The Biden administration has admitted it pushed banks to search customer transaction records using terms like โMAGAโ and โTrumpโ to help catch Jan. 6 protesters
The Treasury Department has admitted that it helped law enforcement catch people involved in the Jan. 6 Capitol breach by urging banks to comb through the private transactions of customers using terms like โMAGAโ and โTrumpโ as part of a surveillance scheme intended to fight money launderers but used to hunt Jan. 6-ers.
In January, The Epoch Times reported on allegations that the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN)โthe U.S. Treasury Departmentโs financial crime-fighting unitโwas accused of engaging in โpervasive financial surveillanceโ by circulating materials to banks that listed keywords that could be used to flag private financial transactions of potential Jan. 6 suspects for law enforcement.
The materials also allegedly included instructions to banks to use indicators that could include โthe purchase of books (including religious texts)โ and subscriptions to media containing โextremist views.โ
The explosive allegations that FinCEN pushed banks to surveil the private transactions of their customers for suspicious charges based in part on political and religious expression prompted Republican lawmakers to demand answers.
Among these was Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), the top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, who pressed Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and FinCEN director Andrea Gacki for answers in a Jan. 19 letter, in which the lawmaker alleged that, if true, the allegations โrepresent a flagrant violation of Americansโ privacy and the improper targeting of U.S. citizens for exercising their constitutional rights without due process.โ
Mr. Scott received a response letter on Feb. 9, in which Office of Legislative Affairs acting assistant secretary Corey Tellez confirmed that keywords like โMAGA,โ โTrump,โ or โstorm the Capitolโ were included in materials FinCEN provided to banks to help the feds track down Jan. 6 protesters.
Mr. Tellez wrote that, following the Jan. 6 incident, FinCEN shared information with banks that included typologies that were based on previous efforts to develop robust anti-money laundering programs that could identify specific types of illegal activity, such as that related to active shooters or violent extremists.
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