18 July 2006

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[Federal Register: July 18, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 137)]

[Proposed Rules]               

[Page 40785-40826]

From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

[DOCID:fr18jy06-16]                         



[[Page 40785]]



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Part II



Department of the Treasury



Office of the Comptroller of the Currency



12 CFR Part 41







Federal Reserve System



12 CFR Part 222





Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation



12 CFR Parts 334 and 364





Department of the Treasury







Office of Thrift Supervision



12 CFR Part 571







National Credit Union Administration



12 CFR Part 717







Federal Trade Commission



16 CFR Part 681







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Identity Theft Red Flags and Address Discrepancies Under the Fair and 

Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003; Proposed Rule





[[Page 40786]]





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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY



Office of the Comptroller of the Currency



12 CFR Part 41



[Docket No. 06-07]

RIN 1557-AC87



FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM



12 CFR Part 222



[Docket No. R-1255]



FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION



12 CFR Parts 334 and 364



RIN 3064-AD00



DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY



Office of Thrift Supervision



12 CFR Part 571



[No. 2006-19]

RIN 1550-AC04



NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION



12 CFR Part 717



FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION



16 CFR Part 681



RIN 3084-AA94



 

Identity Theft Red Flags and Address Discrepancies Under the Fair 

and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003



AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (OCC); 

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal 

Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of Thrift Supervision, 

Treasury (OTS); National Credit Union Administration (NCUA); and 

Federal Trade Commission (FTC or Commission).



ACTION: Joint notice of proposed rulemaking.



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SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, NCUA and FTC (the Agencies) request 

comment on a proposal that would implement sections 114 and 315 of the 

Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 (FACT Act). As 

required by section 114, the Agencies are jointly proposing guidelines 

for financial institutions and creditors identifying patterns, 

practices, and specific forms of activity, that indicate the possible 

existence of identity theft. The Agencies also are proposing joint 

regulations requiring each financial institution and creditor to 

establish reasonable policies and procedures for implementing the 

guidelines, including a provision requiring credit and debit card 

issuers to assess the validity of a request for a change of address 

under certain circumstances.

    In addition, the Agencies are proposing joint regulations under 

section 315 that provide guidance regarding reasonable policies and 

procedures that a user of consumer reports must employ when such a user 

receives a notice of address discrepancy from a consumer reporting 

agency.



DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before September 18, 2006.



ADDRESSES: The Agencies will jointly review all of the comments 

submitted. Therefore, you may comment to any of the Agencies and you 

need not send comments (or copies) to all of the Agencies. Because 

paper mail in the Washington area and at the Agencies is subject to 

delay, please submit your comments by e-mail whenever possible. 

Commenters are encouraged to use the title ``Red Flags Rule'' in 

addition to the docket or RIN number to facilitate the organization and 

distribution of comments among the Agencies. Interested parties are 

invited to submit comments in accordance with the following 

instructions:

    OCC: You should designate OCC in your comment and include Docket 

Number 06-07. You may submit comments by any of the following methods:

     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 



Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

     OCC Web site: http://www.occ.treas.gov. Click on ``Contact 



the OCC,'' scroll down and click on ``Comments on Proposed 

Regulations.''

     Fax: (202) 874-4448.

     Mail: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E 

Street, SW., Public Reference Room, Mail Stop 1-5, Washington, DC 

20219.

     Hand Delivery/Courier: 250 E Street, SW., Attn: Public 

Reference Room, Mail Stop 1-5, Washington, DC 20219.

    Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name 

(OCC) and docket number or Regulatory Information Number (RIN) for this 

notice of proposed rulemaking. In general, the OCC will enter all 

comments received into the docket without change, including any 

business or personal information that you provide.

    You may review the comments received by the OCC and other related 

materials by any of the following methods:



     Viewing Comments Personally: You may personally inspect 

and photocopy comments received at the OCC's Public Reference Room, 250 

E Street, SW., Washington, DC. You can make an appointment to inspect 

comments by calling (202) 874-5043.

     Viewing Comments Electronically: You may request e-mail or 

CD-ROM copies of comments that the OCC has received by contacting the 

OCC's Public Reference Room at regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.

     Docket: You may also request available background 

documents using the methods described earlier.



    Board: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. R-1255, by 

any of the following methods:

     Agency Web site: http://www.federalreserve.gov Follow the instructions for submitting comments at http://www.federalreserve.gov/.



.



     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 



Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

     E-mail: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include docket 

number in the subject line of the message.

     FAX: 202/452-3819 or 202/452-3102.

     Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors 

of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue, 

NW., Washington, DC 20551.



    All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at 

http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted, 



unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your comments will 

not be edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Public 

comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in Room MP-500 

of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. 

and 5 p.m. on weekdays.



    FDIC: You may submit comments, identified by RIN number by any of 

the following methods:

     Agency Web site: http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html.

 Follow instructions for submitting comments on 



the Agency Web site.

     E-mail: Comments@FDIC.gov. Include the RIN number in the 

subject line of the message.



[[Page 40787]]



     Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention: 

Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., 

Washington, DC 20429.

     Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard station at the rear of the 

550 17th Street Building (located on F Street) on business days between 

7 a.m. and 5 p.m.

     Instructions: All submissions received must include the 

agency name and RIN for this rulemaking. All comments received will be 

posted without change to http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html

 including any personal information provided. Comments may 



be inspected at the FDIC Public Information Center, Room E-1002, 3502 

North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA, 22226, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on 

business days.



    OTS: You may submit comments, identified by No. 2006-19, by any of 

the following methods:

     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 



Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

     E-mail: regs.comments@ots.treas.gov. Please include No. 

2006-19 in the subject line of the message and include your name and 

telephone number in the message.

     Fax: (202) 906-6518.

     Mail: Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Office 

of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552, 

Attention: No. 2006-19.

     Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard's Desk, East Lobby Entrance, 

1700 G Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on business days, Attention: 

Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Attention: No. 2006-19.

    Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name 

and number or Regulatory Information Number (RIN) for this rulemaking. 

All comments received will be posted without change to http://www.ots.treas.gov/pagehtml.cfm?catNumber=67&an=1

, including any 



personal information provided.

    Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or 

comments received, go to http://www.ots.treas.gov/pagehtml.cfm?catNumber=67&an=1.

 In addition, you may inspect comments 



at the Public Reading Room, 1700 G Street, NW, by appointment. To make 

an appointment for access, call (202) 906-5922, send an e-mail to 

public.info@ots.treas.gov, or send a facsimile transmission to (202) 



906-7755. (Prior notice identifying the materials you will be 

requesting will assist us in serving you.) We schedule appointments on 

business days between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In most cases, appointments 

will be available the next business day following the date we receive a 

request.



    NCUA: You may submit comments by any of the following methods 

(Please send comments by one method only):

     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 



Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

     NCUA Web site: http://www.ncua.gov/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/proposedregs/proposedregs.html.

 Follow the 



instructions for submitting comments.

     E-mail: Address to regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ``[Your 

name] Comments on Proposed Rule 717, Identity Theft Red Flags,'' in the 

e-mail subject line.

     Fax: (703) 518-6319. Use the subject line described above 

for e-mail.

     Mail: Address to Mary F. Rupp, Secretary of the Board, 

National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, 

Virginia 22314-3428.

     Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail address.



    FTC: Comments should refer to ``The Red Flags Rule, Project No. 

R611019,'' and may be submitted by any of the following methods. 

However, if the comment contains any material for which confidential 

treatment is requested, it must be filed in paper form, and the first 

page of the document must be clearly labeled ``Confidential.'' \1\

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    \1\ Commission Rule 4.2(d), 16 CFR 4.2(d). The comment must be 

accompanied by an explicit request for confidential treatment, 

including the factual and legal basis for the request, and must 

identify the specific portions of the comment to be withheld from 

the public record. The request will be granted or denied by the 

Commission's General Counsel, consistent with applicable law and the 

public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).

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     E-mail: Comments filed in electronic form should be 

submitted by clicking on the following Web link: https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-redflags

 and following the instructions on 



the Web-based form. To ensure that the Commission considers an 

electronic comment, you must file it on the Web-based form at https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-redflags

.



     Federal eRulemaking Portal: If this notice appears at 

http://www.regulations.gov, you may also file an electronic comment 



through that Web site. The Commission will consider all comments that 

regulations.gov forwards to it.

     Mail or Hand Delivery: A comment filed in paper form 

should include ``The Red Flags Rule, Project No. R611019,'' both in the 

text and on the envelope and should be mailed or delivered, with two 

complete copies, to the following address: Federal Trade Commission/

Office of the Secretary, Room H-135 (Annex M), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, 

NW., Washington, DC 20580. Because paper mail in the Washington area 

and at the Commission is subject to delay, please consider submitting 

your comments in electronic form, as prescribed above. The FTC is 

requesting that any comment filed in paper form be sent by courier or 

overnight service, if possible.

    Comments on any proposed filing, recordkeeping, or disclosure 

requirements that are subject to paperwork burden review under the 

Paperwork Reduction Act should additionally be submitted to: Office of 

Management and Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for the Federal Trade 

Commission. Comments should be submitted via facsimile to (202) 395-

6974 because U.S. Postal Mail is subject to lengthy delays due to 

heightened security precautions.

    The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the 

collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as 

appropriate. All timely and responsive public comments, whether filed 

in paper or electronic form, will be considered by the Commission, and 

will be available to the public on the FTC Web site, to the extent 

practicable, at http://www.ftc.gov/os/publiccomments.htm. As a matter 



of discretion, the FTC makes every effort to remove home contact 

information for individuals from the public comments it receives before 

placing those comments on the FTC Web site. More information, including 

routine uses permitted by the Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's 

privacy policy, at http://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm.





FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: OCC: Amy Friend, Assistant Chief 

Counsel, (202) 874-5200; Deborah Katz, Senior Counsel, or Andra 

Shuster, Special Counsel, Legislative and Regulatory Activities 

Division, (202) 874-5090; Paul Utterback, Compliance Specialist, 

Compliance Department, (202) 874-5461; or Aida Plaza Carter, Director, 

Bank Information Technology, (202) 874-4740, Office of the Comptroller 

of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.

    Board: David A. Stein, Counsel, or Ky Tran-Trong, Senior Attorney, 

Division of Consumer and Community Affairs, (202) 452-3667; Andrew 

Miller, Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 452-



[[Page 40788]]



3428; or John Gibbons, Supervisory Financial Analyst, Division of 

Banking Supervision and Regulation, (202) 452-6409, Board of Governors 

of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, NW., Washington, DC 

20551.

    FDIC: Jeffrey M. Kopchik, Senior Policy Analyst, (202) 898-3872 or 

David P. Lafleur, Policy Analyst, (202) 898-6569, Division of 

Supervision and Consumer Protection; Richard M. Schwartz, Counsel, 

(202) 898-7424, or Richard B. Foley, Counsel, (202) 898-3784, Legal 

Division, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., 

Washington, DC 20429.

    OTS: Glenn Gimble, Senior Project Manager, Operation Risk, (202) 

906-7158; Kathleen M. McNulty, Technology Program Manager, Information 

Technology Risk Management, (202) 906-6322; or Richard Bennett, 

Counsel, Regulations and Legislation Division, (202) 906-7409, Office 

of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.

    NCUA: Regina M. Metz, Staff Attorney, Office of General Counsel, 

(703) 518-6540, National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, 

Alexandria, VA 22314-3428.

    FTC: Naomi B. Lefkovitz, Attorney, Division of Privacy and Identity 

Protection, Bureau of Consumer Protection, (202) 326-3228, Federal 

Trade Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington DC 20580



SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice contains the following sections:



I. Section 114 of the FACT Act



A. Background



    The President signed the FACT Act into law on December 4, 2003. 

Pub. L. 108-159 (2003). The FACT Act added several new provisions to 

the Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1970 (FCRA), 15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq., 

that relate to the detection, prevention, and mitigation of identity 

theft.\2\ Section 114 amends section 615 of the FCRA and requires the 

Agencies to jointly issue guidelines for financial institutions and 

creditors regarding identity theft with respect to their account 

holders and customers. In developing the guidelines, the Agencies must 

identify patterns, practices, and specific forms of activity that 

indicate the possible existence of identity theft. The guidelines must 

be updated as often as necessary, and cannot be inconsistent with the 

policies and procedures required under section 326 of the USA PATRIOT 

Act, 31 U.S.C. 5318(l), which requires verification of the identity of 

persons opening new accounts.

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    \2\ Section 111 of the FACT Act defines ``identity theft'' as 

``a fraud committed using the identifying information of another 

person, subject to such further definition as the [Federal Trade] 

Commission may prescribe, by regulation.'' 15 U.S.C. 1681a(q)(3).

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    Section 114 also directs the Agencies to consider including 

reasonable guidelines providing that a financial institution or 

creditor ``shall follow reasonable policies and procedures'' for 

notifying the consumer, ``in a manner reasonably designed to reduce the 

likelihood of identity theft,'' when a transaction occurs in connection 

with a consumer's credit or deposit account that has been inactive for 

two years.

    In addition, the Agencies must jointly prescribe regulations 

requiring each financial institution and creditor to establish 

reasonable policies and procedures for implementing the guidelines to 

identify possible risks to account holders or customers or to the 

safety and soundness of the institution or customer.

    The joint regulations must include a provision generally requiring 

credit and debit card issuers to assess the validity of change of 

address requests. In particular, if the card issuer receives a notice 

of change of address for an existing account, and within a short period 

of time (during at least the first 30 days) receives a request for an 

additional or replacement card for the same account, the issuer must 

follow reasonable policies and procedures designed to prevent identity 

theft. Under these circumstances, the card issuer may not issue the 

card unless it (1) Notifies the cardholder of the request at the 

cardholder's former address and provides the cardholder with a means to 

promptly report an incorrect address; (2) notifies the cardholder of 

the address change request by another means of communication previously 

agreed to by the issuer and the cardholder; or (3) uses other means of 

evaluating the validity of the address change in accordance with the 

reasonable policies and procedures established by the card issuer to 

comply with the joint regulations.

    Section 114 broadly describes elements that belong in the 

regulations and those that belong in the ``guidelines'' without 

defining this term. The Agencies are proposing to implement the 

requirements of section 114 through regulations (Red Flag Regulations) 

requiring each financial institution and creditor to implement a 

written Identity Theft Prevention Program (Program). The Program must 

contain reasonable policies and procedures to address the risk of 

identity theft. The Agencies also are proposing guidelines that 

identify patterns, practices, and specific forms of activity that 

indicate a possible risk of identity theft (Red Flag Guidelines or 

Appendix J). As required by statute, the Agencies will update the Red 

Flag Guidelines as often as necessary. The proposed Red Flag 

Regulations require financial institutions and creditors to incorporate 

relevant indicators of identity theft into their Programs. The Agencies 

request comment on whether the elements described in section 114 have 

been properly allocated between the proposed regulations and the 

proposed guidelines.

    As required by section 114, the Agencies also are proposing joint 

regulations requiring credit card issuers to implement reasonable 

policies and procedures to assess the validity of a change of address.



B. Proposed Red Flag Regulations



1. Overview

    The Agencies are proposing Red Flag Regulations that adopt a 

flexible risk-based approach similar to the approach used in the 

``Interagency Guidelines Establishing Information Security Standards'' 

\3\ issued by the Federal banking agencies (FDIC, Board, OCC and OTS), 

the ``Guidelines for Safeguarding Member Information'' issued by the 

NCUA,\4\ and the ``Standards for Safeguarding Customer Information'' 

\5\ issued by the FTC, (collectively, Information Security Standards), 

to implement section 501(b) of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), 15 

U.S.C. 6801.

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    \3\ 12 CFR part 30, app. B (national banks); 12 CFR part 208, 

app. D-2 and part 225, app. F (state member banks and holding 

companies); 12 CFR part 364, app. B (state non-member banks); 12 CFR 

part 570, app. B (savings associations).

    \4\ 12 CFR part 748, app. A.

    \5\ 16 CFR part 314.

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    Under the proposed Red Flag Regulations, financial institutions and 

creditors must have a written Program that is based upon the risk 

assessment of the financial institution or creditor and that includes 

controls to address the identity theft risks identified. Like the 

program described in the Agencies' Information Security Standards, this 

Program must be appropriate to the size and complexity of the financial 

institution or creditor and the nature and scope of its activities, and 

be flexible to address changing identity theft risks as they arise. A 

financial institution or creditor may wish to combine its program to 

prevent identity theft with its information security program, as these 

programs are complementary in many ways.\6 \

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    \6\ The Agencies note, however, that some creditors covered by 

the proposed Red Flag Guidelines are not financial institutions 

subject to Title V of the GLBA and, therefore, are not required to 

have an information security program under the GLBA. Moreover, the 

term ``customer'' is defined more broadly in the proposed Red Flag 

Regulations than in the Information Security Standards.



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[[Page 40789]]



    Briefly summarized, under the proposed Red Flag Regulations, the 

Program of each financial institution or creditor must be designed to 

address the risk of identity theft to customers and to the safety and 

soundness of the financial institution or creditor. The Program must 

include policies and procedures to prevent identity theft from 

occurring, including policies and procedures to:

     Identify those Red Flags that are relevant to detecting a 

possible risk of identity theft to customers or to the safety and 

soundness of the financial institution or creditor;

     Verify the identity of persons opening accounts;

     Detect the Red Flags that the financial institution or 

creditor identifies as relevant in connection with the opening of an 

account or any existing account;

     Assess whether the Red Flags detected evidence a risk of 

identity theft;

     Mitigate the risk of identity theft, commensurate with the 

degree of risk posed;

     Train staff to implement the Program; and

     Oversee service provider arrangements.

    The proposed Red Flag Regulations also require the board of 

directors or an appropriate committee of the board to approve the 

Program. In addition, the board, an appropriate committee of the board, 

or senior management must exercise oversight over the Program's 

implementation. Staff implementing the Program must report to its 

board, an appropriate committee or senior management, at least 

annually, on compliance by the financial institution or creditor with 

the Red Flag Regulations. These Regulations are described in greater 

detail in the section-by-section analysis that follows.

2. Proposed Red Flag Regulations: Section-by-Section Analysis

    The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS and NCUA propose putting the Red Flag 

Regulations and Guidelines in the FCRA part of their regulations, 12 

CFR parts 41, 222, 334, 571, and 717, respectively. In addition, the 

FDIC proposes to cross-reference the Red Flag Regulations and 

Guidelines in 12 CFR part 364. For ease of reference, the discussion in 

this preamble uses the shared numerical suffix of each of these 

agency's regulations.\7\

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    \7\ The FTC also proposes putting the Red Flag Regulations and 

Guidelines in the FCRA part of its regulations, specifically 16 CFR 

part 681. However, the FTC uses different numerical suffixes that 

equate to the numerical suffixes discussed in the preamble as 

follows: preamble suffix .82 = FTC suffix .1, preamble suffix .90 = 

FTC suffix .2, and preamble suffix .91 = FTC suffix .3. In addition, 

the Appendix J referenced in the preamble equates to Appendix A for 

the FTC.

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Section ----.90 Duties regarding the detection, prevention, and 

mitigation of identity theft

Section ----.90(a) Purpose and Scope

    Proposed Sec.  ----.90(a) sets forth the statutory authority for 

the proposed Red Flag Regulations, namely, section 114 of the FACT Act, 

which amends section 615 of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. 1681m. It also defines 

the scope of this section; each of the Agencies has tailored this 

paragraph to describe those entities to which this section applies.

Section ----.90(b) Definitions

    Proposed Sec.  ----.90(b) sets forth the definitions of various 

terms that apply to this section.

    1. Account. Section 114 of the FACT Act does not use the term 

``account.'' However, for ease of reference, the Agencies believe it is 

helpful to identify a single term to describe the relationships covered 

by section 114 that an account holder or customer may have with a 

financial institution or creditor. Therefore, for purposes of the Red 

Flag Regulations, the Agencies propose to use the term ``account'' to 

broadly describe the various relationships an account holder or 

customer may have with a financial institution or creditor that may 

become subject to identity theft.\8\

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    \8\ The Agencies recognize that, in other contexts, the FCRA 

defines the term ``account'' narrowly to describe certain deposit 

relationships. See 15 U.S.C. 1681a(r)(4).

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    The proposed definition of ``account'' is similar to the definition 

of ``customer relationship'' found in the Agencies' privacy 

regulations.\9\ In particular, the proposed definition of ``account'' 

is ``a continuing relationship established to provide a financial 

product or service that a financial holding company could offer by 

engaging in an activity that is financial in nature or incidental to 

such a financial activity under section 4(k) of the Bank Holding 

Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1843(k).'' \10\ The definition gives examples of 

an ``account'' including an extension of credit for personal, family, 

household or business purposes (such as a credit card account, margin 

account, or retail installment sales contract, including a car loan or 

lease), and a demand deposit, savings or other asset account for 

personal, family, household or business purposes (such as a checking or 

savings account). While the proposed definition of ``account'' is 

expansive, the risk-based nature of the proposed Red Flag Regulations 

affords each financial institution or creditor flexibility to determine 

which relationships will be covered by its Program through a risk 

evaluation process.

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    \9\ See 12 CFR 40.3(i)(1) (OCC); 12 CFR 216.3(i)(1) (Board); 12 

CFR 332.3(i)(1) (FDIC); 12 CFR 573.3(i)(1) (OTS); 12 CFR 716.3(j) 

(NCUA); and 16 CFR 313.3(i)(1) (FTC).

    \10\ See 12 CFR 225.86 for a description of activities that are 

``financial in nature or incidental to a financial activity,'' and 

explanation that these include activities that are ``closely related 

to banking,'' as set forth in 12 CFR 225.28, such as fiduciary, 

agency, custodial, brokerage and investment advisory activities.

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    The Agencies request comment on the scope of the proposed 

definition of ``account.'' In particular, the Agencies solicit comment 

on whether reference to ``financial products and services that a 

financial holding company could offer by engaging in an activity that 

is financial in nature or incidental to such a financial activity under 

section 4(k) of the Bank Holding Company Act'' is appropriate to 

describe the relationships that an account holder or customer may have 

with a financial institution or creditor that should be covered by the 

Red Flag Regulations. The Agencies also request comment on whether the 

definition of ``account'' should include relationships that are not 

``continuing'' that a person may have with a financial institution or 

creditor. In addition, the Agencies request comment on whether 

additional or different examples of accounts should be added to the 

Regulations.

    2. Board of Directors. The proposed Red Flag Regulations discuss 

the role of the board of directors of a financial institution or 

creditor. However, the Agencies recognize that some of the financial 

institutions and creditors covered by the Regulations will not have a 

board of directors. Therefore, in addition to its plain meaning, the 

proposed definition of ``board of directors'' includes, in the case of 

a foreign branch or agency of a foreign bank, the managing official in 

charge of the branch or agency. In the case of any other creditor that 

does not have a board of directors, ``board of directors'' is defined 

as a designated employee.

    3. Customer. Section 114 of the FACT Act refers to ``account 

holders'' and ``customers'' of financial institutions and creditors 

without defining either of these terms. For ease of reference, the



[[Page 40790]]



Agencies are proposing to define ``customer'' to encompass both 

``customers'' and ``account holders.'' Thus, ``customer'' means a 

person that has an account with a financial institution or creditor.

    The proposed definition of ``customer'' is broader than the 

definition of this term in the Information Security Standards. The 

proposed definition applies to any ``person,'' defined by the FCRA as 

any individual, partnership, corporation, trust, estate, cooperative, 

association, government or governmental subdivision or agency, or other 

entity.\11\

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    \11\ See 15 U.S.C. 1681a(b).

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    The Agencies chose this broad definition because, in addition to 

individuals, various types of entities (e.g., small businesses) can be 

victims of identity theft. Although the definition of ``customer'' is 

broad, a financial institution or creditor would have the discretion to 

determine which type of customer accounts will be covered under its 

Program, since the proposed Red Flag Regulations are risk-based.\12\ 

The Agencies solicit comment on the scope of the proposed definition of 

``customer.''

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    \12\ Under proposed Sec.  ----.90(d)(1), this determination must 

be substantiated by a risk evaluation that takes into consideration 

which customer accounts of the financial institution or creditor are 

subject to a risk of identity theft.

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    4. Identity Theft. The proposed definition of ``identity theft'' 

states that this term has the same meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a). 

Section 111 of the FACT Act added several new definitions to the FCRA, 

including ``identity theft.'' However, section 111 granted authority to 

the FTC to further define this term.\13\ The FTC exercised this 

authority and issued a final rule, which became effective on December 

1, 2004, that defines ``identity theft'' as ``a fraud committed or 

attempted using the identifying information of another person without 

authority.'' \14\ The FTC's rule defines ``identifying information'' to 

mean any name or number that may be used, alone or in conjunction with 

any other information, to identify a specific person, such as a name, 

social security number, date of birth, official State or government 

issued driver's license or identification number, alien registration 

number, government passport number, or employer or taxpayer 

identification number.\15\

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    \13\ 15 U.S.C. 1681a(q)(3).

    \14\ 69 FR 63922 (Nov. 3, 2004) (codified at 16 CFR 603.2(a)).

    \15\ See 16 CFR 603.2(b) for additional examples of 

``identifying information,'' including unique biometric identifiers.

