Now, FinCEN has issued preliminary regulations that could extend these rules to investment managers. All SEC-registered investment advisers would be required to design and implement an anti-money-laundering program. They would also need to file SARs with FinCEN.
Once these rules come into effect, investment advisors would no longer be accountable to you, their client. Their highest duty, reinforced by civil and criminal sanctions, would be to act as unpaid undercover agents for the US Treasury.
But FinCEN’s suspicious transaction reporting rules are just the tip of the iceberg. For instance, official guidance from the FBI and other government agencies indicate that all of the following actions make you a terror suspect:
• Making an inter-library loan request for "The Little Red Book" by former Chinese communist leader Mao Tse-Tung;
• Owning a suspicious cat;
• Wearing a politically provocative shirt;
• Searching online for a pressure cooker and backpack;
• Putting a “Do not disturb” sign on the door to your hotel room;
• Making politically inflammatory remarks when getting a tattoo;
• Attempting to shield your computer screen from the viewing of others;
• Expressing frustration with “mainstream ideologies”; and
• Storing more than seven days of food in your home. ◄ (So if you prep, you're already considered suspicious)
Then there’s the “drug courier profile” developed by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). The following profiles are all court-approved reasons to search you and your property:
• Having a pale or dark complexion;
• Having a Hispanic appearance;
• Being between the ages of 25 and 35;
• Acting too nervous or too calm;
• Carrying $100, $50, $20, $10, or $5 bills;
• Wearing casual clothing;
• Wearing perfume;
• Having window coverings on your personal residence;
• Buying a one-way or round-trip airline ticket; and
• Being among the first, last, or middle group of passengers off of an airplane.