Right to Financial Privacy Act explained

Shorttitle:Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978
Enacted By:95th
Cite Statutes At Large:, 3697
Leghisturl:https://www.congress.gov/bill/95th-congress/house-bill/14279/actions
Introducedin:House
Introducedbill:H.R.14279
Introducedby:Henry Reuss (DWI) and Frank Annunzio (D–IL)
Introduceddate:October 10, 1978
Committees:House Committee on Banking, Currency, and Housing, Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
Passedbody1:House
Passeddate1:October 11, 1978
Passedbody2:Senate
Passeddate2:October 12, 1978
Passedbody3:House
Passeddate3:October 14, 1978
Passedbody4:Senate
Passeddate4:October 14, 1978
Signedpresident:Jimmy Carter
Signeddate:November 10, 1978
Amendments:USA PATRIOT Act
USA Freedom Act

The Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978 (RFPA; codified at, et seq.) is a United States federal law, Title XI of the Financial Institutions Regulatory and Interest Rate Control Act of 1978, that gives the customers of financial institutions the right to some level of privacy from government searches.

Before the Act was passed, the United States government did not have to tell customers that it was accessing their records, and customers did not have the right to prevent such actions. The Act came about after the United States Supreme Court held, in United States v. Miller 425 U.S. 435 (1976), that financial records are the property of the financial institution with which they are held, rather than the property of the customer.[1] Under the RFPA, the government must receive the consent of the customer before they can access said customer's financial information.[2] The Act prescribes statutory damages of $100 per violation, and a number of different violations can be aggregated in a class action.[3]

Under the RFPA, the FBI could obtain records with a national security letter (NSL) only if the FBI could first demonstrate the person was a foreign power or an agent of a foreign power. Compliance by the recipient of the NSL was voluntary, and states' consumer privacy laws often allowed financial institutions to decline the requests.[4] In 1986, Congress amended RFPA to allow the government to compel disclosure of the requested information. The USA PATRIOT Act of 2001 amended the RFPA.[5]

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Notes and References

  1. Denning. Brannon P.. 1995–1996. Can the Simple Be Trusted: Lower Court Interpretations of United States v. Miller and the Second Amendment. Cumberland Law Review. 26. 961.
  2. Jones. Sarah Elizabeth. 1988. Right to Financial Privacy: Emerging Standards of Bank Compliance. Banking Law Journal. 105. 37–51.
  3. 1967184. Bray . Samuel L. . 2012 . Announcing Remedies . Cornell Law Review . 97.
  4. Andrew E. Nieland, National Security Letters and the Amended Patriot Act, 92 Cornell L. Rev. 1201, 1207 (2007) http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/research/cornell-law-review/upload/Nieland.pdf
  5. Web site: EPIC - the Right to Financial Privacy Act . epic.org . May 29, 2010.