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    This definition of ``identity theft'' in the FTC's rule would be 

applicable to the Red Flag Regulations. Accordingly, ``identity theft'' 

within the meaning of the proposed Red Flag Regulations includes both 

actual and attempted identity theft.

    5. Red Flag. The proposed definition of a ``Red Flag'' is a 

pattern, practice, or specific activity that indicates the possible 

risk of identity theft. This definition is based on the statutory 

language. Section 114 states that in developing the Red Flag 

Guidelines, the Agencies must identify patterns, practices, and 

specific forms of activity that indicate ``the possible existence'' of 

identity theft. In other words, the Red Flags identified by the 

Agencies must be indicators of ``the possible existence'' of ``a fraud 

committed or attempted using the identifying information of another 

person without authority.'' \16\

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    \16\ See 16 CFR 603.2(a)(defining ``identity theft'').

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    Section 114 also states that the purpose of the Red Flag 

Regulations is to identify ``possible risks'' to account holders or 

customers or to the safety and soundness of the institution or 

``customer'' \17\ from identity theft. The Agencies believe that a 

``possible risk'' of identity theft may exist even where the ``possible 

existence'' of identity theft is not necessarily indicated. For 

example, electronic messages to customers of financial institutions and 

creditors directing them to a fraudulent website in order to obtain 

their personal information (``phishing''), and a security breach 

involving the theft of personal information often are a means to 

acquire the information of another person for use in committing 

identity theft. Because of the linkage between these events and 

identity theft, the Agencies believe that it is important to include 

such precursors to identity theft as Red Flags. Defining these early 

warning signals as Red Flags will better position financial 

institutions and creditors to stop identity theft at its inception. 

Therefore, the Agencies have defined ``Red Flags'' expansively to 

include those precursors to identity theft which indicate ``a possible 

risk'' of identity theft to customers, financial institutions, and 

creditors.

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    \17\ Use of the term ``customer'' here appears to be a drafting 

error and likely should read ``creditor.'' Use of the term 

``customer'' here appears to be a drafting error and likely should 

read ``creditor.''

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    The Agencies request comment on the scope of the definition of 

``Red Flags'' and, specifically, whether the definition of Red Flags 

should include precursors to identity theft.

    6. Service Provider. The proposed definition of ``service 

provider'' is a person that provides a service directly to the 

financial institution or creditor. This definition is based upon the 

definition of ``service provider'' in the Agencies'' standards 

implementing section 501(b) of the GLBA.\18\

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    \18\ 12 CFR part 30, app. B (national banks); 12 CFR part 208, 

app. D-2 and part 225, app. F (state member banks and holding 

companies); 12 CFR part 364, app. B (state non-member banks); 12 CFR 

part 570, app. B (savings associations); 12 CFR part 748, app. A 

(credit unions); 16 CFR part 314 (FTC regulated financial 

institutions).

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Section ----.90(c) Identity Theft Prevention Program

    Proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(c) describes the primary 

objectives of the Program. It states that each financial institution or 

creditor must implement a written Program that includes reasonable 

policies and procedures to address the risk of identity theft to its 

customers and the safety and soundness of the financial institution or 

creditor, in the manner described in Sec.  ----.90(d). The program must 

address financial, operational, compliance, reputation, and litigation 

risks.

    The risks of identity theft to a customer may include financial, 

reputation and litigation risks that occur when another person uses a 

customer's account fraudulently, such as by using the customer's credit 

card account number to make unauthorized purchases. The risks of 

identity theft to the safety and soundness of the financial institution 

or creditor may include: compliance, reputation, or litigation risks 

for failure to adequately protect customers from identity theft; 

operational and financial risks from absorbing losses to customers who 

are the victims of identity theft; or losses to the financial 

institution or creditor from opening an account for a person engaged in 

identity theft. Addressing identity theft in these circumstances would 

not only benefit customers, but would also benefit the financial 

institution or creditor, and any person (who has no relationship with 

the financial institution or creditor) whose identity has been 

misappropriated.

    In addition, proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(c) states that the 

Program must be appropriate to the size and complexity of the financial 

institution or creditor and the nature and scope of its activities. 

Thus, the proposed Red Flag Regulations are flexible and take into 

account the operations of smaller institutions.\19\

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    \19\ Agencies ``are expected to take into account the limited 

personnel and resources available to smaller institutions and craft 

such regulations and guidelines in a manner that does not unduly 

burden these smaller institutions.'' See 149 Cong. Rec. E2513 (daily 

ed. December 8, 2003) (statement Rep. Oxley).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(c) also states that the Program 

must address



[[Page 40791]]



changing identity theft risks as they arise based upon the experience 

of the financial institution or creditor with identity theft. In 

addition, the Program must also address changes in methods of identity 

theft, methods to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft, in the 

types of accounts the financial institution or creditor offers, and in 

its business arrangements, such as mergers and acquisitions, alliances 

and joint ventures, and service provider arrangements.

    Thus, to ensure the Program's effectiveness in addressing the risk 

of identity theft to customers and to its own safety and soundness, 

each financial institution or creditor must monitor, evaluate, and 

adjust its Program, including the type of accounts covered, as 

appropriate. For example, a financial institution or creditor must 

periodically reassess whether to adjust the types of accounts covered 

by its Program and whether to adjust the Red Flags that are a part of 

its Program based upon any changes in the types and methods of identity 

theft that it experiences.

Section----.90(d) Development and Implementation of Identity Theft 

Prevention Program.

1. Identification and Evaluation of Red Flags

i. Risk-Based Red Flags

    Under proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(1)(i), the Program must 

include policies and procedures to identify which Red Flags, singly or 

in combination, are relevant to detecting the possible risk of identity 

theft to customers or to the safety and soundness of the financial 

institution or creditor, using the risk evaluation described in Sec.  

----.90(d)(1)(ii). The Red Flags identified must reflect changing 

identity theft risks to customers and to the financial institution or 

creditor as they arise. At a minimum, the Program must incorporate any 

relevant Red Flags from Appendix J, applicable supervisory guidance, 

incidents of identity theft that the financial institution or creditor 

has experienced, and methods of identity theft that the financial 

institution or creditor has identified that reflect changes in identity 

theft risks.

    The proposed Red Flags enumerated in Appendix J are indicators of a 

possible risk of identity theft that the Agencies compiled from 

literature on the topic, information from credit bureaus, financial 

institutions, creditors, designers of fraud detection software, and the 

Agencies' own experiences. Some of the Red Flags may, by themselves, be 

reliable indicators of a possible risk of identity theft, such as a 

photograph on identification that is not consistent with the appearance 

of the applicant. Some Red Flags may be less reliable except in 

combination with additional Red Flags, such as where a home phone 

number and address submitted on an application match the address and 

number provided by another applicant. Such a match may be attributable 

to identity theft or, for example, it may indicate that the two 

applicants who share a residence are opening separate accounts.

    The Agencies expect that the final Red Flag Regulations will apply 

to a wide variety of financial institutions and creditors that offer 

many different products and services, from credit cards to certain cell 

phone accounts. The Agencies are not proposing to prescribe which Red 

Flags will be relevant to a particular type of financial institution or 

creditor. For this reason, the proposed Regulations provide that each 

financial institution and creditor must identify for itself which Red 

Flags are relevant to detecting the risk of identity theft, based upon 

the risk evaluation described in Sec.  ----.90(d)(1)(ii).

    The Agencies recognize that some Red Flags that are relevant today 

may become obsolete as time passes. While the Agencies expect to update 

Appendix J periodically,\20\ it may be difficult to do so quickly 

enough to keep pace with rapidly evolving patterns of identity theft or 

as quickly as financial institutions and creditors experience new types 

of identity theft. The Agencies may, however, be able to issue 

supervisory guidance more rapidly. Therefore, proposed paragraph Sec.  

----.90(d)(1)(i) provides that each financial institution and creditor 

must have policies and procedures to identify any additional Red Flags 

that are relevant to detecting a possible risk of identity theft from 

applicable supervisory guidance, incidents of identity theft that the 

financial institution or creditor has experienced, and methods of 

identity theft that the financial institution or creditor has 

identified that reflect changes in identity theft risks.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \20\ Section 114 directs the Agencies to update the guidelines 

as often as necessary. See 15 U.S.C. 1681m(e)(1)(a).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Given the changing nature of identity theft, a financial 

institution or creditor must incorporate Red Flags on a continuing 

basis so that its Program reflects changing identity theft risks to 

customers and to the financial institution or creditor as they arise. 

Ultimately, a financial institution or creditor is responsible for 

implementing a Program that is designed to effectively detect, prevent, 

and mitigate identity theft. The Agencies request comment on whether 

the enumerated sources of Red Flags are appropriate.

    The Agencies understand that many financial institutions and 

creditors already have implemented sophisticated policies and 

procedures to detect and prevent fraud, including identity theft, 

through such methods as detection of anomalous patterns of account 

usage. Often these policies and procedures include the use of complex 

computer-based products, such as sophisticated software. The Agencies 

attempted to draft this section in a flexible, technologically neutral 

manner that would not require financial institutions or creditors to 

acquire expensive new technology to comply with the Red Flag 

Regulations, and also would not prevent financial institutions and 

creditors from continuing to use their own or a third party's computer-

based products. The Agencies note, however, that a financial 

institution or creditor that uses a third party's computer-based 

programs to detect fraud and identity theft must independently assess 

whether such programs meet the requirements of the Red Flag Regulations 

and Red Flag Guidelines and should not rely solely on the 

representations of the third party.

    The Agencies request comment on the anticipated impact of this 

proposed paragraph on the policies and procedures that financial 

institutions and creditors currently have to detect, prevent, and 

mitigate identity theft, including on third party computer-based 

products that are currently being used to detect identity theft.

ii. Risk Evaluation

    Proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(1)(ii) provides that in order 

to identify which Red Flags are relevant to detecting a possible risk 

of identity theft to its customers or to its own safety and soundness, 

the financial institution or creditor must consider:

    A. Which of its accounts are subject to a risk of identity theft;

    B. The methods it provides to open these accounts;

    C. The methods it provides to access these accounts; and

    D. Its size, location, and customer base.

    This provision describes a key part of the Program of a financial 

institution or creditor. Under proposed paragraph Sec.  --

--.90(d)(1)(ii), the financial institution or creditor must define the 

scope of its Program by assessing which of its accounts are subject to 

a risk of identity theft. For example, the financial institution or 

creditor must assess



[[Page 40792]]



whether it will identify Red Flags in connection with extensions of 

credit only, or whether other types of relationships, such as deposit 

accounts, are likely to be subject to identity theft and should, 

therefore, be included in the scope of its Program. It must also assess 

whether to include solely the accounts of individual customers, or 

whether other types of accounts, such as those of small businesses, 

will be included in the scope of its Program. The financial institution 

or creditor must determine which Red Flags are relevant when it 

initially establishes its Program, and whenever it is necessary to 

address changing risks of identity theft.

    The factors enumerated in proposed Sec.  ----.90(d)(1)(ii) are 

nearly identical to those that each financial institution must consider 

when designing procedures for verifying the identity of customers 

opening new accounts in accordance with the Customer Identification 

Program (CIP) rules, issued to implement section 326 of the USA PATRIOT 

Act, 31 U.S.C. 5318(l).\21\ The Agencies believe that these CIP factors 

are equally relevant in the Red Flags context. For example, the Red 

Flags that may be relevant when an account is opened in a face-to-face 

transaction may be different from those relevant to an account that is 

opened remotely, by telephone, or over the Internet.

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    \21\ See, e.g., 31 CFR 103.121 (banks, savings associations, 

credit unions, and certain non-federally regulated banks); 31 CFR 

103.122 (broker-dealers); 31 CFR 103.123 (futures commission 

merchants).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The Agencies solicit comment on whether the factors that must be 

considered are appropriate and whether any additional factors should be 

included.

2. Identity Theft Prevention and Mitigation

    Proposed Sec.  ----.90(d)(2) states that the Program must include 

reasonable policies and procedures designed to prevent and mitigate 

identity theft in connection with the opening of an account or any 

existing account. This section then describes the following policies 

and procedures that the Program must include. Some of the policies and 

procedures relate solely to account openings. Others relate to existing 

accounts.

i. Verify Identity of Persons Opening Accounts

    Proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(2)(i) states that the Program 

must include reasonable policies and procedures to obtain identifying 

information about, and verify the identity of, a person opening an 

account. This provision is designed to address the risk of identity 

theft to a financial institution or creditor that occurs in connection 

with the opening of new accounts.

    Some financial institutions and creditors already are subject to 

the CIP rules, which require verification of the identity of customers 

opening accounts. A financial institution or creditor may satisfy the 

proposed requirement in Sec.  ----.90(d)(2)(i) to have policies and 

procedures for verifying the identity of a person opening an account by 

applying the policies and procedures for identity verification it has 

developed to comply with the CIP rules. However, the financial 

institution or creditor must use the CIP policies and procedures to 

verify the identity of any ``customer,'' meaning any person that opens 

a new account, in connection with any type of ``account'' that its risk 

evaluation indicates could be the subject of identity theft. By 

contrast, the CIP rules exclude a variety of entities from the 

definition of ``customer'' and exclude a number of products and 

relationships from the definition of ``account.'' The Agencies are not 

proposing any exclusions from either of these terms given the risk-

based nature of the Red Flag Regulations.\22\

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    \22\ See, e.g., 31 CFR 103.121(a).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The Agencies recognize, however, that not all financial 

institutions and creditors that must implement the Red Flag Regulations 

are required to comply with the CIP rules. This provision would allow 

any financial institution or creditor to follow the CIP rules to 

satisfy the Red Flag requirements to obtain identifying information 

about, and verify the identity of, a person opening an account. This 

approach is designed to ensure that, as stated in section 114, the Red 

Flag Guidelines are not inconsistent with the policies and procedures 

required by the CIP rules.

ii. Detect Red Flags

    Proposed paragraph. Sec.  ----.90(d)(2)(ii) states that the Program 

must include reasonable policies and procedures to detect the Red Flags 

identified pursuant to paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(1).

iii. Assess the Risk of Identity Theft

    Proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(2)(iii) states that the Program 

must include policies and procedures to assess whether the Red Flags 

the financial institution or creditor has detected pursuant to 

paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(2)(ii) evidence a risk of identity theft. It 

also states that a financial institution or creditor must have a 

reasonable basis for concluding that a Red Flag does not evidence a 

risk of identity theft.

    Factors indicating that a Red Flag does not evidence a risk of 

identity theft might include: Patterns of spending that are 

inconsistent with established patterns of activity on an account 

because the customer is traveling abroad, or an inconsistency between 

the social security number on an account application and a consumer 

report because numbers inadvertently were transposed during the 

application process.

iv. Address the Risk of Identity Theft

    Proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(2)(iv) states that the Program 

must include policies and procedures that address the risk of identity 

theft to the customer, the financial institution, or creditor, 

commensurate with the degree of risk posed. The Regulations then 

provide an illustrative list of measures that a financial institution 

or creditor may take,\23\ including:

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    \23\ In the case of credit, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act 

(ECOA), 15 U.S.C. 1691 et seq., applies. Under ECOA, it is unlawful 

for a creditor to discriminate against any applicant for credit 

because the applicant has in good faith exercised any right under 

the Consumer Credit Protection Act (CCPA). 15 U.S.C. 1691(a). A 

consumer who requests the inclusion of a fraud alert or active duty 

alert in his or her credit file is exercising a right under the 

FCRA, which is a part of the CCPA, 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq. 15 U.S.C. 

1681c-1. Consequently, when a credit file contains a fraud or active 

duty alert, a creditor must take reasonable steps to verify the 

identity of the individual in accordance with the requirements in 15 

U.S.C. 1681c-1 before extending credit, closing an account, or 

otherwise limiting the availability of credit. The inability of a 

creditor to verify the individual's identity may indicate that the 

individual is engaged in identity theft and, in those circumstances, 

the creditor may decline to open an account, close an account or 

take other reasonable actions to limit the availability of credit.

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    A. Monitoring an account for evidence of identity theft;

    B. Contacting the customer;

    C. Changing any passwords, security codes, or other security 

devices that permit access to a customer's account;

    D. Reopening an account with a new account number;

    E. Not opening a new account;

    F. Closing an existing account;

    G. Notifying law enforcement and, for those that are subject to 31 

U.S.C. 5318(g), filing a Suspicious Activity Report in accordance with 

applicable law and regulation;

    H. Implementing any requirements regarding limitations on credit 

extensions under 15 U.S.C. 1681c-1(h), such as declining to issue an 

additional credit card when the financial institution or creditor 

detects a fraud or active duty alert associated with the



[[Page 40793]]



opening of an account, or an existing account; or

    I. Implementing any requirements for furnishers of information to 

consumer reporting agencies under 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2, to correct or 

update inaccurate or incomplete information.

    Financial institutions and creditors typically use such measures to 

mitigate the risk of identity theft. In addition, measures E through G 

are actions that each financial institution subject to the CIP rules 

must include in its procedures for responding to circumstances in which 

it cannot form a reasonable belief that it knows the true identity of a 

customer.\24\ Measure H describes the procedures required in section 

112 of the FACT Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681c-1(h), that are applicable to a 

prospective user of credit reports when a user obtains a credit report 

that includes a fraud alert or active duty alert. Measure I describes 

the requirements in section 623 of the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2, 

applicable to a furnisher of information to consumer reporting agencies 

that discovers inaccurate or incomplete information about a consumer.

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    \24\ See, e.g., 31 CFR 103.121(b)(2)(iii).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    These measures illustrate various actions that a financial 

institution or creditor may take depending upon the degree of risk that 

is present. For example, a financial institution or creditor may choose 

to contact a customer to determine whether a material change in credit 

card usage reflects purchases made by the customer or unauthorized 

charges. However, if the financial institution or creditor is notified 

that a customer provided his or her password and account number to a 

fraudulent website, it likely will close the customer's existing 

account and reopen it with a new account number.

    The Agencies solicit comment on whether the enumerated measures 

should be included as examples that a financial institution or creditor 

may take and whether additional measures should be included.

3. Train Staff

    Under proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(3), each financial 

institution or creditor must train staff to implement its Program. 

Proper training will enable staff to address the risk of identity 

theft. For example, staff should be trained to detect Red Flags with 

regard to new and existing accounts, such as discrepancies in 

identification presented by a person opening an account or anomalous 

wire transfers in connection with a customer's deposit account. Staff 

should also be trained to mitigate identity theft, for example, by 

recognizing when an account should not be opened.

4. Oversee Service Provider Arrangements

    Proposed paragraph Sec.  ----.90(d)(4) states that whenever a 

financial institution or creditor engages a service provider to perform 

an activity on its behalf that is covered by Sec.  ----.90, the 

financial institution or creditor must take steps designed to ensure 

that the activity is conducted in compliance with a Program that meets 

the requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. For 

example, a financial institution or creditor that uses a service 

provider to open accounts on its behalf, may reserve for itself the 

responsibility to verify the identity of a person opening a new 

account, may direct the service provider to do so, or may use another 

service provider to verify identity. Ultimately, however, the financial 

institution or creditor remains responsible for ensuring that the 

activity is being conducted in compliance with a Program that meets the 

requirements of the Red Flag Regulations.

    In addition, this provision would allow a service provider that 

provides services to multiple financial institutions and creditors to 

conduct activities on behalf of these entities in accordance with its 

own program to prevent identity theft, as long as the program meets the 

requirements of the Red Flag Regulations. The service provider would 

not need to apply the particular Program of each individual financial 

institution or creditor to whom it is providing services.

    Under the Agencies' Information Security Standards, financial 

institutions must require their service providers by contract to 

safeguard customer information in any manner that meets the objectives 

of the Standards. The Standards provide flexibility for a service 

provider's information security measures to differ from the program 

that a financial institution implements. By contrast, the CIP 

regulations do not contain a service provider provision. Instead, the 

preamble to the CIP regulations simply states that the CIP regulations 

do not affect a financial institution's authority to contract for 

services to be performed by a third party either on or off the 

institution's premises, and also does not alter an institution's 

authority to use an agent to perform services on its behalf.\25\ The 

Agencies invite comment on whether permitting a service provider to 

implement a Program, including policies and procedures to identify and 

detect Red Flags, that differs from the programs of the individual 

financial institution or creditor to whom it is providing services, 

would fulfill the objectives of the Red Flag Regulations. The Agencies 

also invite comment on whether it is necessary to address service 

provider arrangements in the Red Flag Regulations, or whether it is 

self-evident that a financial institution or creditor remains 

responsible for complying with the standards set forth in the 

Regulations, including when it contracts with a third party to perform 

an activity on its behalf.

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    \25\ 68 FR 25104 (May 9, 2003)(preamble to CIP rule applicable 

to banks, savings associations, and credit unions).

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5. Involve the Board of Directors and Senior Management

    Proposed Sec.  ----.90(d)(5) highlights the responsibility of the 

board of directors and senior management to develop and implement the 

Program. The board of directors or an appropriate committee of the 

board must approve the written Program. The board, an appropriate 

committee of the board, or senior management is charged with overseeing 

the development, implementation, and maintenance of the Program, 

including assigning specific responsibility for its implementation. In 

addition, persons charged with overseeing the Program must review 

reports that must be prepared at least annually by staff regarding 

compliance by the financial institution or creditor with the Red Flag 

Regulations. The reports must discuss material matters related to the 

Program and evaluate issues such as: The effectiveness of the policies 

and procedures of the financial institution or creditor in addressing 

the risk of identity theft in connection with the opening of accounts 

and with respect to existing accounts; service provider arrangements; 

significant incidents involving identity theft and management's 

response; and recommendations for changes in the Program. This report 

will indicate whether the Program must be adjusted to increase its 

effectiveness.

    The Agencies request comment regarding the frequency with which 

reports should be prepared for the board, a board committee, or senior 

management. The Agencies also request comment on whether this paragraph 

properly allocates the responsibility for oversight and implementation 

of the Program between the board and senior management.



C. Proposed Red Flag Guidelines: Appendix J



    Section 114 of the FACT Act states that in developing the 

guidelines, the



[[Page 40794]]



Agencies are directed to identify patterns, practices, and specific 

forms of activity that indicate the possible existence of identity 

theft. The Agencies are proposing to implement this provision by 

requiring the Program of a financial institution or creditor to include 

policies and procedures that require the identification and detection 

of risk-based Red Flags.

    As discussed earlier, the Program must include policies and 

procedures designed to identify Red Flags relevant to detecting a 

possible risk of identity theft from among those listed in Appendix J. 

The proposed Red Flags enumerated in Appendix J are indicators of a 

possible risk of identity theft that the Agencies compiled from a 

variety of sources. Appendix J covers Red Flags that may be detected in 

connection with an account opening or an existing account. Some of the 

Red Flags, by themselves, may be reliable indicators of identity theft, 

while others are more reliable when detected in combination with other 

Red Flags.

    Recognizing that a wide range of financial institutions and 

creditors and a broad variety of accounts will be covered by the Red 

Flag Regulations, the proposed Regulations provide each financial 

institution and creditor with the flexibility to develop policies and 

procedures to identify which Red Flags in Appendix J are relevant to 

detecting the possible risk of identity theft.

    The proposed list in Appendix J is not meant to be exhaustive. 

Therefore, proposed Sec.  ----.90(d)(1) of the Red Flag Regulations 

also provide that each financial institution and creditor must have 

policies and procedures to identify additional Red Flags from 

applicable supervisory guidance that may be issued from time-to-time, 

incidents of identity theft that the financial institution or creditor 

has experienced, and methods of identity theft that the financial 

institution or creditor has identified that reflect changes in identity 

theft risks. Ultimately, the financial institution or creditor is 

responsible for implementing a Program that is designed to effectively 

detect, prevent and mitigate identity theft.

    The Agencies solicit comment on whether the proposed Red Flags 

listed in Appendix J are too specific or not specific enough, and 

whether additional or different Red Flags should be included.

    Section 114 also directs the Agencies to consider whether to 

include reasonable guidelines for notifying the consumer when a 

transaction occurs in connection with a consumer's credit or deposit 

account that has been inactive for two years, in order to reduce the 

likelihood of identity theft. The Agencies considered whether to 

incorporate this provision directly into Appendix J, but determined 

that the two-year limit may not be an accurate indicator of identity 

theft given the wide variety of credit and deposit accounts that would 

be covered by the provision.

    The Agencies have concluded, however, that activity in connection 

with an account that has been inactive for a period of time may be an 

indicator of a possible risk of identity theft, depending upon the 

circumstances. Therefore, the Agencies have incorporated a Red Flag on 

inactive accounts into Appendix J that is flexible and is designed to 

take into consideration the type of account, the expected pattern of 

usage of the account, and any other relevant factors.

    The Agencies request comment on whether a provision that mirrors 

the statutory language regarding inactive accounts should be placed 

directly into Appendix J or the Red Flag Regulations, or whether the 

more flexible approach to inactive accounts proposed (i.e., listing as 

a Red Flag the use of an account that has been inactive for a 

reasonably lengthy period of time) should be retained.

    The Agencies also request comment on whether, for ease of use, this 

appendix should be moved to the end of Subpart J or remain at the end 

of the part as proposed.



