicion with particularity – it delegates that determination to banks, which must make judgment calls about whether customers’ financial activity might involve money laundering.
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(212) 300-5196Fourth Amendment jurisprudence requires government searches to be reasonable and particular. BSA conscripts private financial institutions into becoming agents of law enforcement surveillance, forcing them to make suspicion determinations and report customers to federal authorities without warrants, without probable cause, without any showing that the customers actually committed crimes. Courts have upheld this as an administrative search exception to the warrant requirement – but that exception keeps expanding to encompass more transactions, more reporting obligations, more invasive monitoring.
How Investigations Start: Examinations Become Referrals
Federal banking agencies – OCC for national banks, FDIC for state-chartered banks, Federal Reserve for bank holding companies – conduct periodic BSA/AML examinations. Examiners review transaction monitoring systems, SAR filing practices, customer due diligence procedures, and compliance training programs. When they find deficiencies, they issue findings ranging from “Matters Requiring Attention” to formal enforcement actions like consent orders.
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But when deficiencies suggest willfulness – meaning the institution knew about compliance gaps and failed to remediate them – examiners refer cases to FinCEN and DOJ. That referral transforms regulatory examination into criminal investigation. Suddenly you’re not dealing with bank examiners discussing remediation plans. You’re dealing with federal prosecutors using the bank examination reports as probable cause for grand jury subpoenas, target letters, and eventually, deferred prosecution agreements or indictments.

You serve as a compliance officer at a mid-size regional bank, and federal regulators have just notified your institution that suspicious activity reports were not filed on over $200 million in transactions flagged by your monitoring system. FinCEN and DOJ prosecutors are now requesting all internal communications related to your bank's BSA compliance program and transaction monitoring procedures.
Can I personally face criminal charges as a compliance officer if our bank failed to file SARs, even though I raised concerns internally about staffing shortages in our monitoring department?
Under the Bank Secrecy Act (31 U.S.C. § 5322), individuals who willfully violate BSA requirements can face up to 10 years in prison, and prosecutors have increasingly targeted compliance officers personally, not just institutions. However, as the TD Bank case demonstrated, DOJ distinguishes between willful blindness and good-faith compliance efforts — your documented internal warnings about staffing gaps could serve as critical evidence that you lacked the willful intent required for criminal liability. You need to immediately retain personal defense counsel separate from the bank's attorneys, preserve all records of your internal complaints, and avoid making any statements to regulators without counsel present. The fact that TD Bank's $1.8 billion penalty focused on institutional failures where the bank created an environment that allowed illicit funds to flow through unchecked shows that DOJ scrutinizes whether leadership ignored or suppressed compliance concerns like yours.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
TD Bank case demonstrates how this progression works. Examiners identified AML program deficiencies years before the $1.8 billion settlement. The bank received regulatory feedback, promised remediation, but failed to implement effective controls. Prosecutors argued that pattern showed willfulness – the bank knew it wasn’t monitoring transactions adequately, knew money laundering was occurring, and consciously chose not to invest in fixing the problem because doing so would be expensive.