D. Proposed Special Rules for Card Issuers: Section-by-Section Analysis



Section ----.91 Duties of Card Issuers Regarding Changes of Address

Section ----.91(a) Scope

    Section 114 specifically provides that the Agencies must prescribe 

regulations requiring credit and debit card issuers to assess the 

validity of change of address requests. Therefore, in addition to the 

general rule in Sec.  ----.90 that applies to all financial 

institutions and creditors, the Agencies are proposing regulations for 

card issuers, namely a person described in Sec.  ----.90(a) that issues 

a debit or credit card. A financial institution or creditor that is a 

card issuer may incorporate the requirements of Sec.  ----.91 into its 

Program.

Section ----.91(b) Definitions

    The proposed regulations include two definitions that are solely 

applicable to the special rule for card issuers. The first proposed 

definition is for the term ``cardholder.'' Section 114 states that the 

regulations must require the card issuer to follow reasonable policies 

and procedures to assess the validity of a change of address before 

issuing an additional or replacement card. Section 114 provides that a 

card issuer may satisfy this requirement by notifying ``the 

cardholder.''

    The term ``cardholder'' is not defined in the statute. The 

legislative history relating to this provision indicates that ``issuers 

of credit cards and debit cards who receive a consumer request for an 

additional or replacement card for an existing account'' may assess the 

validity of the request by notifying ``the cardholder.'' \26\ 

Presumably, the request will be valid if the consumer making the 

request and the cardholder are one and the same ``consumer.'' 

Therefore, the proposal defines ``cardholder'' as a consumer who has 

been issued a credit or debit card. Further, because ``consumer'' is 

defined in the FCRA as an ``individual'' \27\ the proposed regulations 

will cover a request by an individual for a business card. The Agencies 

request comment on whether this definition of ``cardholder'' is 

appropriate.

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    \26\ See 149 Cong. Rec. E2513 (daily ed. December 8, 2003) 

(statement of Rep. Oxley) (emphasis added).

    \27\ 15 U.S.C. 1681a(c).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The second proposed definition is for the phrase ``clear and 

conspicuous.'' Section ----.91 includes a provision requiring that any 

written or electronic notice provided by a card issuer to the consumer 

pursuant to the regulations be given in a ``clear and conspicuous 

manner.'' The proposed regulations define ``clear and conspicuous'' 

based on the definition of this phrase found in the Agencies' privacy 

regulations.\28\

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    \28\ 12 CFR 40.3(b)(1) (OCC); 12 CFR 216.3(b)(1) (Board); 12 CFR 

332.3(b)(1) (FDIC); 12 CFR 573.3(b)(1) (OTS); 12 CFR 716.3(b)(1) 

(NCUA); 16 CFR 313.3(b)(1) (FTC).

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    The Agencies request comment on whether, for ease of use, the 

regulations implementing section 315 should define additional terms, 

such as ``card issuer,'' ``credit card,'' and ``debit card,'' that are 

already defined in the FCRA.

Section ----.91(c) General Requirements

    As required by section 114, proposed Sec.  ----.91(c) states that a 

card issuer that receives notification of a change of address for a 

consumer's debit or credit card account, and within a short period of 

time afterwards (during at least the first 30 days after it receives 

such notification) receives a request for an additional or replacement 

card for the same account, may not honor the request and issue such a 

card, unless it assesses the validity of the change of address request 

in at least one of three ways. As specified in section 114, proposed 

paragraph Sec.  ----.91(c)



[[Page 40795]]



provides that, in accordance with the card issuer's reasonable policies 

and procedures, and for the purpose of assessing the validity of the 

change of address, the card issuer must:

    (i) Notify the cardholder of the request at the cardholder's former 

address and provide to the cardholder a means of promptly reporting 

incorrect address changes;

    (ii) Notify the cardholder of the request by any other means of 

communication that the card issuer and the cardholder have previously 

agreed to use; or

    (iii) Use other means of assessing the validity of the change of 

address, in accordance with the policies and procedures that the card 

issuer has established pursuant to Sec.  ----.90.

    The proposed rule text specifies that the notification of a change 

of address must pertain to a ``consumer's'' debit or credit account, 

consistent with the legislative history discussed above.\29\

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    \29\ See 149 Cong. Rec. E2513 (daily ed. December 8, 2003) 

(statement of Rep. Oxley) (describing this section as relating to 

``issuers of credit cards and debit cards who receive a consumer 

request for an additional or replacement card for an existing 

account.'' (Emphasis added.))

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    The Agencies request comment on this provision and, in particular, 

whether the Agencies should elaborate further on the means that a card 

issuer must use to assess the validity of a request for a change of 

address.

Section ----.91(d) Form of Notice

    The Agencies note that section 114 is titled ``Establishment of 

Procedures for the Identification of Possible Instances of Identity 

Theft.'' The Agencies understand that Congress singled out this 

scenario involving card issuers and placed it in section 114 because it 

is well known to be a possible indicator of identity theft. The 

Agencies believe that a consumer needs to be able to recognize the 

urgent nature of a written or electronic notice that he or she receives 

from a card issuer pursuant to Sec.  ----.91(d). Therefore, the 

proposed regulations prescribe the form that such a notice should take. 

They state that any written or electronic notice that a card issuer 

provides under this paragraph must be clear and conspicuous and 

provided separately from its regular correspondence with the 

cardholder. Of course, a card issuer may give notice orally in 

accordance with the policies and procedures the cardholder has 

established pursuant to Sec.  ----.90(b).

    The Agencies request comment on whether this section should 

elaborate further on the form that a notice provided under Sec.  --

--.91(d) must take.



II. Section 315 of the FACT Act



A. Background



    Section 315 of the FACT Act amends section 605 of the FCRA, 15 

U.S.C. 1681c, by adding a new section (h). Section 315 requires that, 

when providing consumer reports to requesting users, nationwide 

consumer reporting agencies (as defined in section 603(p) of the FCRA) 

(CRAs) must provide a notice of the existence of a discrepancy if the 

address provided by the user in its request ``substantially differs'' 

from the address the CRA has in the consumer's file.

    Section 315 also requires the Agencies to jointly issue regulations 

that provide guidance regarding reasonable policies and procedures that 

a user of a consumer report should employ when the user receives a 

notice of address discrepancy. These regulations must describe 

reasonable policies and procedures for users of consumer reports to (i) 

enable them to form a reasonable belief that the user knows the 

identity of the person for whom it has obtained a consumer report, and 

(ii) reconcile the address of the consumer with the CRA, if the user 

establishes a continuing relationship with the consumer and regularly 

and in the ordinary course of business furnishes information to the 

CRA.



B. Proposed Regulation Implementing Section 315: Section-by-Section 

Analysis



Section ----.82(a) Scope

    The scope of section 315 differs from the scope of section 114. 

Section 315 applies to ``users of consumer reports'' and ``persons 

requesting consumer reports'' (hereinafter referred to as ``users''), 

as opposed to financial institutions and creditors. Therefore, section 

315 does not apply to a financial institution or creditor that does not 

use consumer reports.

Section ----.82(b) Definition

    The proposed rule defines ``notice of address discrepancy,'' a new 

term introduced in section 315.\30\ The proposed definition is ``a 

notice sent to a user of a consumer report by a CRA pursuant to 15 

U.S.C. 1681c(h)(1), that informs the user of a substantial difference 

\31\ between the address for the consumer provided by the user in 

requesting the consumer report and the address or addresses the CRA has 

in the consumer's file.''

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    \30\ All other terms used in this section of the proposal have 

the same meanings as set forth in the FCRA (15 U.S.C. 1681a).

    \31\ The term used in the statute, ``substantially differs,'' is 

not defined. CRAs are responsible for determining when addresses 

substantially differ and, hence, when they must send a notice of 

address discrepancy to a user requesting a consumer report.

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    The Agencies note that the provisions of section 315 requiring CRAs 

to provide notices of address discrepancy became effective on December 

1, 2004. To the extent that CRAs each have developed their own 

standards for delivery of notices of address discrepancy, it is 

particularly important for users to be able to recognize and receive 

notices of address discrepancy, especially if they are being delivered 

electronically by CRAs. For example, CRAs may provide consumer reports 

with some type of a code to indicate an address discrepancy. Users must 

be prepared to recognize the code as an indication of an address 

discrepancy.

Section ----.82(c) Requirement to Form a Reasonable Belief

    Proposed Sec.  ----.82(c) implements the requirement in section 315 

that the Agencies prescribe regulations describing reasonable policies 

and procedures that will enable the user to form a reasonable belief 

that the user knows ``the identity of the person to whom the consumer 

report pertains'' when the user receives a notice of address 

discrepancy. Proposed Sec.  ----.82(c) states that a user must develop 

and implement reasonable policies and procedures for ``verifying the 

identity of the consumer for whom it has obtained a consumer report'' 

whenever it receives a notice of address discrepancy. These policies 

and procedures must be designed to enable the user to form a reasonable 

belief that it knows the identity of the consumer for whom it has 

obtained a consumer report, or determine that it cannot do so.

    This section also provides that if a user employs the policies and 

procedures regarding identification and verification set forth in the 

CIP rules,\32\ it satisfies the requirement to have policies and 

procedures to verify the identity of the consumer. This provision takes 

into consideration that many users already may be subject to the CIP 

rules, and have in place procedures to comply with those rules, at 

least with respect to the opening of accounts. Thus, such a user could 

use its existing CIP policies and procedures to satisfy this 

requirement, so long as it applies them in all situations where it 

receives a notice of address discrepancy. In addition, any user, such 

as a landlord or employer, may adopt the CIP rules and apply them in 

all situations where it receives an address discrepancy to meet



[[Page 40796]]



this requirement, even if it is not subject to a CIP rule.

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    \32\ See, e.g., 31 CFR 103.121(b)(2)(i) and (ii).

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    The Agencies request comment on whether the CIP procedures are 

sufficient to enable a user that receives a notice of address 

discrepancy with a consumer report to form a reasonable belief that it 

knows the identity of the consumer for whom it obtained the report, 

both in connection with the opening of an account, and in other 

circumstances where a user obtains a consumer report.\33\

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    \33\ For example, a user may request a consumer report on a 

consumer with whom it already has a continuing relationship in order 

to determine whether to increase the consumer's credit line, or in 

other circumstances, such as in the case of a landlord or employer, 

to determine a consumer's eligibility to rent housing or for 

employment.

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    The statutory requirement that a user must form a reasonable belief 

that it knows the identity of the consumer for whom it obtained a 

consumer report applies whether or not the user subsequently 

establishes a continuing relationship with the consumer. By contrast, 

the additional statutory requirement that a user reconcile the address 

of the consumer with the CRA only applies if the user establishes a 

continuing relationship with the consumer.

    The requirement that the user form a reasonable belief that it 

knows the identity of the consumer is likely to benefit both consumers 

and users. For example, this requirement should reduce the likelihood 

that a user will rely on the wrong consumer report in making a decision 

about a consumer's eligibility for a product, such as the consumer 

report of another consumer with the same name who lives at a different 

address. In addition, these policies and procedures may assist the user 

to detect whether a consumer about whom it has requested a consumer 

report is engaged in identity theft or is a victim of identity 

theft.\34\

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    \34\ Under the Red Flag Guidelines, a notice of address 

discrepancy received from a consumer reporting agency is a Red Flag. 

Thus, a user subject to the Red Flag Regulations that receives a 

notice of address discrepancy will need to determine whether its 

policies and procedures regarding identity theft prevention and 

mitigation apply here.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



Section ----.82(d)(1) Requirement to Furnish Consumer's Address To a 

Consumer Reporting Agency

    Proposed Sec.  ----.82(d)(1) provides that a user must develop and 

implement reasonable policies and procedures for furnishing to the CRA 

from whom it received the notice of address discrepancy an address for 

the consumer that the user has reasonably confirmed is accurate when 

the following three conditions are satisfied. The first condition set 

forth in proposed Sec.  ----.82(d)(1)(i) is that the user must be able 

to form a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the consumer 

for whom the consumer report was obtained. This condition will ensure 

that the user furnishes a new address for the consumer to the CRA only 

after the user forms a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of 

the consumer, using the policies and procedures set forth in paragraph 

Sec.  ----.82(c).

    The second condition, set forth in proposed Sec.  --

--.82(d)(1)(ii), is that the user furnish the address to the CRA if it 

establishes or maintains a continuing relationship with the consumer. 

Section 315 specifically requires that the user furnish the consumer's 

address to the CRA if the user establishes a continuing relationship 

with the consumer. Therefore, proposed Sec.  ----.82(d)(1)(ii) 

reiterates this requirement. However, a user also may obtain a notice 

of address discrepancy in connection with a consumer with whom it 

already has an existing relationship. Section 315 provides the Agencies 

with broad authority to prescribe regulations in all circumstances when 

a user has received a notice of address discrepancy. The Agencies have 

exercised this authority to provide that the user must also furnish the 

consumer's address to the CRA from whom the user has received a notice 

of address discrepancy when the user maintains a continuing 

relationship with the consumer.

    Finally, as required by section 315, the third condition set out in 

proposed Sec.  ----.82(d)(1)(iii) is that if the user regularly and in 

the ordinary course of business furnishes information to the CRA from 

which a notice of address discrepancy pertaining to the consumer was 

obtained, the consumer's address must be communicated to the CRA as 

part of the information the user regularly provides.

Section ----.82(d)(2) Requirement To Confirm Consumer's Address

    The Agencies note that section 315 requires the Agencies to 

prescribe regulations describing reasonable policies and procedures for 

a user ``to reconcile the address of the consumer'' about whom it has 

obtained a notice of address discrepancy with the CRA ``by furnishing 

such address'' to the CRA. (Emphasis added.) Even when the user is able 

to form a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the consumer, 

there may be many reasons that the initial address furnished by the 

consumer is incorrect. For example, a consumer may have provided the 

address of a secondary residence or inadvertently reversed a street 

number. To ensure that the address that is furnished to the CRA is 

accurate, the Agencies are proposing to interpret the phrase, ``such 

address,'' as an address that the user has reasonably confirmed is 

accurate. This interpretation requires a user to take steps to 

``reconcile'' the address it initially received from the consumer when 

it receives a notice of address discrepancy rather than simply 

furnishing the initial address it received to the CRA. Proposed Sec.  

----.82(d)(2) contains the following list of illustrative measures that 

a user may employ to reasonably confirm the accuracy of the consumer's 

address:

     Verifying the address with the person to whom the consumer 

report pertains;

     Reviewing its own records of the address provided to 

request the consumer report;

     Verifying the address through third-party sources; or

     Using other reasonable means.

    The Agencies solicit comment on whether the regulation should 

include examples of measures to reasonably confirm the accuracy of the 

consumer's address, or whether different or additional examples should 

be listed.

Section ----.82(d)(3) Timing

    Section 315 specifically addresses when a user must furnish the 

consumer's address to the CRA. It states that this information must be 

furnished for the reporting period in which the user's relationship 

with the consumer is established. Accordingly, proposed Sec.  --

--.82(d)(3)(i) states that, with respect to new relationships, the 

policies and procedures that a user develops in accordance with Sec.  

----.82(d)(1) must provide that a user will furnish the consumer's 

address that it has reasonably confirmed to the CRA as part of the 

information it regularly furnishes for the reporting period in which it 

establishes a relationship with the consumer.

    However, a user may also receive a notice of address discrepancy in 

other circumstances, such as when it requests a consumer report for a 

consumer with whom it already has an existing relationship. As 

previously noted, section 315 provides the Agencies with broad 

authority to prescribe regulations in all circumstances when a user has 

received a notice of discrepancy. Thus, proposed paragraph Sec.  --

--.82(d)(3)(ii) states that in other circumstances, such as when the 

user already has an existing relationship with the consumer, the user 

should furnish this information for the reporting period in which the 

user has reasonably confirmed the accuracy of



[[Page 40797]]



the address of the consumer for whom it has obtained a consumer report.

    The Agencies recognize that the timing provision for newly 

established relationships may be problematic for users hoping to take 

full advantage of the flexibility in the timing for verification of 

identity afforded by the CIP rules. As required by statute, proposed 

Sec.  ----.82(d)(3)(i), the timing provision for new relationships, 

states that the reconciled address must be furnished for the reporting 

period in which the user establishes a relationship with the consumer. 

Proposed Sec.  ----.82(d)(1), which also mirrors the requirement of the 

statute, requires the reconciled address to be furnished to the CRA 

only when the user both establishes a continuing relationship with the 

consumer and forms a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of 

the consumer to whom the consumer report relates. Typically, the CIP 

rules permit an account to be opened (i.e, relationship to be 

established) if certain identifying information is provided. 

Verification to establish the true identity of the customer is required 

within a reasonable period of time after the account has been opened. 

However, in this context, and in order to satisfy the requirements of 

both Sec.  ----.82(d)(1) and Sec.  ----.82(d)(3)(i), a user employing 

the CIP rules will have to both establish a continuing relationship and 

a reasonable belief that it knows the consumer's identity during the 

same reporting period.

    The Agencies request comment on whether the timing for responding 

to notices of address discrepancy received in connection with newly 

established relationships and in connection with circumstances other 

than newly established relationships is appropriate.



III. General Provisions



    The OCC, the Board, the FDIC, the OTS, and the NCUA \35\ are 

proposing to amend the first sentence in Sec.  ----.3, which contains 

the definitions that are applicable throughout this part. This sentence 

currently states that the list of definitions in Sec.  ----.3 apply 

throughout the part ``unless the context requires otherwise.'' These 

agencies are proposing to amend this introductory sentence to make 

clear that the definitions in Sec.  ----.3 apply ``for purposes of this 

part, unless explicitly stated otherwise.'' Thus, these definitions 

apply throughout the part unless defined differently in an individual 

subpart.

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    \35\ The equivalent language for the FTC already exists in 16 

CFR 603.1.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    OTS is also proposing nonsubstantive, technical changes to its rule 

sections on purpose and scope (Sec.  571.1) and disposal of consumer 

information (Sec.  571.83). These changes are necessary in light of the 

proposed incorporation of the address discrepancy section into subpart 

I.



IV. Regulatory Analysis



A. Paperwork Reduction Act



I. Request for Comment on Proposed Information Collection

    In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act 

of 1995, the Agencies may not conduct or sponsor, and the respondent is 

not required to respond to, an information collection unless it 

displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 

control number.

    The information collection requirements contained in this joint 

notice of proposed rulemaking have been submitted by the OCC, FDIC, 

OTS, NCUA, and FTC to OMB for review and approval under the Paperwork 

Reduction Act of 1995. The requirements are found in 12 CFR 41.82, 

41.90, 41.91, 334.82, 334.90, 334.91, 571.82, 571.90, 571.91, and 

717.82; 717.90; and 717.91; and 16 CFR 681.1, 681.2, and 681.3.

    In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 

U.S.C. 3506; 5 CFR part 1320, Appendix A.1), the Board has reviewed the 

proposed rule under the authority delegated by OMB. The proposed rule 

contains requirements subject to the PRA. The collections of 

information that are required by this proposed rule are found in 12 CFR 

222.82, 222.90, and 222.91. The Board may not conduct or sponsor, and 



an organization is not required to respond to, this information 

collection unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The 

OMB control number is to be assigned.

    Comments are invited on:

    (a) Whether the collection of information is necessary for the 

proper performance of the Agencies' functions, including whether the 

information has practical utility;

    (b) The accuracy of the estimates of the burden of the information 

collection, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions 

used;

    (c) Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the 

information to be collected;

    (d) Ways to minimize the burden of the information collection on 

respondents, including through the use of automated collection 

techniques or other forms of information technology; and

    (e) Estimates of capital or start up costs and costs of operation, 

maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.

All comments will become a matter of public record.

    Comments should be addressed to: OCC: Communications Division, 

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Public Information Room, 

Mail stop 1-5, Attention: 1557-NEW, 250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC 

20219. In addition, comments may be sent by fax to 202-874-4448, or by 

electronic mail to regs.comments@occ.treas.gov. You can inspect and 

photocopy the comments at the OCC's Public Information Room, 250 E 

Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219. You can make an appointment to 

inspect the comments by calling 202-874-5043.



    Board: You may submit comments, identified by R-1255, by any of the 

following methods:

     Agency Web site: http://www.federalreserve.gov Follow the instructions for submitting comments on the http://.



http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.



     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 



Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

     E-mail: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include docket 

number in the subject line of the message.

     FAX: 202-452-3819 or 202-452-3102.

     Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors 

of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue, 

NW., Washington, DC 20551.



All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm

 as submitted, 



unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your comments will 

not be edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Public 

comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in Room MP-500 

of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. 

and 5 p.m. on weekdays.



    FDIC: You may submit written comments, which should refer to 3064-

------, by any of the following methods:

     Agency Web site: http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html.

 Follow the instructions for submitting comments 



on the FDIC Web site.



[[Page 40798]]



     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 



Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

     E-mail: Comments@FDIC.gov.

     Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention: 

Comments, FDIC, 550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.

     Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard station at the rear of the 

550 17th Street Building (located on F Street) on business days between 

7 a.m. and 5 p.m.



    Public Inspection: All comments received will be posted without 

change to http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose/html 



including any personal information provided. Comments may be inspected 

at the FDIC Public Information Center, Room 100, 801 17th Street, NW., 

Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on business days.



    OTS: Information Collection Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, 

Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552; 

send a facsimile transmission to (202) 906-6518; or send an e-mail to 

related index on the OTS Internet site at http://www.ots.treas.gov. In 



addition, interested persons may inspect the comments at the Public 

Reading Room, 1700 G Street, NW., by appointment. To make an 

appointment, call (202) 906-5922, send an e-mail to 

publicinfo@ots.treas.gov, or send a facsimile transmission to (202) 



906-7755.



    NCUA: You may submit comments by any of the following methods 

(Please send comments by one method only):

     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 



Follow the instructions for submitting comments.

     NCUA Web site: http://www.ncua.gov/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/proposedregs/proposedregs.html.

 Follow the 



instructions for submitting comments.

     E-mail: Address to regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ``[Your 

name] Comments on ----,'' in the e-mail subject line.

     Fax: (703) 518-6319. Use the subject line described above 

for e-mail.

     Mail: Address to Mary F. Rupp, Secretary of the Board, 

National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA 

22314-3428.

     Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail address.



    FTC: Comments should refer to ``The Red Flags Rule: Project No. 

R611019,'' and may be submitted by any of the following methods. 

However, if the comment contains any material for which confidential 

treatment is requested, it must be filed in paper form, and the first 

page of the document must be clearly labeled ``Confidential.'' \36\

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    \36\ Commission Rule 4.2(d), 16 CFR 4.2(d). The comment must be 

accompanied by an explicit request for confidential treatment, 

including the factual and legal basis for the request, and must 

identify the specific portions of the comment to be withheld from 

the public record. The request will be granted or denied by the 

Commission's General Counsel, consistent with applicable law and the 

public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).

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     E-mail: Comments filed in electronic form should be 

submitted by clicking on the following Web link: https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-redflags

 and following the instructions on 



the Web-based form. To ensure that the Commission considers an 

electronic comment, you must file it on the Web-based form at https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-redflags

.



     Federal eRulemaking Portal: If this notice appears at 

http://www.regulations.gov, you may also file an electronic comment 



through that Web site. The Commission will consider all comments that 

regulations.gov forwards to it.

     Mail or Hand Delivery: A comment filed in paper form 

should include ``The Red Flags Rule, Project No. R611019,'' both in the 

text and on the envelope and should be mailed or delivered, with two 

complete copies, to the following address: Federal Trade Commission/

Office of the Secretary, Room H-135 (Annex M), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, 

NW., Washington, DC 20580. Because paper mail in the Washington area 

and at the Commission is subject to delay, please consider submitting 

your comments in electronic form, as prescribed above. The FTC is 

requesting that any comment filed in paper form be sent by courier or 

overnight service, if possible.



    Comments on any proposed filing, recordkeeping, or disclosure 

requirements that are subject to paperwork burden review under the 

Paperwork Reduction Act should additionally be submitted to: Office of 

Management and Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for the Federal Trade 

Commission. Comments should be submitted via facsimile to (202) 395-

6974 because U.S. Postal Mail is subject to lengthy delays due to 

heightened security precautions.

    The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the 

collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as 

appropriate. All timely and responsive public comments, whether filed 

in paper or electronic form, will be considered by the Commission, and 

will be available to the public on the FTC Web site, to the extent 

practicable, at http://www.ftc.gov/os/publiccomments.htm. As a matter 



of discretion, the FTC makes every effort to remove home contact 

information for individuals from the public comments it receives before 

placing those comments on the FTC Web site. More information, including 

routine uses permitted by the Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's 

privacy policy, at http://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.htm.



II. Proposed Information Collection

    Title of Information Collection: Identity Theft Red Flags and 

Address Discrepancies under the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions 

Act of 2002.

    Frequency of Response: On occasion.

    Affected Public: OCC: National banks and Federal branches and 

agencies of foreign banks and certain subsidiaries of these entities.

    Board: State member banks, uninsured state agencies and branches of 

foreign banks, commercial lending companies owned or controlled by 

foreign banks, and Edge and agreement corporations.

    FDIC: Insured nonmember banks, insured state branches of foreign 

banks, and certain subsidiaries of these entities.

    OTS: Savings associations and certain of their subsidiaries.

    NCUA: Federally-chartered credit unions.

    FTC: Section 114: State-chartered credit unions, non-bank lenders, 

mortgage brokers, motor vehicle dealers, utility companies, 

telecommunications companies, and any other person that regularly 

participates in a credit decision, including setting the terms of 

credit.

    Section 315: State-chartered credit unions, non-bank lenders, 

insurers, landlords, employers, mortgage brokers, motor vehicle 

dealers, collection agencies, and any other person who requests a 

consumer report from a nationwide consumer reporting agency as 

described in section 603(p) of the FCRA.

    Abstract: Section 114: As required by section 114, the Agencies are 

jointly proposing guidelines for financial institutions and creditors 

identifying patterns, practices, and specific forms of activity, that 

indicate the possible existence of identity theft. The Agencies also 

are proposing joint regulations requiring each financial institution 

and creditor to establish reasonable policies



[[Page 40799]]



and procedures to address the risk of identity theft that incorporate 

the guidelines. In addition, credit and debit card issuers must develop 

policies and procedures to assess the validity of a request for a 

change of address under certain circumstances.

    The information collections in the proposed regulations 

implementing section 114 would require each financial institution and 

creditor to create an Identity Theft Prevention Program (Program) and 

report to the board of directors, a committee thereof or senior 

management at least annually on compliance with the proposed 

regulations. Staff must be trained to implement the Program. In 

addition, each credit and debit card issuer would be required to 

establish policies and procedures to assess the validity of a change of 

address request. The proposed regulations require the card issuer to 

notify the cardholder in writing, electronically, or orally, or use 

another means of assessing the validity of the change of address.

    Section 315: The Agencies are proposing joint regulations under 

section 315 that provide guidance regarding reasonable policies and 

procedures that a user of consumer reports must employ when a user 

receives a notice of address discrepancy from a consumer reporting 

agency.

    The information collections in the proposed regulations 

implementing section 315 would require each user of consumer reports to 

develop reasonable policies and procedures that it will employ when it 

receives a notice of address discrepancy from a consumer reporting 

agency. The proposed regulations require a user of consumer reports to 

furnish an address that the user has reasonably confirmed is accurate 

to the consumer reporting agency from which it receives a notice of 

address discrepancy.

    Estimated Burden: \37\ Section 114: The Agencies estimate that it 

will initially take financial institutions and creditors 25 hours to 

create the Program outlined in the proposed rule, 4 hours to prepare an 

annual report, and 2 hours to train staff to implement the Program.

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    \37\ The Estimated Burden section reflects the views of all of 

the Agencies except the FTC, which has prepared a separate analysis.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The Agencies estimate that it will take credit and debit card 

issuers 4 hours to develop policies and procedures to assess the 

validity of a change of address request.

    The Agencies believe that most of the covered entities already 

employ a variety of measures to detect and address identity theft that 

are required by section 114 of the proposed regulations because these 

are usual and customary business practices that they engage in to 

minimize losses due to fraud. In addition, the Agencies believe that 

many financial institutions and creditors already have implemented some 

of the requirements of the proposed regulations implementing section 

114 as a result of having to comply with other existing regulations and 

guidance, such as the regulations implementing section 326 of the USA 

PATRIOT Act, 31 U.S.C. 5318(l),\38\ the Information Security Standards 

that implement section 501(b) of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), 15 

U.S.C. 6801, and section 216 of the FACT Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681w,\39\ and 

guidance issued by the Agencies or the Federal Financial Institutions 

Examination Council regarding information security, authentication, 

identity theft, and response programs.\40\ The Agencies also believe 

that card issuers already assess the validity of change of address 

requests, and for the most part, have automated the process of 

notifying the cardholder or using other means to assess the validity of 

changes of address. Therefore implementation of this requirement will 

pose no further burden. Accordingly, these estimates represent the 

incremental amount of time the Agencies believe it will take to create 

a written Program that incorporates the policies and procedures that 

covered entities are likely to already have in place, the incremental 

time to train staff to implement the Program, to establish policies and 

procedures to assess the validity of changes of address, and to notify 

cardholders, as appropriate.

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    \38\ See, e.g., 31 CFR 103.121 (banks, savings associations, 

credit unions, and certain non-federally regulated banks); 31 CFR 

103.122 (broker-dealers); 31 CFR 103.123 (futures commission 

merchants).

    \39\ 12 CFR part 30, app. B (national banks); 12 CFR part 208, 

app. D-2 and part 225, app. F (state member banks and holding 

companies); 12 CFR part 364, app. B (state non-member banks); 12 CFR 

part 570, app. B (savings associations); 12 CFR part 748, app. A and 

B, and 12 CFR 717 (credit unions); 16 CFR part 314 (financial 

institutions that are not regulated by the Board, FDIC, NCUA, OCC 

and OTS).

    \40\ See, e.g., 12 CFR part 30, supp. A to app. B (national 

banks); 12 CFR part 208, supp. A to app. D-2 and part 225, supp. A 

to app. F (state member banks and holding companies); 12 CFR part 

364, supp. A to app. B (state non-member banks); 12 CFR part 570, 

supp. A to app. B (savings associations); 12 CFR 748, app. A and B 

(credit unions); Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council 

(FFIEC) Information Technology Examination Handbook's Information 

Security Booklet (the ``IS Booklet'') available at http://www.ffiec.gov/guides.htm

; FFIEC ``Authentication in an Internet 



Banking Environment'' available at http://www.ffiec.gov/pdf/authentication_guidance.pdf

; Board SR 01-11 (Supp) (Apr. 26, 2001) 



available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2001/sr0111.htm

; ``Guidance on Identity Theft and Pretext Calling,'' 



OCC AL 2001-4 (April 30, 2001); ``Identity Theft and Pretext 

Calling,'' OTS CEO Letter 139 (May 4, 2001); NCUA Letter to 

Credit Unions 01-CU-09, ``Identity Theft and Pretext Calling'' 

(Sept. 2001); OCC 2005-24, ``Threats from Fraudulent Bank Web Sites: 

Risk Mitigation and Response Guidance for Web Site Spoofing 

Incidents,'' (July 1, 2005); ``Phishing and E-mail Scams,'' OTS CEO 

Letter 193 (Mar. 8, 2004); NCUA Letter to Credit Unions 04-

CU-12, ``Phishing Guidance for Credit Unions'' (Sept. 2004).

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    Section 315: The Agencies estimate that it will take users of 

consumer reports 4 hours to develop policies and procedures that they 

will employ when they receive a notice of address discrepancy. The 

Agencies believe that users of credit reports covered by this analysis 

already are furnishing this information to consumer reporting agencies 

because it is a usual and customary business practice. Therefore, the 

Agencies estimate that there will be no implementation burden.

    Thus, the burden associated with this collection of information may 

be summarized as follows.



OCC



    Number of respondents: 2,100.

    Estimated time per response: 39.

    Developing program: 25.

    Preparing annual report: 4.

    Training: 2.

    Developing policies and procedures to assess validity of changes of 

address: 4.

    Developing policies and procedures to respond to notices of address 

discrepancy: 4.

    Total estimated annual burden: 81,900.



Board



    Number of respondents: 1,182.

    Estimated time per response: 39 hours.

    Developing program: 25 hours.

    Preparing annual report: 4 hours.

    Training: 2 hours.

    Developing policies and procedures to assess validity of changes of 

address: 4 hours.

    Developing policies and procedures to respond to notices of address 

discrepancy: 4 hours.

    Total Estimated Annual Burden: 46,098.



FDIC



    Number of respondents: 5,245.

    Estimated time per response: 39 hours.

    Developing program: 25 hours.

    Preparing annual report: 4 hours.

    Training: 2 hours.

    Developing policies and procedures to assess validity of changes of 

address: 4 hours.



[[Page 40800]]



    Developing policies and procedures to respond to notices of address 

discrepancy: 4 hours.

    Total Estimated Annual Burden: 204,555 hours.



OTS



    Number of respondents: 858.

    Estimated time per response: 39 hours.

    Developing program: 25 hours.

    Preparing annual report: 4 hours.

    Training: 2 hours.

    Developing policies and procedures to assess validity of changes of 

address: 4 hours.

    Developing policies and procedures to respond to notices of address 

discrepancy: 4 hours.

    Total Estimated Annual Burden: 33,462.



NCUA



    Number of respondents: 5,393.

    Estimated time per Response: 39 hours.

    Developing program: 25 hours.

    Preparing annual report: 4 hours.

    Training: 2 hours.

    Developing policies and procedures to assess validity of changes of 

address: 4 hours.

    Developing policies and procedures to respond to notice of address 

discrepancy: 4 hours.

    Total Estimated Annual Burden: 210,327.



FTC 41

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    \41\ Due to the varied nature of the entities subject to the 

jurisdiction of the FTC, this Estimated Burden section reflects only 

the view of the FTC. The banking regulatory agencies have jointly 

prepared a separate analysis.

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    Section 114: Estimated Hours Burden: As discussed above, the 

proposed regulations would require financial institutions and creditors 

to create a Program and report to the board of directors, a committee 

thereof, or senior management at least annually on compliance with the 

proposed regulations. The FCRA defines ``creditor'' to have the same 

meaning as in section 702 of the ECOA.\42\ Under Regulation B, which 

implements the ECOA, a creditor means a person who regularly 

participates in a credit decision, including setting the terms of 

credit. Regulation B defines credit as a transaction in which the party 

has a right to defer payment of a debt, regardless of whether the 

credit is for personal or commercial purposes.\43\ Given the broad 

scope of entities covered, it is difficult to determine precisely the 

number of financial institutions and creditors that are subject to the 

FTC's jurisdiction. There are numerous small businesses under the FTC's 

jurisdiction, and there is no formal way to track them; moreover, as a 

whole, the entities under the FTC's jurisdiction are so varied that 

there are no general sources that provide a record of their existence. 

Nonetheless, FTC staff estimates that the proposed regulations 

implementing section 114 will affect over 3500 financial institutions 

\44\ and over 11 million creditors \45\ subject to the FTC's 

jurisdiction, for a combined total of approximately 11.1 million 

affected entities. As detailed below, FTC staff estimates that the 

average annual information collection burden during the three-year 

period for which OMB clearance is sought will be 6,279,000 hours 

(rounded to the nearest thousand). The estimated annual labor cost 

associated with this burden is $134,621,000 (rounded to the nearest 

thousand).

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    \42\ 15 U.S.C. 1681a(r)(5).

    \43\ Regulation B Equal Credit Opportunity, 12 CFR 202 (as 

amended effective April 15, 2003).

    \44\ Under the FCRA, the only financial institutions over which 

the FTC has jurisdiction are state-chartered credit unions. 15 

U.S.C. 1681s. As of December 31, 2005, there were 3,302 state-

chartered federally-insured credit unions and 362 state-chartered 

nonfederally insured credit unions, totaling 3,664 financial 

institutions. See http://www.ncua.gov/news/quick_facts/quick_facts.html

 and ``Disclosures for Non-Federally Insured Depository 



Institutions under the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 

Improvement Act (FDICIA),'' 70 FR 12823 (March 16, 2005).

    \45\ This estimate is derived from an analysis of a database of 

U.S. businesses based on NAICS codes for businesses that market 

goods or services to consumers or other businesses, which totaled 

11,076,463 creditors subject to the FTC's jurisdiction.

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    FTC staff believes that the affected entities can be categorized in 

two groups, based on the nature of their businesses: Entities that are 

subject to a high risk of identity theft and entities that are subject 

to a low risk of identity theft.\46\ Moreover, FTC staff believes that 

many of the high-risk entities, as part of their usual and customary 

business practices, already take steps to minimize losses due to fraud. 

Furthermore, FTC staff believes that motor vehicle dealers would incur 

less burden than other high-risk entities. Because their loans are 

typically financed by financial institutions that are also subject to 

these proposed regulations, FTC staff believes that motor vehicle 

dealers are likely to use the financial institutions' programs as a 

basis for developing their own programs. Accordingly, FTC staff 

estimates that to create and implement a written Program that 

incorporates the policies and procedures that high-risk entities 

already are likely to have in place, it will take high-risk entities 

(excluding motor vehicle dealers) 25 hours, with an annual recurring 

burden of 1 hour, and it will take motor vehicle dealers 5 hours, with 

an annual recurring burden of 1 hour. FTC staff also estimates that the 

incremental time to train staff to implement the Program will take 

high-risk entities (including motor vehicle dealers) 2 hours, with an 

annual recurring burden of 1 hour. Finally, FTC staff estimates that 

preparation of an annual report will take high-risk entities (including 

motor vehicle dealers) 4 hours, with an annual recurring burden of 1 

hour.

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    \46\ In general, high-risk entities may provide consumer 

financial services or other goods or services of value to identity 

thieves such as telecommunication services or goods that are easily 

convertible to cash, whereas low-risk entities may do business 

primarily with other businesses and provide non-financial services 

or goods that are not easily convertible to cash.

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    FTC staff assumes that most of the low-risk entities do not employ 

currently the measures to detect and address identity theft that are 

required by section 114 of the proposed regulations. However, the 

proposed regulations are drafted in a flexible manner that allows 

entities to develop and implement different types of programs based 

upon their size, complexity, and the nature and scope of their 

activities. Moreover, the emphasis of the written Program, as required 

under the proposed regulations, is to identify risks of identity theft. 

To the extent that entities determine that they have a minimal risk of 

identity theft, they would be tasked only with developing a streamlined 

Program. As a result, FTC staff anticipates that the burden on low-risk 

entities to comply with the proposed regulations will be minimal. 

Accordingly, FTC staff believes that to create a streamlined Program, 

it will take low-risk entities 20 minutes, with an annual recurring 

burden of 5 minutes. The FTC staff believes that training staff to be 

attentive to any future risks of identity theft will take low-risk 

entities 10 minutes, with an annual recurring burden of 5 minutes. The 

FTC staff believes that preparing an annual report will take low-risk 

entities 10 minutes, with an annual recurring burden of 5 minutes.

    Accordingly, FTC staff estimates that the proposed regulations 

implementing section 114 affect the following: 93,487 high-risk 

entities (excluding motor vehicle dealers) subject to the FTC's 

jurisdiction at an average annual burden of 12 hours and 20 minutes per 

entity [average annual burden over 3-year clearance period for creation 

and implementation of Program ((25 + 1 + 1)/3) plus average annual 

burden over 3-year clearance period for staff training ((2 + 1 + 1)/3) 

plus average annual



[[Page 40801]]



burden over 3-year clearance period for preparing annual report ((4 + 1 

+ 1)/3)], for a total of 1,153,000 hours (rounded to the nearest 

thousand); 173,115 motor vehicle dealers subject to the FTC's 

jurisdiction at an average annual burden of 5 hours and 40 minutes per 

entity [average annual burden over 3-year clearance period for creation 

and implementation of Program ((5+1+1)/3) plus average annual burden 

over 3-year clearance period for staff training ((2 + 1 + 1)/3) plus 

average annual burden over 3-year clearance period for preparing annual 

report ((4 + 1 + 1)/3)], for a total of 981,000 hours (rounded to the 

nearest thousand); and 10,813,525 low-risk entities subject to the 

FTC's jurisdiction at an average annual burden of approximately 23 

minutes per entity [average annual burden over 3-year clearance period 

for creation and implementation of streamlined Program ((20 + 5 + 5)/3) 

plus average annual burden over 3-year clearance period for staff 

training ((10+5+5)/3) plus average annual burden over 3-year clearance 

period for preparing annual report ((10 + 5 + 5)/3], for a total of 

4,145,000 hours (rounded to the nearest thousand).

    The FTC requests comment on whether the proposed regulations are 

sufficiently flexible to minimize the burden of compliance on entities 

that are not subject to a significant risk of identity theft. If not, 

are there ways in which the burden for such entities could be minimized 

further? If so, what are the ways in which the burden could be 

minimized further?

    The proposed regulations implementing Section 114 also require 

credit and debit card issuers to establish policies and procedures to 

assess the validity of a change of address request, including notifying 

the cardholder or using another means of assessing the validity of the 

change of address. FTC staff believes that there may be as many as 

3,764 credit or debit card issuers under the FTC's jurisdiction.\47\ 

FTC staff estimates that most of the credit or debit card issuers are 

high-risk entities that already have automated the process of notifying 

the cardholder or using other means to assess the validity of the 

change of address, such that implementation will pose no further 

burden. Nevertheless, in order to be conservative, FTC staff estimates 

that it will take 100 credit or debit card issuers 4 hours to develop 

and implement policies and procedures to assess the validity of a 

change of address request for a total burden of 400 hours.

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    \47\ In addition to the 3,664 state-chartered credit unions 

under FTC jurisdiction (see supra), there may be other creditors 

that issue their own credit cards. FTC staff is unable to determine 

how many such creditors exist, but estimates that there may be as 

many as 100. FTC staff requests comment on the number of such 

creditors in existence.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Estimated Cost Burden: FTC staff derived labor costs by applying 

appropriate estimated hourly cost figures to the burden hours described 

above. It is difficult to calculate with precision the labor costs 

associated with the proposed regulations, as they entail varying 

compensation levels of management and/or technical staff among 

companies of different sizes. In calculating the cost figures, staff 

assumes that for high-risk entities, professional technical personnel 

and/or managerial personnel will create and implement the Program, 

prepare the annual report, train employees, and assess the validity of 

a change of address request, at an hourly rate of $32.00.\48\ Staff 

assumes that for low-risk entities, administrative support personnel 

will justify the low-risk of identity theft, prepare the annual report, 

and train employees, at an hourly rate of $16.00.\49\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \48\ The cost is derived from a mid-range among the reported 

2004 Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) rates for likely positions 

within the professional technical and managerial categories.

    \49\ The cost is derived from a mid-range among the reported 

2004 BLS rates for likely positions within the administrative 

support category.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Based on the above estimates and assumptions, the total annual 

labor costs for all categories of covered entities under the proposed 

regulations implementing section 114 are $134,621,000 (rounded to the 

nearest thousand) [((1,153,000 hours + 400 hours + 981,000 hours) x 

$32.00 = $68,301,000) + (4,145,000 hours x $16.00 = $66,320,000)].



    Section 315: Estimated Hours Burden: User Policies and Procedures: 

As discussed above, the regulations implementing section 315 provide 

guidance regarding reasonable policies and procedures that a user of 

consumer reports must employ when a user receives a notice of address 

discrepancy from a consumer reporting agency. Given the broad scope of 

users of consumer reports, it is difficult to determine with precision 

the number of users of consumer reports that are subject to the FTC's 

jurisdiction. As noted above, there are numerous small businesses under 

the FTC's jurisdiction, and there is no formal way to track them; 

moreover, as a whole, the entities under the FTC's jurisdiction are so 

varied that there are no general sources that provide a record of their 

existence. Nonetheless, FTC staff estimates that the proposed 

regulations implementing section 315 will affect approximately 1.6 

million users of consumer reports subject to the FTC's 

jurisdiction.\50\ As detailed below, FTC staff estimates that the 

average annual information collection burden during the three-year 

period for which OMB clearance is sought will be 831,000 hours (rounded 

to the nearest thousand). The estimated annual labor cost associated 

with this burden is $13,296,000 (rounded to the nearest thousand).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \50\ This estimate is derived from an analysis of a database of 

U.S. businesses based on NAICS codes for businesses in industries 

that typically use consumer reports from consumer reporting agencies 

described in section 603(p), which totaled 1,658,758 users of 

consumer reports subject to the FTC's jurisdiction.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Although Section 315 created a new obligation for consumer 

reporting agencies to provide a notice of address discrepancy to users 

of consumer reports, prior to FACTA's enactment, users of consumer 

reports could compare the address on the consumer report to the address 

provided by the consumer and discern for themselves any discrepancy. As 

a result, FTC staff believes that many users of consumer reports have 

developed methods of reconciling address discrepancies, and the 

following estimates represent the incremental amount of time it will 

take users of consumer reports to develop and comply with the policies 

and procedures for when they receive a notice of address discrepancy.

    Due to the varied nature of the entities under the jurisdiction of 

the FTC, it is difficult to determine the appropriate burden estimates. 

For example, users of consumer reports can range from a landlord 

renting a single unit who may use no more than one consumer report a 

year, to insurance companies that may use thousands of consumer reports 

a year. FTC staff estimates that it may take a small user no more than 

16 minutes to develop and comply with the policies and procedures that 

it will employ when it receives a notice of address discrepancy, 

whereas a large user may take 1 hour. Similarly, FTC staff estimates 

that, during the remaining two years of the clearance, it may take a 

small user no more than 1 minute to comply with the policies and 

procedures that it will employ when it receives a notice of address 

discrepancy, whereas a large user may take 45 minutes. Taking into 

account these extremes, FTC staff estimates that, during the first year 

of the clearance, it will take users of consumer reports under the 

jurisdiction of the FTC an average of 40 minutes [the midrange between 

16 minutes and 60 minutes is approximately 38 minutes rounded to 40 

minutes] to develop and comply with the policies and procedures that 

they



[[Page 40802]]



will employ when they receive a notice of address discrepancy. FTC 

staff also estimates that the average recurring burden during the 

remaining two years of the clearance period will be 25 minutes [the 

midrange between 1 minute and 45 minutes is approximately 23 minutes 

rounded to 25 minutes].

    Furnishing Correct Addresses: The proposed regulations implementing 

section 315 also require a user of consumer reports to furnish an 

address that the user has reasonably confirmed is accurate to the 

consumer reporting agency from which it receives a notice of address 

discrepancy, but only to the extent that such user regularly and in the 

ordinary course of business furnishes information to such consumer 

reporting agency. FTC staff believes that only 10,000 of the 1,658,758 

users of consumer reports furnish information to consumer reporting 

agencies as part of their usual and customary business practices,\51\ 

therefore, only these 10,000 users of consumer reports will be affected 

by the portion of the proposed regulations that require furnishing the 

correct address. FTC staff estimates that it will take such users of 

consumer reports 30 minutes to develop the policies and procedures for 

furnishing the correct address to the consumer reporting agencies 

pursuant to the proposed regulations for implementing section 315. FTC 

staff believes that users of consumer reports that furnish information 

to consumer reporting agencies as part of their usual and customary 

business practices will have automated the process of furnishing the 

correct address in the first year of the clearance, therefore, there 

will be no annual recurring burden.

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    \51\ Report to Congress Under Sections 318 and 319 of the Fair 

and Accurate Credit Transactions of 2003, Federal Trade Commission, 

80 (Dec. 2004) available at http://www.ftc.gov/reports/facta/041209factarpt.pdf

.



---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Accordingly, FTC staff estimates that the proposed regulations 

implementing section 315 affect 1,658,758 users of consumer reports 

subject to the FTC's jurisdiction that must develop policies and 

procedures that they will employ when they receive a notice of address 

discrepancy, at an average annual burden of 30 minutes per entity 

[average annual burden over 3-year clearance period = (40 + 25 + 25)/

3)], for a total of approximately 829,000 hours (rounded to the nearest 

thousand). The 10,000 of those users described above must also furnish 

the correct address to the consumer reporting agency, at an average 

annual burden of 10 minutes per entity [average annual burden over 3-

year clearance period = ((30 + 0 + 0)/3)], for a total of 2,000 hours 

(rounded to the nearest thousand).

    Estimated Cost Burden: FTC staff derived labor costs by applying 

appropriate estimated hourly cost figures to the burden hours described 

above. It is difficult to calculate with precision the labor costs 

associated with the proposed regulations, as they entail varying 

compensation levels of different types of support staff among companies 

of different sizes, as well as users of consumer reports with no 

employees. Nonetheless, in calculating the cost figures, staff assumes 

that the policies and procedures for notice of address discrepancy and 

furnishing the correct address will be set up by administrative support 

personnel at an hourly rate of $16.00.\52\

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \52\ As noted above, the cost is derived from a mid-range among 

the reported 2004 BLS rates for likely positions within the 

administrative support category.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Based on the above estimates and assumptions, the total annual 

labor costs for the two categories of burden under the proposed 

regulations implementing section 315 are $13,296,000 (rounded to the 

nearest thousand) [(829,000 hours + 2,000 hours) x $16.00].



B. Regulatory Flexibility Act



    OCC: When an agency issues a rulemaking proposal, the Regulatory 

Flexibility Act (RFA), requires the agency to publish an initial 

regulatory flexibility analysis unless the agency certifies that the 

rule will not have ``a significant economic impact on a substantial 

number of small entities.'' \53\ 5 U.S.C. 603, 605(b). The OCC has 

reviewed the impact of the proposed regulations on small banks and 

certifies that that proposed regulations, if adopted as proposed, would 

not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 

entities.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \53\ Small Business Administration regulations define ``small 

entities'' to include banks with total assets of $165 million or 

less. 13 CFR 121.201.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The proposed rulemaking implements sections 114 and 315 of the FACT 

Act and applies to all national banks, Federal branches and agencies 

and their operating subsidiaries that are not functionally regulated 

within the meaning of section 5(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company 

Act,\54\ 1,011 of which have assets of less than or equal to $165 

million.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \54\ For convenience, these entities are referred to as 

``national banks.''

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The proposed regulations implementing section 114 require the 

development and establishment of a written identity theft prevention 

program to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft. The proposed 

regulations also require card issuers to assess the validity of a 

notice of address change under certain circumstances.

    The OCC believes that the requirements in the proposed regulations 

implementing section 114 of the FACT Act are consistent with banks' 

usual and customary business practices used to minimize losses due to 

fraud in connection with new and existing accounts. Banks also are 

likely to have implemented most of the proposed requirements as a 

result of having to comply with other existing regulations and 

guidance. For example, national banks are already subject to CIP rules 

requiring them to verify the identity of a person opening a new 

account.\55\ A covered entity may use the policies and procedures 

developed to comply with the CIP rules to satisfy the identity 

verification requirements in the proposed rules.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \55\ 31 CFR 103.121; 12 CFR 21.21 (national banks).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    National banks complying with the ``Interagency Guidelines 

Establishing Information Security Standards'' \56\ and guidance 

recently issued by the FFIEC titled ``Authentication in an Internet 

Banking Environment'' \57\ already will have policies and procedures in 

place to detect attempted and actual intrusions into customer 

information systems. Banks complying with the OCC's ``Guidance on 

Identity Theft and Pretext Calling'' \58\ already will have policies 

and procedures to verify the validity of change of address requests on 

existing accounts.

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    \56\ 12 CFR part 30, app. B (national banks).

    \57\ OCC Bulletin 2005-35 (Oct. 12, 2005).

    \58\ OCC AL 2001-4 (April 30, 2001).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    In addition, the flexibility incorporated into the proposed 

rulemaking provides a covered entity with discretion to design and 

implement a program that is tailored to its size and complexity and the 

nature and scope of its operations. In this regard, the OCC believes 

that expenditures associated with establishing and implementing an 

identity theft prevention program will be commensurate with the size of 

the bank.

    The OCC believes that the proposed regulations implementing section 

114, if adopted as proposed, will not impose undue costs on national 

banks and will not have a substantial economic impact on a substantial 

number of small national banks. Nonetheless, the OCC specifically 

requests comment and specific data on the size of the incremental 

burden creating an identity theft prevention program would have on 

small national banks, given banks'



[[Page 40803]]



current practices and compliance with existing requirements. The OCC 

also requests comment on how the final regulations might minimize any 

burden imposed to the extent consistent with the requirements of the 

FACT Act.

    The regulations implementing section 315 require users of consumer 

reports to have various policies and procedures to respond to the 

receipt of an address discrepancy. The FACT Act already requires CRAs 

to provide notices of address discrepancy to users of credit reports. 

The OCC understands that as a matter of good business practice, most 

national banks currently have policies and procedures in place to 

respond to these notices when they are provided in connection with both 

new and existing accounts, by furnishing an address for the consumer 

that the bank has reasonably confirmed is accurate to the CRA from 

which it received the notice of address discrepancy. In addition, with 

respect to new accounts, a national bank already is required by the CIP 

rules to ensure that it knows the identity of a person opening a new 

account and to keep a record describing the resolution of any 

substantive discrepancy discovered during the verification process.

    Given current practices of national banks in responding to notices 

of address discrepancy from CRAs, and the existing requirements in the 

CIP rule, the OCC believes that the proposed regulations implementing 

section 315, if adopted as proposed, will not impose undue costs on 

national banks and likely will not have a significant economic impact 

on a substantial number of national banks. Nonetheless, the OCC 

specifically requests comment on whether the proposed requirements 

differ from small banks' current practices and whether the proposed 

requirements on users of consumer reports to have policies and 

procedures to respond to the receipt of an address discrepancy could be 

altered to minimize any burden imposed to the extent consistent with 

the requirements of the FACT Act.

    Board: The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) 

requires an agency either to provide an initial regulatory flexibility 

analysis with a proposed rule or certify that the proposed rule will 

not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 

entities (defined for purposes of the RFA to include commercial banks 

and other depository institutions with less than $165 million in 

assets).

A. Reasons for the Proposed Rule

    The FACT Act amends the FCRA and was enacted, in part, for the 

purpose of preventing the theft of consumer information. The statute 

contains several provisions relating to the detection, prevention, and 

mitigation of identity theft. The Board is proposing rules to implement 

statutory directives in section 114 of the FACT Act, which amends 

section 615 of the FCRA, and section 315 of the FACT Act, which amends 

section 605 of the FCRA, that require the Board to prescribe 

regulations jointly with other federal agencies.

    Section 114 requires the Board to prescribe regulations that 

require financial institutions and creditors to establish policies and 

procedures to implement guidelines established by the Board that 

address identity theft with respect to account holders and customers. 

Section 114 also requires the Board to adopt regulations applicable to 

credit and debit card issuers to implement policies and procedures to 

assess the validity of change of address requests. Section 315 requires 

the Board to prescribe regulations that provide guidance regarding 

reasonable policies and procedures that a user of consumers' reports 

should employ to verify the identity of a consumer when a consumer 

reporting agency provides a notice of address discrepancy relating to 

that consumer.

B. Statement of Objectives and Legal Basis

    The SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION above contains information on the 

objectives of the final rules. The legal bases for the proposed rules 

are sections 114 and 315 of the FACT Act.

C. Description of Small Entities To Which the Rule Applies

    The Board's proposed rule would apply to all banks that are members 

of the Federal Reserve System (other than national banks) and their 

respective operating subsidiaries, branches and agencies of foreign 

banks (other than Federal branches, Federal Agencies, and insured State 

branches of foreign banks), commercial lending companies owned or 

controlled by foreign banks, and organizations operating under section 

25 or 25A of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 601 et seq., and 611 et 

seq.). The Board's rule would apply to the following institutions 

(numbers approximate): State member banks (902), U.S. branches and 

agencies of foreign banks (206), commercial lending companies owned or 

controlled by foreign banks (3), and Edge and agreement corporations 

(71), for a total of approximately 1,182 institutions. The Board 

estimates that more than 550 of these institutions could be considered 

small institutions with assets less than $165 million.

D. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance Requirements

    Section 114 requires the Board to prescribe regulations that 

require financial institutions and creditors to establish reasonable 

policies and procedures to implement guidelines established by the 

Board and other federal agencies that address identity theft with 

respect to account holders and customers. This would be implemented by 

requiring a covered financial institution or creditor to create an 

Identity Theft Prevention Program that detects, prevents and mitigates 

the risk of identity theft applicable to its accounts.

    Section 114 also requires the Board to adopt regulations applicable 

to credit and debit card issuers to implement policies and procedures 

to assess the validity of change of address requests. The proposed rule 

would implement this by requiring credit and debit card issuers to 

establish reasonable policies and procedures to assess the validity of 

a change of address if it receives notification of a change of address 

for a debit or credit card account and within a short period of time 

afterwards (at least 30 days), the issuer receives a request for an 

additional or replacement card for the same account.

    Section 315 requires the Board to prescribe regulations that 

provide guidance regarding reasonable policies and procedures that a 

user of consumers' reports should employ to verify the identity of a 

consumer when a consumer reporting agency provides a notice of address 

discrepancy relating to that consumer and to reconcile the address 

discrepancy with the consumer reporting agency in certain 

circumstances. The proposed rule would require users of consumer 

reports to develop and implement reasonable policies and procedures for 

verifying the identity of a consumer for whom it has obtained a 

consumer report and for whom it receives a notice of address 

discrepancy and to reconcile an address discrepancy with the 

appropriate consumer reporting agency in certain circumstances.

    The Board seeks information and comment on any costs, compliance 

requirements, or changes in operating procedures arising from the 

application of the proposed rules in addition to or which may differ 

from those arising



[[Page 40804]]



from the application of the statute generally.

E. Identification of Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal 

Rules

    The Board is unable to identify any federal statutes or regulations 

that would duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the proposed rule. The 

Board seeks comment regarding any statutes or regulations, including 

state or local statutes or regulations, that would duplicate, overlap, 

or conflict with the proposed rule, including particularly any statutes 

or regulations that address situations in which institutions must adopt 

specified policies and procedures to detect or prevent identity theft 

or mitigate identity theft that has occurred.

    Section 222.90 of the Board's proposed rule would require financial 

institutions and creditors that are subject to the Board's rule to 

implement a written identity theft program that includes reasonable 

policies and procedures to address the risk of identity theft to its 

customers and the safety and soundness of the financial institution or 

creditor. Many of these entities also are subject to the Interagency 

Guidelines Establishing Standards for Safeguarding Customer Information 

(see 12 CFR part 208, appendix D-1) and rules of the Department of the 

Treasury that require these entities to implement customer 

identification programs (see 31 CFR 103.121).

    Programs adopted pursuant to these requirements would include 

policies and procedures that would safeguard against the theft of 

customer information and would be considered complementary to the 

identity theft prevention program that would be required under Sec.  

222.90. For example, proposed Sec.  222.90(d) would require that 

institutions adopt reasonable policies and procedures to, among other 

things, obtain identifying information about, and verify the identity 

of, persons opening an account. The proposed rule indicates that 

policies and procedures an institution has adopted under the Department 

of the Treasury's rules on customer identification programs would 

satisfy this requirement.

F. Discussion of Significant Alternatives

    The proposed rules would require financial institutions and 

creditors to create an Identity Theft Prevention Program, maintain a 

record of the Program, and report to the board of directors, a 

committee of the board, or senior management at least annually on 

compliance with the regulations. Credit and debit card issuers would be 

required to assess the validity of a change of address request by 

notifying the cardholder or using other means to assess the validity of 

a change of address. Users of consumer reports would be required to 

furnish an address that the user has reasonably confirmed is accurate 

to the consumer reporting agency from which it receives a notice of 

address discrepancy.

    The Board welcomes comments on any significant alternatives, 

consistent with the mandates in section 114 and 315, that would 

minimize the impact of the proposed rules on small entities.

    FDIC: In accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 

601-612) (RFA), an agency must publish an initial regulatory 

flexibility analysis with its proposed rule, unless the agency 

certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on 

a substantial number of small entities (defined for purposes of the RFA 

to include banks with less than $165 million in assets). The FDIC 

hereby certifies that the proposed rule would not have a significant 

economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

    Under the proposed rule, financial institutions and creditors must 

have a written program that includes controls to address the identity 

theft risks they have identified. With respect to credit and debit card 

issuers, the program also must include policies and procedures to 

assess the validity of change of address requests. Users of consumer 

reports must have reasonable policies and procedures with respect to 

address discrepancies. The program must be appropriate to the size and 

complexity of the financial institution or creditor and the nature and 

scope of its activities, and be flexible to address changing identity 

theft risks as they arise. A financial institution or creditor may wish 

to combine its program to prevent identity theft with its information 

security program, as these programs are complementary in many ways.

    The proposed rule would apply to all FDIC-insured state nonmember 

banks, approximately 3,400 of which are small entities. The proposed 

rule is drafted in a flexible manner that allows institutions to 

develop and implement different types of programs based upon their 

size, complexity, and the nature and scope of their activities. The 

proposed rule would also permit institutions to modify existing 

information security programs to address identity theft. The FDIC also 

believes that many institutions have already implemented a significant 

portion of the detection and mitigation efforts required by the 

proposed rule.

    OTS: When an agency issues a rulemaking proposal, the Regulatory 

Flexibility Act (RFA), requires the agency to publish an initial 

regulatory flexibility analysis unless the agency certifies that the 

rule will not have ``a significant economic impact on a substantial 

number of small entities.'' \59\ 5 U.S.C. 603, 605(b). OTS has reviewed 

the impact of the proposed regulations on small savings associations 

and certifies that that proposed regulations, if adopted as proposed, 

would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 

small entities.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \59\ Small Business Administration regulations define ``small 

entities'' to include savings associations with total assets of $165 

million or less. 13 CFR 121.201.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The proposed rulemaking would implement sections 114 and 315 of the 

FACT Act and would apply to all savings associations (and federal 

savings association operating subsidiaries that are not functionally 

regulated within the meaning of section 5(c)(5) of the Bank Holding 

Company Act),\60\ 446 of which have assets of less than or equal to 

$165 million.

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    \60\ For convenience, these entities are referred to as 

``savings associations.''

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    The proposed regulations implementing section 114 would require the 

development and establishment of a written identity theft prevention 

program to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft. The proposed 

regulations also would require card issuers to assess the validity of a 

notice of address change under certain circumstances.

    OTS believes that the proposed requirements implementing section 

114 of the FACT Act would be consistent with savings associations' 

usual and customary business practices used to minimize losses due to 

fraud in connection with new and existing accounts. Savings 

associations also are likely to have implemented most of the proposed 

requirements as a result of having to comply with other existing 

regulations and guidance. For example, savings associations are already 

subject to CIP rules requiring them to verify the identity of a person 

opening a new account.\61\ A covered entity may use the policies and 

procedures developed to comply with the CIP rules to satisfy the 

identity verification requirements in the proposed rules.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \61\ 31 CFR 103.121; 12 CFR 563.177 (savings associations).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Savings associations complying with the ``Interagency Guidelines 

Establishing Information Security



[[Page 40805]]



Standards'' \62\ and guidance recently issued by the FFIEC titled 

``Authentication in an Internet Banking Environment'' \63\ already will 

have policies and procedures in place to detect attempted and actual 

intrusions into customer information systems. Savings associations 

complying with OTS's guidance on ``Identity Theft and Pretext Calling'' 

\64\ already will have policies and procedures to verify the validity 

of change of address requests on existing accounts.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \62\ 12 CFR part 570, app. B (savings associations).

    \63\ OTS CEO Letter 228 (Oct. 12, 2005).

    \64\ ``Identity Theft and Pretext Calling,'' OTS CEO Letter 

139 (May 4, 2001).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    In addition, the flexibility incorporated into the proposed 

rulemaking provides a covered entity with discretion to design and 

implement a program that is tailored to its size and complexity and the 

nature and scope of its operations. In this regard, OTS believes that 

expenditures associated with establishing and implementing a program 

would be commensurate with the size of the savings associations.

    OTS believes that the proposed regulations implementing section 114 

would not impose undue costs on savings associations and likely would 

have a minimal economic impact on small savings associations. 

Nonetheless, OTS specifically requests comment and specific data on the 

size of the incremental burden creating a program would have on small 

savings associations, given their current practices and compliance with 

existing requirements. OTS also requests comment on how the final 

regulations might minimize any burden imposed to the extent consistent 

with the requirements of the FACT Act.

    The proposed regulations implementing section 315 would require 

users of consumer reports to have various policies and procedures to 

respond to the receipt of an address discrepancy. The FACT Act already 

requires CRAs to provide notices of address discrepancy to users of 

credit reports. OTS understands that as a matter of good business 

practice, most savings associations currently have policies and 

procedures in place to respond to these notices when they are provided 

in connection with both new and existing accounts, by furnishing an 

address for the consumer that the savings association has reasonably 

confirmed is accurate to the CRA from which it received the notice of 

address discrepancy. In addition, with respect to new accounts, a 

savings association already is required by the CIP rules to ensure that 

it knows the identity of a person opening a new account and to keep a 

record describing the resolution of any substantive discrepancy 

discovered during the verification process.

    Given current practices of savings associations in responding to 

notices of address discrepancy from CRAs, and the existing requirements 

in the CIP rule, OTS believes that the proposed regulations 

implementing section 315 would not impose undue costs on savings 

associations and likely would have a minimal economic impact on small 

savings associations. Nonetheless, OTS specifically requests comment on 

whether the proposed requirements differ from small savings 

associations' current practices and how the final regulations might 

minimize any burden imposed to the extent consistent with the 

requirements of the FACT Act.

    NCUA: The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires NCUA to prepare an 

analysis to describe any significant economic impact a regulation may 

have on a substantial number of small credit unions (primarily those 

under $10 million in assets). The NCUA certifies the proposed rule will 

not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 

credit unions and therefore, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not 

required.

    FTC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA''), 5 U.S.C. 601-612, 

requires that the Commission provide an Initial Regulatory Flexibility 

Analysis (``IRFA'') with a proposed rule and a Final Regulatory 

Flexibility Analysis (``FRFA''), if any, with the final rule, unless 

the Commission certifies that the rule will not have a significant 

economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. See 5 U.S.C. 

603-605.

    The Commission does not anticipate that the proposed regulations 

will have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 

small entities. The Commission recognizes that the proposed regulations 

will affect a substantial number of small businesses. We do not expect, 

however, that the proposed requirements will have a significant 

economic impact on these small entities.

    This document serves as notice to the Small Business Administration 

of the FTC's certification of no effect. To ensure the accuracy of this 

certification, however, the Commission requests comment on whether the 

proposed regulations will have a significant impact on a substantial 

number of small entities, including specific information on the number 

of entities that would be covered by the proposed regulations, the 

number of these companies that are ``small entities,'' and the average 

annual burden for each entity. Although the Commission certifies under 

the RFA that the regulations proposed in this notice would not, if 

promulgated, have a significant impact on a substantial number of small 

entities, the Commission has determined, nonetheless, that it is 

appropriate to publish an IRFA in order to inquire into the impact of 

the proposed regulations on small entities. Therefore, the Commission 

has prepared the following analysis:

1. Description of the Reasons That Action by the Agency Is Being Taken

    The Federal Trade Commission is charged with enforcing the 

requirements of sections 114 and 315 of the Fair and Accurate Credit 

Transactions Act of 2003 (FACT Act) (15 U.S.C. 1681m(e) and 

1681c(h)(2)), which require the agency to issue these proposed 

regulations.

2. Statement of the Objectives of, and Legal Basis for, the Proposed 

Regulations

    The objective of the proposed regulations is to establish 

guidelines for financial institutions and creditors identifying 

patterns, practices, and specific forms of activity, that indicate the 

possible existence of identity theft. In addition, the proposed 

regulations require credit and debit card issuers to establish policies 

and procedures to assess the validity of a change of address request. 

They also set out requirements for policies and procedures that a user 

of consumer reports must employ when such a user receives a notice of 

address discrepancy from a consumer reporting agency described in 

section 603(p) of the FCRA. The legal basis for the proposed 

regulations is 15 U.S.C. 1681m(e) and1681c(h)(2).

3. Small Entities To Which the Proposed Rule Will Apply

    The proposed regulations apply to a wide variety of business 

categories under the Small Business Size Standards. Generally, the 

proposed regulations would apply to financial institutions, creditors, 

and users of consumer reports. In particular, entities under FTC's 

jurisdiction covered by section 114 include State-chartered credit 

unions, non-bank lenders, mortgage brokers, automobile dealers, utility 

companies, telecommunications companies, and any other person that 

regularly participates in a credit decision, including setting the 

terms of credit. The section 315 requirements



[[Page 40806]]



apply to State-chartered credit unions, non-bank lenders, insurers, 

landlords, employers, mortgage brokers, automobile dealers, collection 

agencies, and any other person who requests a consumer report from a 

consumer reporting agency described in section 603(p) of the FCRA.

    Given the coverage of the proposed rule, a very large number of 

small entities across almost every industry could be subject to the 

Rule. For the majority of these entities, a small business is defined 

by the Small Business Administration as one whose average annual 

receipts do not exceed $6 million or who have fewer than 500 

employees.\65\

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    \65\ These numbers represent the size standards for most retail 

and service industries ($6 million total receipts) and manufacturing 

industries (500 employees). A list of the SBA's size standards for 

all industries can be found at http://www.sba.gov/size/summary-whatis.html

.



---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    Section 114: As discussed in the PRA section of this Notice, given 

the broad scope of section 114's requirements, it is difficult to 

determine with precision the number of financial institutions and 

creditors that are subject to the FTC's jurisdiction. There are 

numerous small businesses under the FTC's jurisdiction and there is no 

formal way to track them; moreover, as a whole, the entities under the 

FTC's jurisdiction are so varied that there are no general sources that 

provide a record of their existence. Nonetheless, FTC staff estimates 

that the proposed regulations implementing section 114 will affect over 

3500 financial institutions and over 11 million creditors \66 \subject 

to the FTC's jurisdiction, for a combined total of approximately 11.1 

million affected entities. Of this total, the FTC staff expects that 

well over 90% of these firms qualify as small businesses under existing 

size standards (i.e., $165 million in assets for financial institutions 

and $6.5 million in sales for many creditors), but requests comment on 

the number of small businesses that would be covered by the rule.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \66\ This estimate is derived from census data of U.S. 

businesses based on NAICS codes for businesses that market goods or 

services to consumers and businesses. 2003 County Business Patterns, 

U.S. Census Bureau (http://censtats.census.gov/cgi-bin/cbpnaic/cbpsel.pl); and 2002 Economic Census Bureau (http://www.census.gov/



gov/



---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The proposed regulations implementing Section 114 also require 

credit and debit card issuers to establish policies and procedures to 

assess the validity of a change of address request. Indeed, the 

proposed regulations require credit and debit card issuers to notify 

the cardholder or to use another means of assessing the validity of the 

change of address. FTC staff believes that there may be as many as 

3,764 credit or debit card issuers that fall under the jurisdiction of 

the FTC and that well over 90% of these firms qualify as small 

businesses under existing size standards (i.e., $165 million in assets 

for financial institutions and $6.5 million in sales for many 

creditors), but requests comment on the number of small businesses that 

would be covered by the rule.

    Section 315: As discussed in the PRA section of this Notice, given 

the broad scope of section 315's requirements, it is difficult to 

determine with precision the number of users of consumer reports that 

are subject to the FTC's jurisdiction. There are numerous small 

businesses under the FTC's jurisdiction and there is no formal way to 

track them; moreover, as a whole, the entities under the FTC's 

jurisdiction are so varied that there are no general sources that 

provide a record of their existence. Nonetheless, FTC staff estimates 

that the proposed regulations implementing section 315 will affect 

approximately 1.6 million users of consumer reports subject to the 

FTC's jurisdiction \67\ and that well over 90% of these firms qualify 

as small businesses under existing size standards (i.e., $165 million 

in assets for financial institutions and $6.5 million in sales for many 

creditors), but requests comment on the number of small businesses that 

would be covered by the rule.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------



    \67\ This estimate is derived from census data of U.S. 

businesses based on NAICS codes for businesses that market goods or 

services to consumers and businesses. 2003 County Business Patterns, 

U.S. Census Bureau (http://censtats.census.gov/cgi-bin/cbpnaic/cbpsel.pl); and 2002 Economic Census, Bureau (http://www.census.gov/



.gov/



---------------------------------------------------------------------------



4. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance Requirements

    The proposed requirements will involve some increased costs for 

affected parties. Most of these costs will be incurred by those 

required to draft identity theft Programs and annual reports. There 

will also be costs associated with training, and for credit and debit 

card issuers to establish policies and procedures to assess the 

validity of a change of address request. In addition, there will be 

costs related to developing reasonable policies and procedures that a 

user of consumer reports must employ when a user receives a notice of 

address discrepancy from a consumer reporting agency, and for 

furnishing an address that the user has reasonably confirmed is 

accurate The Commission does not expect, however, that the increased 

costs associated with proposed regulations will be significant as 

explained below.

    Section 114: The FTC staff estimates that there may be as many as 

90% of the businesses affected by the proposed rules under section 114 

that are subject to a high-risk of identity theft that qualify as small 

businesses, but staff requests comment on the number of small 

businesses that would be affected. It is likely that such entities 

already engage in various activities to minimize losses due to fraud as 

part of their usual and customary business practices. Accordingly, the 

impact of the proposed requirements would be merely incremental and not 

significant. In particular, the rule will direct many of these entities 

to consolidate their existing policies and procedures into a written 

Program and may require some additional staff training.

    The FTC expects that well over 90% of the businesses affected by 

the proposed rules under section 114 that are subject to a low risk of 

identity theft qualify as small businesses under existing size 

standards (i.e., $165 million in assets for financial institutions and 

$6.5 million in sales for many creditors), but the staff requests 

comment on the number of small businesses that would be covered by the 

rule. As discussed in the PRA section of this Notice, it is unlikely 

that such low-risk entities employ the measures to detect and address 

identity theft. Nevertheless, the proposed requirements are drafted in 

a flexible manner that allows entities to develop and implement 

different types of programs based upon their size, complexity, and the 

nature and scope of their activities. As a result, the FTC staff 

expects that the burden on these low-risk entities will be minimal 

(i.e., not significant). The proposed regulations would require low-

risk entities that have no existing identity theft procedures to 

justify in writing their low-risk of identity theft, train staff to be 

attentive to future risks of identity theft, and prepare the annual 

report. The FTC staff believes that, for the affected low-risk 

entities, such activities will not be complex or resource-intensive 

tasks.

    The proposed regulations implementing Section 114 also require 

credit and debit card issuers to establish policies and procedures to 

assess the validity of a change of address request. It is likely that 

most of the entities have automated the process of notifying the 

cardholder or using other means to assess the validity of the change of 

address such that implementation will pose no further burden. For those 

that do not, the FTC staff expects that a small number of such entities 

(100) will need to develop policies and procedures to assess the 

validity of a change of



[[Page 40807]]



address request. The impacts on such entities should not be 

significant, however.

    Section 315: The regulations implementing section 315 provide 

guidance regarding reasonable policies and procedures that a user of 

consumer reports must employ when a user receives a notice of address 

discrepancy from a consumer reporting agency. The proposed regulations 

also require a user of consumer reports to furnish an address that the 

user has reasonably confirmed is accurate to the consumer reporting 

agency from which it receives a notice of address discrepancy, but only 

to the extent that such user regularly and in the ordinary course of 

business furnishes information to such consumer reporting agency. The 

FTC staff believes that the impacts on users of consumer reports that 

are small businesses will not be significant. As discussed in the PRA 

section of this Notice, the FTC staff believes that it will not take 

users of consumer reports under FTC jurisdiction a significant amount 

of time to develop policies and procedures that they will employ when 

they receive a notice of address discrepancy. FTC staff believes that 

only 10,000 of such users of consumer reports furnish information to 

consumer reporting agencies as part of their usual and customary 

business practices and that approximately 20% of these entities qualify 

as small businesses. Therefore, the staff estimates that 2,000 small 

businesses will be affected by this portion of the proposed regulation 

that requires furnishing the correct address. As discussed in the PRA 

section of this Notice, FTC staff estimates that it will not take such 

users of consumer reports a significant amount of time to develop the 

policies and procedures for furnishing the correct address to the 

consumer reporting agencies pursuant to the proposed regulations for 

implementing section 315. The FTC staff estimates that the costs 

associated with these impacts will not be significant.

    The Commission does not expect that there will be any significant 

legal, professional, or training costs to comply with the Rule. 

Although it is not possible to estimate small businesses' compliance 

costs precisely, such costs are likely to be quite modest for most 

small entities. Nonetheless, because the Commission is concerned about 

the potential impact of the proposed Rule on small entities, it 

specifically invites comment on the costs of compliance for such 

parties. In particular, although the Commission does not expect that 

small entities will require legal assistance to meet the proposed 

Rule's requirements, the Commission requests comment on whether small 

entities believe that they will incur such costs and, if so, what they 

will be. In addition, the Commission requests comment on the costs, if 

any, of training relevant employees regarding the proposed 

requirements. The Commission invites comment and information on these 

issues.

5. Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal Rules

    The Commission has not identified any other federal statutes, 

rules, or policies that would duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the 

proposed Rule. The Commission invites comment and information on this 

issue.

6. Significant Alternatives to the Proposed Rule

    The standards in the proposed Rule are flexible, and take into 

account a covered entity's size and sophistication, as well as the 

costs and benefits of alternative compliance methods. Nevertheless, the 

Commission seeks comment and information on the need, if any, for 

alternative compliance methods that, consistent with the statutory 

requirements, would reduce the economic impact of the rule on such 

small entities, including the need, if any, to delay the rule's 

effective date to provide additional time for small business 

compliance.

    If the comments filed in response to this notice identify small 

entities that are affected by the rule, as well as alternative methods 

of compliance that would reduce the economic impact of the rule on such 

entities, the Commission will consider the feasibility of such 

alternatives and determine whether they should be incorporated into the 

final rule.



C. OCC and OTS Executive Order 12866 Determination



    The OCC and the OTS each has determined that this proposed 

rulemaking, mandated by sections 114 and 315 of the FACT Act, is not a 

significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.

    The OCC and OTS believe that national banks and savings 

associations, respectively, already have procedures in place that 

fulfill many of the requirements of the proposed regulations because 

they are consistent with institutions' usual and customary business 

practices used to minimize losses due to fraud in connection with new 

and existing accounts. Institutions also are likely to have implemented 

many of the proposed requirements as a result of complying with other 

existing regulations and guidance. For these reasons, and for the 

reasons discussed elsewhere in this preamble, the OCC and OTS each 

believes that the burden stemming from this rulemaking will not cause 

the proposed rules to be a ``significant regulatory action.''

    Nevertheless, because the proposed rulemaking implements new 

statutory requirements, it may impose costs on some national banks and 

savings associations by requiring them to formalize or enhance their 

existing policies and procedures. Therefore, the OCC and OTS invite 

national banks, savings associations and the public to provide any cost 

estimates and related data that they think would be useful in 

evaluating the overall costs of this rulemaking. The OCC and OTS will 

review any comments and cost data provided carefully, and will revisit 

the cost aspects of the proposed rules in developing final rules.



D. OCC and OTS Executive Order 13132 Determination



    The OCC and the OTS each has determined that this proposal does not 

have any federalism implications for purposes of Executive Order 13132.



E. NCUA Executive Order 13132 Determination



    Executive Order 13132 encourages independent regulatory agencies to 

consider the impact of their actions on State and local interests. In 

adherence to fundamental federalism principles, the NCUA, an 

independent regulatory agency as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5) 

voluntarily complies with the Executive Order. The proposed rule 

applies only to federally chartered credit unions and would not have 

substantial direct effects on the States, on the connection between the 

national government and the States, or on the distribution of power and 

responsibilities among the various levels of government. The NCUA has 

determined that this proposed rule does not constitute a policy that 

has federalism implications for purposes of the Executive Order.



F. OCC and OTS Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 Determination



    Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, Public Law 

104-4 (Unfunded Mandates Act) requires that an agency prepare a 

budgetary impact statement before promulgating a rule that includes a 

Federal mandate that may result in expenditure by State, local, and 

tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100 

million or more in any one year (adjusted annually for inflation). If a 

budgetary impact



[[Page 40808]]



statement is required section 205 of the Unfunded Mandates Act also 

requires an agency to identify and consider a reasonable number of 

regulatory alternatives before promulgating a rule.

    The OCC and OTS each believes that the financial institutions 

subject to their jurisdiction covered by the proposed rules already 

have identity theft prevention programs because it is a sound business 

practice. In addition, key elements of the proposed rules are elements 

in existing regulations and guidance. Therefore, the OCC and OTS each 

has determined that this proposed rule will not result in expenditures 

by State, local, and tribal governments, or by the private sector, that 

exceed the expenditure threshold. Accordingly, neither the OCC nor OTS 

has prepared a budgetary impact statement or specifically addressed 

regulatory alternatives considered.



G. NCUA: The Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999--

Assessment of Federal Regulations and Policies on Families



    The NCUA has determined that this proposed rule would not affect 

family well-being within the meaning of section 654 of the Treasury and 

General Government Appropriations Act, 1999, Pub. L. 105-277, 112 Stat. 

2681 (1998).



H. Community Bank Comment Request



    The Agencies invite your comments on the impact of this proposal on 

community banks. The Agencies recognize that community banks operate 

with more limited resources than larger institutions and may present a 

different risk profile. Thus, the Agencies specifically request comment 

on the impact of the proposal on community banks' current resources and 

available personnel with the requisite expertise, and whether the goals 

of the proposal could be achieved, for community banks, through an 

alternative approach.



V. Solicitation of Comments on Use of Plain Language



    Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, Pub. L. 106-102, sec. 

722, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (Nov. 12, 1999), requires the OCC, Board, 

FDIC, and OTS to use plain language in all proposed and final rules 

published after January 1, 2000. Therefore, these agencies specifically 

invite your comments on how to make this proposal easier to understand. 

For example:

     Have we organized the material to suit your needs? If not, 

how could this material be better organized?

     Are the requirements in the proposed guidelines and 

regulations clearly stated? If not, how could the guidelines and 

regulations be more clearly stated?

     Do the proposed guidelines and regulations contain 

language or jargon that is not clear? If so, which language requires 

clarification?

     Would a different format (grouping and order of sections, 

use of headings, paragraphing) make the guidelines and regulations 

easier to understand? If so, what changes to the format would make them 

easier to understand?

     What else could we do to make the guidelines and 

regulations easier to understand?



VI. Communications by Outside Parties to FTC Commissioners or Their 

Advisors



    Written communications and summaries or transcripts of oral 

communications respecting the merits of this proceeding from any 

outside party to any FTC Commissioner or FTC Commissioner's advisor 

will be placed on the public record. See 16 CFR 1.26(b)(5).



List of Subjects



12 CFR Part 41



    Banks, banking, Consumer protection, National Banks, Reporting and 

recordkeeping requirements.



12 CFR Part 222



    Banks, banking, Holding companies, state member banks.



12 CFR Part 334



    Administrative practice and procedure, Bank deposit insurance, 

Banks, Banking, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Safety and 

soundness.



12 CFR Part 364



    Administrative practice and procedure, Bank deposit insurance, 

Banks, Banking, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Safety and 

Soundness.



12 CFR Part 571



    Consumer protection, Credit, Fair Credit Reporting Act, Privacy, 

Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations.



12 CFR Part 717



    Consumer protection, Credit unions, Fair credit reporting, Privacy, 

Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.



16 CFR Part 681



    Fair Credit Reporting Act, Consumer reports, Consumer report users, 

Consumer reporting agencies, Credit, Creditors, Information furnishers, 

Identity theft, Trade practices.



Department of the Treasury



Office of the Comptroller of the Currency



12 CFR Chapter I



Authority and Issuance



    For the reasons discussed in the joint preamble, the Office of the 

Comptroller of the Currency proposes to amend chapter I of title 12 of 

the Code of Federal Regulations by amending 12 CFR part 41 as follows:



PART 41--FAIR CREDIT REPORTING



    1. The authority citation for part 41 is revised to read as 

follows:



    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 24(Seventh), 93a, 481, and 1818; 

15 U.S.C. 1681c, 1681m, 1681s, 1681w, 6801 and 6805.



Subpart A--General Provisions



    2. Amend Sec.  41.3 by revising the introductory text to read as 

follows:





Sec.  41.3  Definitions.



    For purposes of this part, unless explicitly stated otherwise:

* * * * *



Subpart I--Duties of Users of Consumer Reports Regarding Address 

Discrepancies and Records Disposal



    3. Revise the heading for Subpart I as shown above.

    4. Add Sec.  41.82 to read as follows:





Sec.  41.82  Duties of users regarding address discrepancies.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to users of consumer reports that 

receive notices of address discrepancies from credit reporting agencies 

(referred to as ``users''), and that are national banks, Federal 

branches and agencies of foreign banks, and any of their operating 

subsidiaries that are not functionally regulated within the meaning of 

section 5(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended (12 

U.S.C. 1844(c)(5)).

    (b) Definition. For purposes of this section, a notice of address 

discrepancy means a notice sent to a user of a consumer report by a 

consumer reporting agency pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1681c(h)(1), that 

informs the user of a substantial difference between the address for 

the consumer that the user provided to request the consumer report and 

the address(es) in the agency's file for the consumer.

    (c) Requirement to form a reasonable belief. A user must develop 

and implement reasonable policies and procedures for verifying the 

identity of the consumer for whom it has obtained a consumer report and 

for whom it



[[Page 40809]]



receives a notice of address discrepancy. These policies and procedures 

must be designed to enable the user either to form a reasonable belief 

that it knows the identity of the consumer or determine that it cannot 

do so. A user that employs the policies and procedures regarding 

identification and verification set forth in the Customer 

Identification Program (CIP) rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 5318(l) under 

these circumstances satisfies this requirement, whether or not the user 

is subject to the CIP rules.

    (d) Consumer's address (1) Requirement to furnish consumer's 

address to a consumer reporting agency. A user must develop and 

implement reasonable policies and procedures for furnishing an address 

for the consumer that the user has reasonably confirmed is accurate to 

the consumer reporting agency from whom it received the notice of 

address discrepancy when the user:

    (i) Can form a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the 

consumer for whom the consumer report was obtained;

    (ii) Establishes or maintains a continuing relationship with the 

consumer; and

    (iii) Regularly and in the ordinary course of business furnishes 

information to the consumer reporting agency from which the notice of 

address discrepancy pertaining to the consumer was obtained.

    (2) Requirement to confirm consumer's address. The user may 

reasonably confirm an address is accurate by:

    (i) Verifying the address with the person to whom the consumer 

report pertains;

    (ii) Reviewing its own records of the address provided to request 

the consumer report;

    (iii) Verifying the address through third-party sources; or

    (iv) Using other reasonable means.

    (3) Timing. The policies and procedures developed in accordance 

with paragraph (d)(1) of this section must provide that the user will 

furnish the consumer's address that the user has reasonably confirmed 

is accurate to the consumer reporting agency as part of the information 

it regularly furnishes:

    (i) With respect to new relationships, for the reporting period in 

which it establishes a relationship with the consumer; and

    (ii) In other circumstances, for the reporting period in which the 

user confirms the accuracy of the address of the consumer.

    5. Add Subpart J to part 41 to read as follows:



Subpart J--Identity Theft Red Flags





Sec.  41.90  Duties regarding the detection, prevention, and mitigation 

of identity theft.



    (a) Purpose and scope. This section implements section 114 of the 

Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681m, which 

amends section 615 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). It applies 

to financial institutions and creditors that are national banks, 

Federal branches and agencies of foreign banks, and any of their 

operating subsidiaries that are not functionally regulated within the 

meaning of section 5(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as 

amended (12 U.S.C. 1844(c)(5)).

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 

definitions apply:

    (1) Account means a continuing relationship established to provide 

a financial product or service that a financial holding company could 

offer by engaging in an activity that is financial in nature or 

incidental to such a financial activity under section 4(k) of the Bank 

Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1843(k). Account includes:

    (i) An extension of credit for personal, family, household or 

business purposes, such as a credit card account, margin account, or 

retail installment sales contract, such as a car loan or lease; and

    (ii) A demand deposit, savings or other asset account for personal, 

family, household, or business purposes, such as a checking or savings 

account.

    (2) The term board of directors includes:

    (i) In the case of a foreign branch or agency of a foreign bank, 

the managing official in charge of the branch or agency; and

    (ii) In the case of any other creditor that does not have a board 

of directors, a designated employee.

    (3) Customer means a person that has an account with a financial 

institution or creditor.

    (4) Identity theft has the same meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).

    (5) Red Flag means a pattern, practice, or specific activity that 

indicates the possible risk of identity theft.

    (6) Service provider means a person that provides a service 

directly to the financial institution or creditor.

    (c) Identity Theft Prevention Program. Each financial institution 

or creditor must implement a written Identity Theft Prevention Program 

(Program). The Program must include reasonable policies and procedures 

to address the risk of identity theft to its customers and the safety 

and soundness of the financial institution or creditor, including 

financial, operational, compliance, reputation, and litigation risks, 

in the manner discussed in paragraph (d) of this section. The Program 

must be:

    (1) Appropriate to the size and complexity of the financial 

institution or creditor and the nature and scope of its activities; and

    (2) Designed to address changing identity theft risks as they arise 

in connection with the experiences of the financial institution or 

creditor with identity theft, and changes in methods of identity theft, 

methods to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft, the types of 

accounts it offers, and business arrangements, including mergers, 

acquisitions, alliances, joint ventures, and service provider 

arrangements.

    (d) Development and implementation of Program. (1) Identification 

and evaluation of Red Flags. (i) Risk-based Red Flags. The Program must 

include policies and procedures to identify Red Flags, singly or in 

combination, that are relevant to detecting a possible risk of identity 

theft to customers or to the safety and soundness of the financial 

institution or creditor, using the risk evaluation set forth in 

paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section. The Red Flags identified must 

reflect changing identity theft risks to customers and to the financial 

institution or creditor as they arise. At a minimum, the Program must 

incorporate any relevant Red Flags from:

    (A) Appendix J to this part;

    (B) Applicable supervisory guidance;

    (C) Incidents of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has experienced; and

    (D) Methods of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has identified that reflect changes in identity theft risks.

    (ii) Risk evaluation. In identifying which Red Flags are relevant, 

the financial institution or creditor must consider:

    (A) Which of its accounts are subject to a risk of identity theft;

    (B) The methods it provides to open these accounts;

    (C) The methods it provides to access these accounts; and

    (D) Its size, location, and customer base.

    (2) Identity theft prevention and mitigation. The Program must 

include reasonable policies and procedures designed to prevent and 

mitigate identity theft in connection with the opening of an account or 

any existing account, including policies and procedures to:

    (i) Obtain identifying information about, and verify the identity 

of, a person opening an account. A financial institution or creditor 

that uses the policies and procedures regarding



[[Page 40810]]



identification and verification set forth in the Customer 

Identification Program (CIP) rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 5318(l), 

under these circumstances, satisfies this requirement whether or not 

the user is subject to the CIP rules;

    (ii) Detect the Red Flags identified pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) 

of this section;

    (iii) Assess whether the Red Flags detected pursuant to paragraph 

(d)(2)(ii) of this section evidence a risk of identity theft. An 

institution or creditor must have a reasonable basis for concluding 

that a Red Flag does not evidence a risk of identity theft; and

    (iv) Address the risk of identity theft, commensurate with the 

degree of risk posed, such as by:

    (A) Monitoring an account for evidence of identity theft;

    (B) Contacting the customer;

    (C) Changing any passwords, security codes, or other security 

devices that permit access to a customer's account;

    (D) Reopening an account with a new account number;

    (E) Not opening a new account;

    (F) Closing an existing account;

    (G) Notifying law enforcement and, for those that are subject to 31 

U.S.C. 5318(g), filing a Suspicious Activity Report in accordance with 

applicable law and regulation;

    (H) Implementing any requirements regarding limitations on credit 

extensions under 15 U.S.C. 1681c-1(h), such as declining to issue an 

additional credit card when the financial institution or creditor 

detects a fraud or active duty alert associated with the opening of an 

account, or an existing account; or

    (I) Implementing any requirements for furnishers of information to 

consumer reporting agencies under 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2, to correct or 

update inaccurate or incomplete information.

    (3) Staff training. Each financial institution or creditor must 

train staff to implement its Program.

    (4) Oversight of service provider arrangements. Whenever a 

financial institution or creditor engages a service provider to perform 

an activity on its behalf and the requirements of its Program are 

applicable to that activity (such as account opening), the financial 

institution or creditor must take steps designed to ensure that the 

activity is conducted in compliance with a Program that meets the 

requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.

    (5) Involvement of board of directors and senior management. (i) 

Board approval. The board of directors or an appropriate committee of 

the board must approve the written Program.

    (ii) Oversight by board or senior management. The board of 

directors, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior management 

must oversee the development, implementation, and maintenance of the 

Program, including assigning specific responsibility for its 

implementation, and reviewing annual reports prepared by staff 

regarding compliance by the financial institution or creditor with this 

section.

    (iii) Reports. (A) In general. Staff of the financial institution 

or creditor responsible for implementation of its Program must report 

to the board, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior 

management, at least annually, on compliance by the financial 

institution or creditor with this section.

    (B) Contents of report. The report must discuss material matters 

related to the Program and evaluate issues such as: the effectiveness 

of the policies and procedures of the financial institution or creditor 

in addressing the risk of identity theft in connection with the opening 

of accounts and with respect to existing accounts; service provider 

arrangements; significant incidents involving identity theft and 

management's response; and recommendations for changes in the Program.





Sec.  41.91  Duties of card issuers regarding changes of address.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to a person described in Sec.  

41.90(a) that issues a debit or credit card.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:

    (1) Cardholder means a consumer who has been issued a credit or 

debit card.

    (2) Clear and conspicuous means reasonably understandable and 

designed to call attention to the nature and significance of the 

information presented.

    (c) In general. A card issuer must establish and implement 

reasonable policies and procedures to assess the validity of a change 

of address if it receives notification of a change of address for a 

consumer's debit or credit card account and within a short period of 

time afterwards (during at least the first 30 days after it receives 

such notification), the card issuer receives a request for an 

additional or replacement card for the same account. Under these 

circumstances, the card issuer may not issue an additional or 

replacement card, unless, in accordance with its reasonable policies 

and procedures and for the purpose of assessing the validity of the 

change of address, the card issuer:

    (1) Notifies the cardholder of the request at the cardholder's 

former address and provides to the cardholder a means of promptly 

reporting incorrect address changes;

    (2) Notifies the cardholder of the request by any other means of 

communication that the card issuer and the cardholder have previously 

agreed to use; or

    (3) Uses other means of assessing the validity of the change of 

address, in accordance with the policies and procedures the card issuer 

has established pursuant to Sec.  41.90.

    (d) Form of notice. Any written or electronic notice that the card 

issuer provides under this paragraph shall be clear and conspicuous and 

provided separately from its regular correspondence with the 

cardholder.

    6. Reserve appendices B through I to part 41.

    7. Add Appendix J to part 41 to read as follows:



    Appendix J to Part 41--Interagency Guidelines on Identity Theft 



Detection, Prevention, and MitigationRed Flags in Connection With 

an Account Application or an Existing Account Information From a 

Consumer Reporting Agency



    1. A fraud or active duty alert is included with a consumer 

report.

    2. A notice of address discrepancy is provided by a consumer 

reporting agency.

    3. A consumer report indicates a pattern of activity that is 

inconsistent with the history and usual pattern of activity of an 

applicant or customer, such as:

    a. A recent and significant increase in the volume of inquiries.

    b. An unusual number of recently established credit 

relationships.

    c. A material change in the use of credit, especially with 

respect to recently established credit relationships.

    d. An account was closed for cause or identified for abuse of 

account privileges by a financial institution or creditor.



Documentary Identification



    4. Documents provided for identification appear to have been 

altered.

    5. The photograph or physical description on the identification 

is not consistent with the appearance of the applicant or customer 

presenting the identification.

    6. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information provided by the person opening a new account or 

customer presenting the identification.

    7. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information that is on file, such as a signature card.



Personal Information



    8. Personal information provided is inconsistent when compared 

against external information sources. For example:

    a. The address does not match any address in the consumer 

report; or

    b. The Social Security Number (SSN) has not been issued, or is 

listed on the Social Security Administration's Death Master File.

    9. Personal information provided is internally inconsistent. For 

example, there is



[[Page 40811]]



a lack of correlation between the SSN range and date of birth.

    10. Personal information provided is associated with known 

fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is the same as the address 

provided on a fraudulent application; or

    b. The phone number on an application is the same as the number 

provided on a fraudulent application.

    11. Personal information provided is of a type commonly 

associated with fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is fictitious, a mail drop, or 

prison.

    b. The phone number is invalid, or is associated with a pager or 

answering service.

    12. The address, SSN, or home or cell phone number provided is 

the same as that submitted by other persons opening an account or 

other customers.

    13. The person opening the account or the customer fails to 

provide all required information on an application.

    14. Personal information provided is not consistent with 

information that is on file.

    15. The person opening the account or the customer cannot 

provide authenticating information beyond that which generally would 

be available from a wallet or consumer report.



Address Changes



    16. Shortly following the notice of a change of address for an 

account, the institution or creditor receives a request for new, 

additional, or replacement checks, convenience checks, cards, or a 

cell phone, or for the addition of authorized users on the account.

    17. Mail sent to the customer is returned as undeliverable 

although transactions continue to be conducted in connection with 

the customer's account.



Anomalous Use of the Account



    18. A new revolving credit account is used in a manner commonly 

associated with fraud. For example:

    a. The majority of available credit is used for cash advances or 

merchandise that is easily convertible to cash (e.g., electronics 

equipment or jewelry); or

    b. The customer fails to make the first payment or makes an 

initial payment but no subsequent payments.

    19. An account is used in a manner that is not consistent with 

established patterns of activity on the account. There is, for 

example:

    a. Nonpayment when there is no history of late or missed 

payments;

    b. A material increase in the use of available credit;

    c. A material change in purchasing or spending patterns;

    d. A material change in electronic fund transfer patterns in 

connection with a deposit account; or

    e. A material change in telephone call patterns in connection 

with a cellular phone account.

    20. An account that has been inactive for a reasonably lengthy 

period of time is used (taking into consideration the type of 

account, the expected pattern of usage and other relevant factors).



Notice from Customers or Others Regarding Customer Accounts



    21. The financial institution or creditor is notified of 

unauthorized charges in connection with a customer's account.

    22. The financial institution or creditor is notified that it 

has opened a fraudulent account for a person engaged in identity 

theft.

    23. The financial institution or creditor is notified that the 

customer is not receiving account statements.

    24. The financial institution or creditor is notified that its 

customer has provided information to someone fraudulently claiming 

to represent the financial institution or creditor or to a 

fraudulent website.

    25. Electronic messages are returned to mail servers of the 

financial institution or creditor that it did not originally send, 

indicating that its customers may have been asked to provide 

information to a fraudulent website that looks very similar, if not 

identical, to the website of the financial institution or creditor.



Other Red Flags



    26. The name of an employee of the financial institution or 

creditor has been added as an authorized user on an account.

    27. An employee has accessed or downloaded an unusually large 

number of customer account records.

    28. The financial institution or creditor detects attempts to 

access a customer's account by unauthorized persons.

    29. The financial institution or creditor detects or is informed 

of unauthorized access to a customer's personal information.

    30. There are unusually frequent and large check orders in 

connection with a customer's account.

    31. The person opening an account or the customer is unable to 

lift a credit freeze placed on his or her consumer report.



Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System



12 CFR Chapter II



Authority and Issuance



    For the reasons discussed in the joint preamble, the Board of 

Governors of the Federal Reserve System proposes to amend chapter II of 

title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations by amending 12 CFR part 222 

as follows:



PART 222--FAIR CREDIT REPORTING (REGULATION V)



    1. The authority citation for part 222 is revised to read as 

follows:



    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1681b, 1681c, 1681m and 1681s; Secs. 3, 

214, and 216, Pub. L. 108-159, 117 Stat. 1952.



    2. Amend Sec.  222.3 by revising the introductory text to read as 

follows:



Subpart A--General Provisions



* * * * *





Sec.  222.3  Definitions.



    For purposes of this part, unless explicitly stated otherwise:

* * * * *

    3. Revise the heading for Subpart I to read as follows:



Subpart I--Duties of Users of Consumer Reports Regarding Address 

Discrepancies and Records Disposal



    4. Add Sec.  222.82 to read as follows:





Sec.  222.82  Duties of users regarding address discrepancies.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to users of consumer reports that 

receive notices of address discrepancies from credit reporting agencies 

(referred to as ``users''), and that are member banks of the Federal 

Reserve System (other than national banks) and their respective 

operating subsidiaries, branches and Agencies of foreign banks (other 

than Federal branches, Federal Agencies, and insured State branches of 

foreign banks), commercial lending companies owned or controlled by 

foreign banks, and organizations operating under section 25 or 25A of 

the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 601 et seq., and 611 et seq.).

    (b) Definition. For purposes of this section, a notice of address 

discrepancy means a notice sent to a user of a consumer report by a 

consumer reporting agency pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1681c(h)(1), that 

informs the user of a substantial difference between the address for 

the consumer that the user provided to request the consumer report and 

the address(es) in the agency's file for the consumer.

    (c) Requirement to form a reasonable belief. A user must develop 

and implement reasonable policies and procedures for verifying the 

identity of the consumer for whom it has obtained a consumer report and 

for whom it receives a notice of address discrepancy. These policies 

and procedures must be designed to enable the user either to form a 

reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the consumer or 

determine that it cannot do so. A user that employs the policies and 

procedures regarding identification and verification set forth in the 

Customer Identification Program (CIP) rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 

5318(l) under these circumstances satisfies this requirement, whether 

or not the user is subject to the CIP rules.

    (d) Consumer's address. (1) Requirement to furnish consumer's 

address to a consumer reporting agency. A user must develop and 

implement reasonable policies and procedures for furnishing an address 

for the consumer that the user has reasonably confirmed



[[Page 40812]]



is accurate to the consumer reporting agency from whom it received the 

notice of address discrepancy when the user:

    (i) Can form a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the 

consumer for whom the consumer report was obtained;

    (ii) Establishes or maintains a continuing relationship with the 

consumer; and

    (iii) Regularly and in the ordinary course of business furnishes 

information to the consumer reporting agency from which the notice of 

address discrepancy pertaining to the consumer was obtained.

    (2) Requirement to confirm consumer's address. The user may 

reasonably confirm an address is accurate by:

    (i) Verifying the address with the person to whom the consumer 

report pertains;

    (ii) Reviewing its own records of the address provided to request 

the consumer report;

    (iii) Verifying the address through third-party sources; or

    (iv) Using other reasonable means.

    (3) Timing. The policies and procedures developed in accordance 

with paragraph (d)(1) of this section must provide that the user will 

furnish the consumer's address that the user has reasonably confirmed 

is accurate to the consumer reporting agency as part of the information 

it regularly furnishes:

    (i) With respect to new relationships, for the reporting period in 

which it establishes a relationship with the consumer; and

    (ii) In other circumstances, for the reporting period in which the 

user confirms the accuracy of the address of the consumer.

    5. Add Subpart J to part 222 to read as follows:



Subpart J--Identity Theft Red Flags





Sec.  222.90  Duties regarding the detection, prevention, and 

mitigation of identity theft.



    (a) Purpose and scope. This section implements section 114 of the 

Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681m, which 

amends section 615 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). It applies 

to financial institutions and creditors that are member banks of the 

Federal Reserve System (other than national banks) and their respective 

operating subsidiaries, branches and Agencies of foreign banks (other 

than Federal branches, Federal Agencies, and insured State branches of 

foreign banks), commercial lending companies owned or controlled by 

foreign banks, and organizations operating under section 25 or 25A of 

the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 601 et seq., and 611 et seq.).

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 

definitions apply:

    (1) Account means a continuing relationship established to provide 

a financial product or service that a financial holding company could 

offer by engaging in an activity that is financial in nature or 

incidental to such a financial activity under section 4(k) of the Bank 

Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1843(k). Account includes:

    (i) An extension of credit for personal, family, household or 

business purposes, such as a credit card account, margin account, or 

retail installment sales contract, such as a car loan or lease; and

    (ii) A demand deposit, savings or other asset account for personal, 

family, household, or business purposes, such as a checking or savings 

account.

    (2) The term board of directors includes:

    (i) In the case of a foreign branch or agency of a foreign bank, 

the managing official in charge of the branch or agency; and

    (ii) In the case of any other creditor that does not have a board 

of directors, a designated employee.

    (3) Customer means a person that has an account with a financial 

institution or creditor.

    (4) Identity theft has the same meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).

    (5) Red Flag means a pattern, practice, or specific activity that 

indicates the possible risk of identity theft.

    (6) Service provider means a person that provides a service 

directly to the financial institution or creditor.

    (c) Identity Theft Prevention Program. Each financial institution 

or creditor must implement a written Identity Theft Prevention Program 

(Program). The Program must include reasonable policies and procedures 

to address the risk of identity theft to its customers and the safety 

and soundness of the financial institution or creditor, including 

financial, operational, compliance, reputation, and litigation risks, 

in the manner discussed in paragraph (d) of this section. The Program 

must be:

    (1) Appropriate to the size and complexity of the financial 

institution or creditor and the nature and scope of its activities; and

    (2) Designed to address changing identity theft risks as they arise 

in connection with the experiences of the financial institution or 

creditor with identity theft, and changes in methods of identity theft, 

methods to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft, the types of 

accounts it offers, and business arrangements, including mergers, 

acquisitions, alliances, joint ventures, and service provider 

arrangements.

    (d) Development and implementation of Program. (1) Identification 

and evaluation of Red Flags. (i) Risk-based Red Flags. The Program must 

include policies and procedures to identify Red Flags, singly or in 

combination, that are relevant to detecting a possible risk of identity 

theft to customers or to the safety and soundness of the financial 

institution or creditor, using the risk evaluation set forth in 

paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section. The Red Flags identified must 

reflect changing identity theft risks to customers and to the financial 

institution or creditor as they arise. At a minimum, the Program must 

incorporate any relevant Red Flags from:

    (A) Appendix J to this part;

    (B) Applicable supervisory guidance;

    (C) Incidents of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has experienced; and

    (D) Methods of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has identified that reflect changes in identity theft risks.

    (ii) Risk evaluation. In identifying which Red Flags are relevant, 

the financial institution or creditor must consider:

    (A) Which of its accounts are subject to a risk of identity theft;

    (B) The methods it provides to open these accounts;

    (C) The methods it provides to access these accounts; and

    (D) Its size, location, and customer base.

    (2) Identity theft prevention and mitigation. The Program must 

include reasonable policies and procedures designed to prevent and 

mitigate identity theft in connection with the opening of an account or 

any existing account, including policies and procedures to:

    (i) Obtain identifying information about, and verify the identity 

of, a person opening an account. A financial institution or creditor 

that uses the policies and procedures regarding identification and 

verification set forth in the Customer Identification Program (CIP) 

rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 5318(l), under these circumstances, 

satisfies this requirement whether or not the user is subject to the 

CIP rules;

    (ii) Detect the Red Flags identified pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) 

of this section;

    (iii) Assess whether the Red Flags detected pursuant to paragraph 

(d)(2)(ii) of this section evidence a risk of identity theft. An 

institution or creditor must have a reasonable basis for concluding



[[Page 40813]]



that a Red Flag does not evidence a risk of identity theft; and

    (iv) Address the risk of identity theft, commensurate with the 

degree of risk posed, such as by:

    (A) Monitoring an account for evidence of identity theft;

    (B) Contacting the customer;

    (C) Changing any passwords, security codes, or other security 

devices that permit access to a customer's account;

    (D) Reopening an account with a new account number;

    (E) Not opening a new account;

    (F) Closing an existing account;

    (G) Notifying law enforcement and, for those that are subject to 31 

U.S.C. 5318(g), filing a Suspicious Activity Report in accordance with 

applicable law and regulation;

    (H) Implementing any requirements regarding limitations on credit 

extensions under 15 U.S.C. 1681c-1(h), such as declining to issue an 

additional credit card when the financial institution or creditor 

detects a fraud or active duty alert associated with the opening of an 

account, or an existing account; or

    (I) Implementing any requirements for furnishers of information to 

consumer reporting agencies under 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2, to correct or 

update inaccurate or incomplete information.

    (3) Staff training. Each financial institution or creditor must 

train staff to implement its Program.

    (4) Oversight of service provider arrangements. Whenever a 

financial institution or creditor engages a service provider to perform 

an activity on its behalf and the requirements of its Program are 

applicable to that activity (such as account opening), the financial 

institution or creditor must take steps designed to ensure that the 

activity is conducted in compliance with a Program that meets the 

requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.

    (5) Involvement of board of directors and senior management. (i) 

Board approval. The board of directors or an appropriate committee of 

the board must approve the written Program.

    (ii) Oversight by board or senior management. The board of 

directors, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior management 

must oversee the development, implementation, and maintenance of the 

Program, including assigning specific responsibility for its 

implementation, and reviewing annual reports prepared by staff 

regarding compliance by the financial institution or creditor with this 

section.

    (iii) Reports. (A) In general. Staff of the financial institution 

or creditor responsible for implementation of its Program must report 

to the board, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior 

management, at least annually, on compliance by the financial 

institution or creditor with this section.

    (B) Contents of report. The report must discuss material matters 

related to the Program and evaluate issues such as: the effectiveness 

of the policies and procedures of the financial institution or creditor 

in addressing the risk of identity theft in connection with the opening 

of accounts and with respect to existing accounts; service provider 

arrangements; significant incidents involving identity theft and 

management's response; and recommendations for changes in the Program.





Sec.  222.91  Duties of card issuers regarding changes of address.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to a person described in Sec.  

222.90(a) that issues a debit or credit card.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:

    (1) Cardholder means a consumer who has been issued a credit or 

debit card.

    (2) Clear and conspicuous means reasonably understandable and 

designed to call attention to the nature and significance of the 

information presented.

    (c) In general. A card issuer must establish and implement 

reasonable policies and procedures to assess the validity of a change 

of address if it receives notification of a change of address for a 

consumer's debit or credit card account and within a short period of 

time afterwards (during at least the first 30 days after it receives 

such notification), the card issuer receives a request for an 

additional or replacement card for the same account. Under these 

circumstances, the card issuer may not issue an additional or 

replacement card, unless, in accordance with its reasonable policies 

and procedures and for the purpose of assessing the validity of the 

change of address, the card issuer:

    (1) Notifies the cardholder of the request at the cardholder's 

former address and provides to the cardholder a means of promptly 

reporting incorrect address changes;

    (2) Notifies the cardholder of the request by any other means of 

communication that the card issuer and the cardholder have previously 

agreed to use; or

    (3) Uses other means of assessing the validity of the change of 

address, in accordance with the policies and procedures the card issuer 

has established pursuant to section 222.90.

    (d) Form of notice. Any written or electronic notice that the card 

issuer provides under this paragraph shall be clear and conspicuous and 

provided separately from its regular correspondence with the 

cardholder.

    6. Reserve appendices C through I to part 222.

    7. Add Appendix J to part 222 to read as follows:



    Appendix J to Part 222--Interagency Guidelines on Identity Theft 



Detection, Prevention, and MitigationRed Flags in Connection With 

an Account Application or an Existing Account Information From a 

Consumer Reporting Agency



    1. A fraud or active duty alert is included with a consumer 

report.

    2. A notice of address discrepancy is provided by a consumer 

reporting agency.

    3. A consumer report indicates a pattern of activity that is 

inconsistent with the history and usual pattern of activity of an 

applicant or customer, such as:

    a. A recent and significant increase in the volume of inquiries.

    b. An unusual number of recently established credit 

relationships.

    c. A material change in the use of credit, especially with 

respect to recently established credit relationships.

    d. An account was closed for cause or identified for abuse of 

account privileges by a financial institution or creditor.



Documentary Identification



    4. Documents provided for identification appear to have been 

altered.

    5. The photograph or physical description on the identification 

is not consistent with the appearance of the applicant or customer 

presenting the identification.

    6. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information provided by the person opening a new account or 

customer presenting the identification.

    7. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information that is on file, such as a signature card.



Personal Information



    8. Personal information provided is inconsistent when compared 

against external information sources. For example:

    a. The address does not match any address in the consumer 

report; or

    b. The Social Security Number (SSN) has not been issued, or is 

listed on the Social Security Administration's Death Master File.

    9. Personal information provided is internally inconsistent. For 

example, there is a lack of correlation between the SSN range and 

date of birth.

    10. Personal information provided is associated with known 

fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is the same as the address 

provided on a fraudulent application; or

    b. The phone number on an application is the same as the number 

provided on a fraudulent application.

    11. Personal information provided is of a type commonly 

associated with fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is fictitious, a mail drop, or 

prison.



[[Page 40814]]



    b. The phone number is invalid, or is associated with a pager or 

answering service.

    12. The address, SSN, or home or cell phone number provided is 

the same as that submitted by other persons opening an account or 

other customers.

    13. The person opening the account or the customer fails to 

provide all required information on an application.

    14. Personal information provided is not consistent with 

information that is on file.

    15. The person opening the account or the customer cannot 

provide authenticating information beyond that which generally would 

be available from a wallet or consumer report.



Address Changes



    16. Shortly following the notice of a change of address for an 

account, the institution or creditor receives a request for new, 

additional, or replacement checks, convenience checks, cards, or a 

cell phone, or for the addition of authorized users on the account.

    17. Mail sent to the customer is returned as undeliverable 

although transactions continue to be conducted in connection with 

the customer's account.



Anomalous Use of the Account



    18. A new revolving credit account is used in a manner commonly 

associated with fraud. For example:

    a. The majority of available credit is used for cash advances or 

merchandise that is easily convertible to cash (e.g., electronics 

equipment or jewelry); or

    b. The customer fails to make the first payment or makes an 

initial payment but no subsequent payments.

    19. An account is used in a manner that is not consistent with 

established patterns of activity on the account. There is, for 

example:

    a. Nonpayment when there is no history of late or missed 

payments;

    b. A material increase in the use of available credit;

    c. A material change in purchasing or spending patterns;

    d. A material change in electronic fund transfer patterns in 

connection with a deposit account; or

    e. A material change in telephone call patterns in connection 

with a cellular phone account.

    20. An account that has been inactive for a reasonably lengthy 

period of time is used (taking into consideration the type of 

account, the expected pattern of usage and other relevant factors).



Notice From Customers or Others Regarding Customer Accounts



    21. The financial institution or creditor is notified of 

unauthorized charges in connection with a customer's account.

    22. The financial institution or creditor is notified that it 

has opened a fraudulent account for a person engaged in identity 

theft.

    23. The financial institution or creditor is notified that the 

customer is not receiving account statements.

    24. The financial institution or creditor is notified that its 

customer has provided information to someone fraudulently claiming 

to represent the financial institution or creditor or to a 

fraudulent website.

    25. Electronic messages are returned to mail servers of the 

financial institution or creditor that it did not originally send, 

indicating that its customers may have been asked to provide 

information to a fraudulent website that looks very similar, if not 

identical, to the website of the financial institution or creditor.



Other Red Flags



    26. The name of an employee of the financial institution or 

creditor has been added as an authorized user on an account.

    27. An employee has accessed or downloaded an unusually large 

number of customer account records.

    28. The financial institution or creditor detects attempts to 

access a customer's account by unauthorized persons.

    29. The financial institution or creditor detects or is informed 

of unauthorized access to a customer's personal information.

    30. There are unusually frequent and large check orders in 

connection with a customer's account.

    31. The person opening an account or the customer is unable to 

lift a credit freeze placed on his or her consumer report.



Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation



12 CFR Chapter III



Authority and Issuance



    For the reasons set forth in the joint preamble, the Federal 

Deposit Insurance Corporation proposes to amend chapter III of title 12 

of the Code of Federal Regulations by amending 12 CFR parts 334 and 364 

as follows:



PART 334--FAIR CREDIT REPORTING



    1. The authority citation for part 334 is revised to read as 

follows:



    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1818 and 1819 (Tenth); 15 U.S.C. 1681b, 

1681c, 1681m, 1681s, 1681w, 6801 and 6805.



Subpart A--General Provisions



    2. Amend Sec.  334.3 by revising the introductory text to read as 

follows:





Sec.  334.3  Definitions.



    For purposes of this part, unless explicitly stated otherwise:

* * * * *



Subpart I--Duties of Users of Consumer Reports Regarding Address 

Discrepancies and Records Disposal



    3. Revise the heading for Subpart I as shown above.

    4. Add Sec.  334.82 to read as follows:





Sec.  334.82  Duties of users regarding address discrepancies.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to users of consumer reports that 

receive notices of address discrepancies from credit reporting agencies 

(referred to as ``users''), and that are insured state nonmember banks, 

insured state licensed branches of foreign banks, or subsidiaries of 

such entities (except brokers, dealers, persons providing insurance, 

investment companies, and investment advisers).

    (b) Definition. For purposes of this section, a notice of address 

discrepancy means a notice sent to a user of a consumer report by a 

consumer reporting agency pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1681c(h)(1), that 

informs the user of a substantial difference between the address for 

the consumer that the user provided to request the consumer report and 

the address(es) in the agency's file for the consumer.

    (c) Requirement to form a reasonable belief. A user must develop 

and implement reasonable policies and procedures for verifying the 

identity of the consumer for whom it has obtained a consumer report and 

for whom it receives a notice of address discrepancy. These policies 

and procedures must be designed to enable the user either to form a 

reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the consumer or 

determine that it cannot do so. A user that employs the policies and 

procedures regarding identification and verification set forth in the 

Customer Identification Program (CIP) rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 

5318(l) under these circumstances satisfies this requirement, whether 

or not the user is subject to the CIP rules.

    (d) Consumer's address (1) Requirement to furnish consumer's 

address to a consumer reporting agency. A user must develop and 

implement reasonable policies and procedures for furnishing an address 

for the consumer that the user has reasonably confirmed is accurate to 

the consumer reporting agency from whom it received the notice of 

address discrepancy when the user:

    (i) Can form a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the 

consumer for whom the consumer report was obtained;

    (ii) Establishes or maintains a continuing relationship with the 

consumer; and

    (iii) Regularly and in the ordinary course of business furnishes 

information to the consumer reporting agency from which the notice of 

address discrepancy pertaining to the consumer was obtained.

    (2) Requirement to confirm consumer's address. The user may 

reasonably confirm an address is accurate by:



[[Page 40815]]



    (i) Verifying the address with the person to whom the consumer 

report pertains;

    (ii) Reviewing its own records of the address provided to request 

the consumer report;

    (iii) Verifying the address through third-party sources; or

    (iv) Using other reasonable means.

    (3) Timing. The policies and procedures developed in accordance 

with paragraph (d)(1) of this section must provide that the user will 

furnish the consumer's address that the user has reasonably confirmed 

is accurate to the consumer reporting agency as part of the information 

it regularly furnishes:

    (i) With respect to new relationships, for the reporting period in 

which it establishes a relationship with the consumer; and

    (ii) In other circumstances, for the reporting period in which the 

user confirms the accuracy of the address of the consumer.

    5. Add Subpart J to part 334 to read as follows:



Subpart J--Identity Theft Red Flags





Sec.  334.90  Duties regarding the detection, prevention, and 

mitigation of identity theft.



    (a) Purpose and scope. This section implements section 114 of the 

Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681m, which 

amends section 615 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). It applies 

to financial institutions and creditors that are insured state 

nonmember banks, insured state licensed branches of foreign banks, or 

subsidiaries of such entities (except brokers, dealers, persons 

providing insurance, investment companies, and investment advisers).

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 

definitions apply:

    (1) Account means a continuing relationship established to provide 

a financial product or service that a financial holding company could 

offer by engaging in an activity that is financial in nature or 

incidental to such a financial activity under section 4(k) of the Bank 

Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1843(k). Account includes:

    (i) An extension of credit for personal, family, household or 

business purposes, such as a credit card account, margin account, or 

retail installment sales contract, such as a car loan or lease; and

    (ii) A demand deposit, savings or other asset account for personal, 

family, household, or business purposes, such as a checking or savings 

account.

    (2) The term board of directors includes:

    (i) In the case of a foreign branch or agency of a foreign bank, 

the managing official in charge of the branch or agency; and

    (ii) In the case of any other creditor that does not have a board 

of directors, a designated employee.

    (3) Customer means a person that has an account with a financial 

institution or creditor.

    (4) Identity theft has the same meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).

    (5) Red Flag means a pattern, practice, or specific activity that 

indicates the possible risk of identity theft.

    (6) Service provider means a person that provides a service 

directly to the financial institution or creditor.

    (c) Identity Theft Prevention Program. Each financial institution 

or creditor must implement a written Identity Theft Prevention Program 

(Program). The Program must include reasonable policies and procedures 

to address the risk of identity theft to its customers and the safety 

and soundness of the financial institution or creditor, including 

financial, operational, compliance, reputation, and litigation risks, 

in the manner discussed in paragraph (d) of this section. The Program 

must be:

    (1) Appropriate to the size and complexity of the financial 

institution or creditor and the nature and scope of its activities; and

    (2) Designed to address changing identity theft risks as they arise 

in connection with the experiences of the financial institution or 

creditor with identity theft, and changes in methods of identity theft, 

methods to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft, the types of 

accounts it offers, and business arrangements, including mergers, 

acquisitions, alliances, joint ventures, and service provider 

arrangements.

    (d) Development and implementation of Program. (1) Identification 

and evaluation of Red Flags. (i) Risk-based Red Flags. The Program must 

include policies and procedures to identify Red Flags, singly or in 

combination, that are relevant to detecting a possible risk of identity 

theft to customers or to the safety and soundness of the financial 

institution or creditor, using the risk evaluation set forth in 

paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section. The Red Flags identified must 

reflect changing identity theft risks to customers and to the financial 

institution or creditor as they arise. At a minimum, the Program must 

incorporate any relevant Red Flags from:

    (A) Appendix J to this part;

    (B) Applicable supervisory guidance;

    (C) Incidents of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has experienced; and

    (D) Methods of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has identified that reflect changes in identity theft risks.

    (ii) Risk evaluation. In identifying which Red Flags are relevant, 

the financial institution or creditor must consider:

    (A) Which of its accounts are subject to a risk of identity theft;

    (B) The methods it provides to open these accounts;

    (C) The methods it provides to access these accounts; and

    (D) Its size, location, and customer base.

    (2) Identity theft prevention and mitigation. The Program must 

include reasonable policies and procedures designed to prevent and 

mitigate identity theft in connection with the opening of an account or 

any existing account, including policies and procedures to:

    (i) Obtain identifying information about, and verify the identity 

of, a person opening an account. A financial institution or creditor 

that uses the policies and procedures regarding identification and 

verification set forth in the Customer Identification Program (CIP) 

rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 5318(l), under these circumstances, 

satisfies this requirement whether or not the user is subject to the 

CIP rules;

    (ii) Detect the Red Flags identified pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) 

of this section;

    (iii) Assess whether the Red Flags detected pursuant to paragraph 

(d)(2)(ii) of this section evidence a risk of identity theft. An 

institution or creditor must have a reasonable basis for concluding 

that a Red Flag does not evidence a risk of identity theft; and

    (iv) Address the risk of identity theft, commensurate with the 

degree of risk posed, such as by:

    (A) Monitoring an account for evidence of identity theft;

    (B) Contacting the customer;

    (C) Changing any passwords, security codes, or other security 

devices that permit access to a customer's account;

    (D) Reopening an account with a new account number;

    (E) Not opening a new account;

    (F) Closing an existing account;

    (G) Notifying law enforcement and, for those that are subject to 31 

U.S.C. 5318(g), filing a Suspicious Activity Report in accordance with 

applicable law and regulation;

    (H) Implementing any requirements regarding limitations on credit 

extensions under 15 U.S.C. 1681c-1(h), such as declining to issue an 

additional credit card when the financial institution or creditor 

detects a fraud or active duty alert associated with the opening of an 

account, or an existing account; or



[[Page 40816]]



    (I) Implementing any requirements for furnishers of information to 

consumer reporting agencies under 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2, to correct or 

update inaccurate or incomplete information.

    (3) Staff training. Each financial institution or creditor must 

train staff to implement its Program.

    (4) Oversight of service provider arrangements. Whenever a 

financial institution or creditor engages a service provider to perform 

an activity on its behalf and the requirements of its Program are 

applicable to that activity (such as account opening), the financial 

institution or creditor must take steps designed to ensure that the 

activity is conducted in compliance with a Program that meets the 

requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.

    (5) Involvement of board of directors and senior management. (i) 

Board approval. The board of directors or an appropriate committee of 

the board must approve the written Program.

    (ii) Oversight by board or senior management. The board of 

directors, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior management 

must oversee the development, implementation, and maintenance of the 

Program, including assigning specific responsibility for its 

implementation, and reviewing annual reports prepared by staff 

regarding compliance by the financial institution or creditor with this 

section.

    (iii) Reports. (A) In general. Staff of the financial institution 

or creditor responsible for implementation of its Program must report 

to the board, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior 

management, at least annually, on compliance by the financial 

institution or creditor with this section.

    (B) Contents of report. The report must discuss material matters 

related to the Program and evaluate issues such as: the effectiveness 

of the policies and procedures of the financial institution or creditor 

in addressing the risk of identity theft in connection with the opening 

of accounts and with respect to existing accounts; service provider 

arrangements; significant incidents involving identity theft and 

management's response; and recommendations for changes in the Program.





Sec.  334.91  Duties of card issuers regarding changes of address.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to a person described in Sec.  

334.90(a) that issues a debit or credit card.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:

    (1) Cardholder means a consumer who has been issued a credit or 

debit card.

    (2) Clear and conspicuous means reasonably understandable and 

designed to call attention to the nature and significance of the 

information presented.

    (c) In general. A card issuer must establish and implement 

reasonable policies and procedures to assess the validity of a change 

of address if it receives notification of a change of address for a 

consumer's debit or credit card account and within a short period of 

time afterwards (during at least the first 30 days after it receives 

such notification), the card issuer receives a request for an 

additional or replacement card for the same account. Under these 

circumstances, the card issuer may not issue an additional or 

replacement card, unless, in accordance with its reasonable policies 

and procedures and for the purpose of assessing the validity of the 

change of address, the card issuer:

    (1) Notifies the cardholder of the request at the cardholder's 

former address and provides to the cardholder a means of promptly 

reporting incorrect address changes;

    (2) Notifies the cardholder of the request by any other means of 

communication that the card issuer and the cardholder have previously 

agreed to use; or

    (3) Uses other means of assessing the validity of the change of 

address, in accordance with the policies and procedures the card issuer 

has established pursuant to section 334.90.

    (d) Form of notice. Any written or electronic notice that the card 

issuer provides under this paragraph shall be clear and conspicuous and 

provided separately from its regular correspondence with the 

cardholder.

    6. Reserve appendices A through I to part 334.

    7. Add Appendix J to part 334 to read as follows:



    Appendix J to Part 334--Interagency Guidelines on Identity Theft 





Detection, Prevention, and MitigationRed Flags in Connection With 

an Account Application or an Existing Account Information From a 

Consumer Reporting Agency



    1. A fraud or active duty alert is included with a consumer 

report.

    2. A notice of address discrepancy is provided by a consumer 

reporting agency.

    3. A consumer report indicates a pattern of activity that is 

inconsistent with the history and usual pattern of activity of an 

applicant or customer, such as:

    a. A recent and significant increase in the volume of inquiries.

    b. An unusual number of recently established credit 

relationships.

    c. A material change in the use of credit, especially with 

respect to recently established credit relationships.

    d. An account was closed for cause or identified for abuse of 

account privileges by a financial institution or creditor.



Documentary Identification



    4. Documents provided for identification appear to have been 

altered.

    5. The photograph or physical description on the identification 

is not consistent with the appearance of the applicant or customer 

presenting the identification.

    6. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information provided by the person opening a new account or 

customer presenting the identification.

    7. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information that is on file, such as a signature card.



Personal Information



    8. Personal information provided is inconsistent when compared 

against external information sources. For example:

    a. The address does not match any address in the consumer 

report; or

    b. The Social Security Number (SSN) has not been issued, or is 

listed on the Social Security Administration's Death Master File.

    9. Personal information provided is internally inconsistent. For 

example, there is a lack of correlation between the SSN range and 

date of birth.

    10. Personal information provided is associated with known 

fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is the same as the address 

provided on a fraudulent application; or

    b. The phone number on an application is the same as the number 

provided on a fraudulent application.

    11. Personal information provided is of a type commonly 

associated with fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is fictitious, a mail drop, or 

prison.

    b. The phone number is invalid, or is associated with a pager or 

answering service.

    12. The address, SSN, or home or cell phone number provided is 

the same as that submitted by other persons opening an account or 

other customers.

    13. The person opening the account or the customer fails to 

provide all required information on an application.

    14. Personal information provided is not consistent with 

information that is on file.

    15. The person opening the account or the customer cannot 

provide authenticating information beyond that which generally would 

be available from a wallet or consumer report.



Address Changes



    16. Shortly following the notice of a change of address for an 

account, the institution or creditor receives a request for new, 

additional or replacement checks, convenience checks, cards, or cell 

phone, or for the addition of authorized users on the account.

    17. Mail sent to the customer is returned as undeliverable 

although transactions continue to be conducted in connection with 

the customer's account.



[[Page 40817]]



Anomalous Use of the Account



    18. A new revolving credit account is used in a manner commonly 

associated with fraud. For example:

    a. The majority of available credit is used for cash advances or 

merchandise that is easily convertible to cash (e.g., electronics 

equipment or jewelry); or

    b. The customer fails to make the first payment or makes an 

initial payment but no subsequent payments.

    19. An account is used in a manner that is not consistent with 

established patterns of activity on the account. There is, for 

example:

    a. Nonpayment when there is no history of late or missed 

payments;

    b. A material increase in the use of available credit;

    c. A material change in purchasing or spending patterns;

    d. A material change in electronic fund transfer patterns in 

connection with a deposit account; or

    e. A material change in telephone call patterns in connection 

with a cellular phone account.

    20. An account that has been inactive for a reasonably lengthy 

period of time is used (taking into consideration the type of 

account, the expected pattern of usage and other relevant factors).



Notice From Customers or Others Regarding Customer Accounts



    21. The financial institution or creditor is notified of 

unauthorized charges in connection with a customer's account.

    22. The financial institution or creditor is notified that it 

has opened a fraudulent account for a person engaged in identity 

theft.

    23. The financial institution or creditor is notified that the 

customer is not receiving account statements.

    24. The financial institution or creditor is notified that its 

customer has provided information to someone fraudulently claiming 

to represent the financial institution or creditor or to a 

fraudulent Web site.

    25. Electronic messages are returned to mail servers of the 

financial institution or creditor that it did not originally send, 

indicating that its customers may have been asked to provide 

information to a fraudulent Web site that looks very similar, if not 

identical, to the Web site of the financial institution or creditor.



Other Red Flags



    26. The name of an employee of the financial institution or 

creditor has been added as an authorized user on an account.

    27. An employee has accessed or downloaded an unusually large 

number of customer account records.

    28. The financial institution or creditor detects attempts to 

access a customer's account by unauthorized persons.

    29. The financial institution or creditor detects or is informed 

of unauthorized access to a customer's personal information.

    30. There are unusually frequent and large check orders in 

connection with a customer's account.

    31. The person opening an account or the customer is unable to 

lift a credit freeze placed on his or her consumer report.



PART 364--STANDARDS FOR SAFETY AND SOUNDNESS



    8. The authority citation for part 364 continues to read as 

follows:



    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1819(Tenth), 1831p-1; 15 U.S.C. 1681s, 

1681w, 6801(b), 6805(b)(1).



    9. Add the following sentence at the end of Sec.  364.101(b):





Sec.  364.101  Standards for safety and soundness.



* * * * *

    (b) * * * The interagency regulations and guidelines on identity 

theft detection, prevention, and mitigation prescribed pursuant to 

section 114 of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003, 

15 U.S.C. 1681m(e), are set forth in Sec. Sec.  334.90, 334.91, and 

Appendix J of part 334.



Department of the Treasury



Office of Thrift Supervision



12 CFR Chapter V



Authority and Issuance



    For the reasons discussed in the joint preamble, the Office of 

Thrift Supervision proposes to amend chapter V of title 12 of the Code 

of Federal Regulations by amending 12 CFR part 571 as follows:



PART 571--FAIR CREDIT REPORTING



    1. The authority citation for part 571 is revised to read as 

follows:



    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1467a, 1828, 1831p-1, 

and 1881-1884; 15 U.S.C. 1681b, 1681c, 1681m, 1681s, and 1681w; 15 

U.S.C. 6801 and 6805(b)(1).



Subpart A--General Provisions



    2. Amend Sec.  571.1 by revising paragraph (b)(9) and adding a new 

paragraph (b)(10) to read as follows:





Sec.  571.1  Purpose and Scope.



* * * * *

    (b) Scope.

* * * * *

    (9)(i) The scope of Sec.  571.82 of Subpart I of this part is 

stated in Sec.  571.82(a).

    (ii) The scope of Sec.  571.83 of Subpart I of this part is stated 

in Sec.  571.83(a).

    (10) The scope of Subpart J of this part is stated in Sec.  

571.90(a).

    3. Amend Sec.  571.3 by revising the introductory text to read as 

follows:





Sec.  571.3  Definitions.



    For purposes of this part, unless explicitly stated otherwise:

* * * * *



Subpart I--Duties of Users of Consumer Reports Regarding Address 

Discrepancies and Records Disposal



    4. Revise the heading for Subpart I as shown above.

    5. Add Sec.  571.82 to read as follows:





Sec.  571.82  Duties of users regarding address discrepancies.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to users of consumer reports that 

receive notices of address discrepancies from credit reporting agencies 

(referred to as ``users''), and that are either savings associations 

whose deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 

or, in accordance with Sec.  559.3(h)(1) of this chapter, federal 

savings association operating subsidiaries that are not functionally 

regulated within the meaning of section 5(c)(5) of the Bank Holding 

Company Act of 1956, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1844(c)(5)).

    (b) Definition. For purposes of this section, a notice of address 

discrepancy means a notice sent to a user of a consumer report by a 

consumer reporting agency pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1681c(h)(1), that 

informs the user of a substantial difference between the address for 

the consumer that the user provided to request the consumer report and 

the address(es) in the agency's file for the consumer.

    (c) Requirement to form a reasonable belief. A user must develop 

and implement reasonable policies and procedures for verifying the 

identity of the consumer for whom it has obtained a consumer report and 

for whom it receives a notice of address discrepancy. These policies 

and procedures must be designed to enable the user either to form a 

reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the consumer or 

determine that it cannot do so. A user that employs the policies and 

procedures regarding identification and verification set forth in the 

Customer Identification Program (CIP) rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 

5318(l) under these circumstances satisfies this requirement, whether 

or not the user is subject to the CIP rules.

    (d) Consumer's address. (1) Requirement to furnish consumer's 

address to a consumer reporting agency. A user must develop and 

implement reasonable policies and procedures for furnishing an address 

for the consumer that the user has reasonably confirmed is accurate to 

the consumer reporting agency from whom it received the notice of 

address discrepancy when the user:

    (i) Can form a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the 

consumer for



[[Page 40818]]



whom the consumer report was obtained;

    (ii) Establishes or maintains a continuing relationship with the 

consumer; and

    (iii) Regularly and in the ordinary course of business furnishes 

information to the consumer reporting agency from which the notice of 

address discrepancy pertaining to the consumer was obtained.

    (2) Requirement to confirm consumer's address. The user may 

reasonably confirm an address is accurate by:

    (i) Verifying the address with the person to whom the consumer 

report pertains;

    (ii) Reviewing its own records of the address provided to request 

the consumer report;

    (iii) Verifying the address through third-party sources; or

    (iv) Using other reasonable means.

    (3) Timing. The policies and procedures developed in accordance 

with paragraph (d)(1) of this section must provide that the user will 

furnish the consumer's address that the user has reasonably confirmed 

is accurate to the consumer reporting agency as part of the information 

it regularly furnishes:

    (i) With respect to new relationships, for the reporting period in 

which it establishes a relationship with the consumer; and

    (ii) In other circumstances, for the reporting period in which the 

user confirms the accuracy of the address of the consumer.

    6. Revise Sec.  571.83 by:

    a. Redesignating paragraphs (a) and (b) as paragraph (b) and (c), 

respectively.

    b. Adding a new paragraph (a) to read as follows:





Sec.  571.83  Disposition of consumer information.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to savings associations whose 

deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (and 

federal savings association operating subsidiaries in accordance with 

Sec.  559.3(h)(1) of this chapter) (defined as ``you'' in Sec.  

571.3(o) of this part).

* * * * *

    7. Add Subpart J to part 571 to read as follows:



Subpart J--Identity Theft Red Flags





Sec.  571.90  Duties regarding the detection, prevention, and 

mitigation of identity theft.



    (a) Purpose and scope. This section implements section 114 of the 

Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681m, which 

amends section 615 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). It applies 

to financial institutions and creditors that are either savings 

associations whose deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit 

Insurance Corporation or, in accordance with Sec.  559.3(h)(1) of this 

chapter, federal savings association operating subsidiaries that are 

not functionally regulated within the meaning of section 5(c)(5) of the 

Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1844(c)(5)).

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 

definitions apply:

    (1) Account means a continuing relationship established to provide 

a financial product or service that a financial holding company could 

offer by engaging in an activity that is financial in nature or 

incidental to such a financial activity under section 4(k) of the Bank 

Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1843(k). Account includes:

    (i) An extension of credit for personal, family, household or 

business purposes, such as a credit card account, margin account, or 

retail installment sales contract, such as a car loan or lease; and

    (ii) A demand deposit, savings or other asset account for personal, 

family, household, or business purposes, such as a checking or savings 

account.

    (2) The term board of directors includes:

    (i) In the case of a foreign branch or agency of a foreign bank, 

the managing official in charge of the branch or agency; and

    (ii) In the case of any other creditor that does not have a board 

of directors, a designated employee.

    (3) Customer means a person that has an account with a financial 

institution or creditor.

    (4) Identity theft has the same meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).

    (5) Red Flag means a pattern, practice, or specific activity that 

indicates the possible risk of identity theft.

    (6) Service provider means a person that provides a service 

directly to the financial institution or creditor.

    (c) Identity Theft Prevention Program. Each financial institution 

or creditor must implement a written Identity Theft Prevention Program 

(Program). The Program must include reasonable policies and procedures 

to address the risk of identity theft to its customers and the safety 

and soundness of the financial institution or creditor, including 

financial, operational, compliance, reputation, and litigation risks, 

in the manner discussed in paragraph (d) of this section. The Program 

must be:

    (1) Appropriate to the size and complexity of the financial 

institution or creditor and the nature and scope of its activities; and

    (2) Designed to address changing identity theft risks as they arise 

in connection with the experiences of the financial institution or 

credit with identity theft, and changes in methods of identity theft, 

methods to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft, the types of 

accounts it offers, and business arrangements, including mergers, 

acquisitions, alliances, joint ventures, and service provider 

arrangements.

    (d) Development and implementation of Program. (1) Identification 

and evaluation of Red Flags. (i) Risk-based Red Flags. The Program must 

include policies and procedures to identify Red Flags, singly or in 

combination, that are relevant to detecting a possible risk of identity 

theft to customers or to the safety and soundness of the financial 

institution or creditor, using the risk evaluation set forth in 

paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section. The Red Flags identified must 

reflect changing identity theft risks to customers and to the financial 

institution or creditor as they arise. At a minimum, the Program must 

incorporate any relevant Red Flags from:

    (A) Appendix J to this part;

    (B) Applicable supervisory guidance;

    (C) Incidents of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has experienced; and

    (D) Methods of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has identified that reflect changes in identity theft risks.

    (ii) Risk evaluation. In identifying which Red Flags are relevant, 

the financial institution or creditor must consider:

    (A) Which of its accounts are subject to a risk of identity theft;

    (B) The methods it provides to open these accounts;

    (C) The methods it provides to access these accounts; and

    (D) Its size, location, and customer base.

    (2) Identity theft prevention and mitigation. The Program must 

include reasonable policies and procedures designed to prevent and 

mitigate identity theft in connection with the opening of an account or 

any existing account, including policies and procedures to:

    (i) Obtain identifying information about, and verify the identity 

of, a person opening an account. A financial institution or creditor 

that uses the policies and procedures regarding identification and 

verification set forth in the Customer Identification Program (CIP) 

rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 5318(l), under these circumstances,



[[Page 40819]]



satisfies this requirement whether or not the user is subject to the 

CIP rules;

    (ii) Detect the Red Flags pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) of this 

section;

    (iii) Assess whether the Red Flags detected pursuant to paragraph 

(d)(2)(ii) of this section evidence a risk of identity theft. An 

institution or creditor must have a reasonable basis for concluding 

that a Red Flag does not evidence a risk of identity theft; and

    (iv) Address the risk of identity theft, commensurate with the 

degree of risk posed, such as by:

    (A) Monitoring an account for evidence of identity theft;

    (B) Contacting the customer;

    (C) Changing any passwords, security codes, or other security 

devices that permit access to a customer's account;

    (D) Reopening an account with a new account number;

    (E) Not opening a new account;

    (F) Closing an existing account;

    (G) Notifying law enforcement and, for those that are subject to 31 

U.S.C. 5318(g), filing a Suspicious Activity Report in accordance with 

applicable law and regulation;

    (H) Implementing any requirements regarding limitations on credit 

extensions under 15 U.S.C. 1681c-1(h) as declining to issue an 

additional credit card when the financial institution or creditor 

detects a fraud or active duty alert associated with the opening of an 

account, or an existing account; or

    (I) Implementing any requirements for furnishers of information to 

consumer reporting agencies under 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2, to correct or 

update inaccurate or incomplete information.

    (3) Staff training. Each financial institution or creditor must 

train staff to implement its Program.

    (4) Oversight of service provider arrangements. Whenever a 

financial institution or creditor engages a service provider to perform 

an activity on its behalf and the requirements of its Program are 

applicable to that activity (such as account opening), the financial 

institution or creditor must take steps designed to ensure that the 

activity is conducted in compliance with a Program that meets the 

requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.

    (5) Involvement of board of directors and senior management. (i) 

Board approval. The board of directors or an appropriate committee of 

the board must approve the written Program.

    (ii) Oversight by board or senior management. The board of 

directors, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior management 

must oversee the development, implementation, and maintenance of the 

Program, including assigning specific responsibility for its 

implementation, and reviewing annual reports prepared by staff 

regarding compliance by the financial institution or creditor with this 

section.

    (iii) Reports. (A) In general. Staff of the financial institution 

or creditor responsible for implementation of its Program must report 

to the board, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior 

management, at least annually, on compliance by the financial 

institution or creditor with this section.

    (B) Contents of report. The report must discuss material matters 

related to the Program and evaluate issues such as: the effectiveness 

of the policies and procedures of the financial institution or creditor 

in addressing the risk of identity theft in connection with the opening 

of accounts and with respect to existing accounts; service provider 

arrangements; significant incidents involving identity theft and 

management's response; and recommendations for changes in the Program.





Sec.  571.91  Duties of card issuers regarding changes of address.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to a person described in Sec.  

571.90(a) that issues a debit or credit card.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:

    (1) Cardholder means a consumer who has been issued a credit or 

debit card.

    (2) Clear and conspicuous means reasonably understandable and 

designed to call attention to the nature and significance of the 

information presented.

    (c) In general. The card issuer must establish and implement 

reasonable policies and procedures to assess the validity of a change 

of address if it receives notification of a change of address for a 

consumer's debit or credit card account and within a short period of 

time afterwards (during at least the first 30 days after it receives 

such notification), the card issuer receives a request for an 

additional or replacement card for the same account. Under these 

circumstances, the card issuer may not issue an additional or 

replacement card, unless, in accordance with its reasonable policies 

and procedures and for the purpose of assessing the validity of the 

change of address, the card issuer:

    (1) Notifies the cardholder of the request at the cardholder's 

former address and provides to the cardholder a means of promptly 

reporting incorrect address changes;

    (2) Notifies the cardholder of the request by any other means of 

communication that the card issuer and the cardholder have previously 

agreed to use; or

    (3) Uses other means of assessing the validity of the change of 

address, in accordance with the policies and procedures the card issuer 

has established pursuant to section 571.90.

    (d) Form of notice. Any written or electronic notice that the card 

issuer provides under this paragraph shall be clear and conspicuous and 

provided separately from its regular correspondence with the 

cardholder.

    8. Reserve appendices A through I to part 571.

    9. Add Appendix J to part 571 to read as follows:



    Appendix J to Part 571--Interagency Guidelines on Identity Theft 



Detection, Prevention, and MitigationRed Flags in Connection With 

an Account Application or an Existing Account Information From a 

Consumer Reporting Agency



    1. A fraud or active duty alert is included with a consumer 

report.

    2. A notice of address discrepancy is provided by a consumer 

reporting agency.

    3. A consumer report indicates a pattern of activity that is 

inconsistent with the history and usual pattern of activity of an 

applicant or customer, such as:

    a. A recent and significant increase in the volume of inquiries.

    b. An unusual number of recently established credit 

relationships.

    c. A material change in the use of credit, especially with 

respect to recently established credit relationships.

    d. An account was closed for cause or identified for abuse of 

account privileges by a financial institution or creditor.



Documentary Identification



    4. Documents provided for identification appear to have been 

altered.

    5. The photograph or physical description on the identification 

is not consistent with the appearance of the applicant or customer 

presenting the identification.

    6. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information provided by the person opening a new account or 

customer presenting the identification.

    7. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information that is on file, such as a signature card.



Personal Information



    8. Personal information provided is inconsistent when compared 

against external information sources. For example:

    a. The address does not match any address in the consumer 

report; or

    b. The Social Security Number (SSN) has not been issued, or is 

listed on the Social Security Administration's Death Master File.

    9. Personal information provided is internally inconsistent. For 

example, there is a lack of correlation between the SSN range and 

date of birth.

    10. Personal information provided is associated with known 

fraudulent activity. For example:



[[Page 40820]]



    a. The address on an application is the same as the address 

provided on a fraudulent application; or

    b. The phone number on an application is the same as the number 

provided on a fraudulent application.

    11. Personal information provided is of a type commonly 

associated with fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is fictitious, a mail drop, or 

prison.

    b. The phone number is invalid, or is associated with a pager or 

answering service.

    12. The address, SSN, or home or cell phone number provided is 

the same as that submitted by other persons opening an account or 

other customers.

    13. The person opening the account or the customer fails to 

provide all required information on an application.

    14. Personal information provided is not consistent with 

information that is on file.

    15. The person opening the account or the customer cannot 

provide authenticating information beyond that which generally would 

be available from a wallet or consumer report.



Address Changes



    16. Shortly following the notice of a change of address for an 

account, the institution or creditor receives a request for new, 

additional, or replacement checks, convenience checks, cards, or a 

cell phone, or for the addition of authorized users on the account.

    17. Mail sent to the customer is returned as undeliverable 

although transactions continue to be conducted in connection with 

the customer's account.



Anomalous Use of the Account



    18. A new revolving credit account is used in a manner commonly 

associated with fraud. For example:

    a. The majority of available credit is used for cash advances or 

merchandise that is easily convertible to cash (e.g., electronics 

equipment or jewelry); or

    b. The customer fails to make the first payment or makes an 

initial payment but no subsequent payments.

    19. An account is used in a manner that is not consistent with 

established patterns of activity on the account. There is, for 

example:

    a. Nonpayment when there is no history of late or missed 

payments;

    b. A material increase in the use of available credit;

    c. A material change in purchasing or spending patterns;

    d. A material change in electronic fund transfer patterns in 

connection with a deposit account; or

    e. A material change in telephone call patterns in connection 

with a cellular phone account.

    20. An account that has been inactive for a reasonably lengthy 

period of time is used (taking into consideration the type of 

account, the expected pattern of usage and other relevant factors).



Notice From Customers or Others Regarding Customer Accounts



    21. The financial institution or creditor is notified of 

unauthorized charges in connection with a customer's account.

    22. The financial institution or creditor is notified that it 

has opened a fraudulent account for a person engaged in identity 

theft.

    23. The financial institution or creditor is notified that the 

customer is not receiving account statements.

    24. The financial institution or creditor is notified that its 

customer has provided information to someone fraudulently claiming 

to represent the financial institution or creditor or to a 

fraudulent website.

    25. Electronic messages are returned to mail servers of the 

financial institution or creditor that it did not originally send, 

indicating that its customers may have been asked to provide 

information to a fraudulent Web site that looks very similar, if not 

identical, to the Web site of the financial institution or creditor.



Other Red Flags



    26. The name of an employee of the financial institution or 

creditor has been added as an authorized user on an account.

    27. An employee has accessed or downloaded an unusually large 

number of customer account records.

    28. The financial institution or creditor detects attempts to 

access a customer's account by unauthorized persons.

    29. The financial institution or creditor detects or is informed 

of unauthorized access to a customer's personal information.

    30. There are unusually frequent and large check orders in 

connection with a customer's account.

    31. The person opening an account or the customer is unable to 

lift a credit freeze placed on his or her consumer report.



National Credit Union Administration



12 CFR Part 717



Authority and Issuance



    For the reasons discussed in the joint preamble, the National 

Credit Union Administration proposes to amend chapter VII of title 12 

of the Code of Federal Regulations by amending 12 CFR part 717 as 

follows:



PART 717--FAIR CREDIT REPORTING



    1. The authority citation for part 717 is revised to read as 

follows:



    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1681a, 1681c, 1681m, 1681s, 1681w, 6801 and 

6805.



Subpart A--General Provisions



    2. Amend Sec.  717.3 by revising the introductory text to read as 

follows:





Sec.  717.3  Definitions.



    For purposes of this part, unless explicitly stated otherwise:

* * * * *



Subpart I--Duties of Users of Consumer Reports Regarding Address 

Discrepancies and Records Disposal



    3. Revise the heading for Subpart I as shown above.

    4. Add Sec.  717.82 to read as follows:





Sec.  717.82  Duties of users regarding address discrepancies.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to users of consumer reports that 

receive notices of address discrepancies from credit reporting agencies 

(referred to as ``users''), and that are Federal credit unions.

    (b) Definition. For purposes of this section, a notice of address 

discrepancy means a notice sent to a user of a consumer report by a 

consumer reporting agency pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1681c(h)(1), that 

informs the user of a substantial difference between the address for 

the consumer that the user provided to request the consumer report and 

the address(es) in the agency's file for the consumer.

    (c) Requirement to form a reasonable belief. A user must develop 

and implement reasonable policies and procedures for verifying the 

identity of the consumer for whom it has obtained a consumer report and 

for whom it receives a notice of address discrepancy. These policies 

and procedures must be designed to enable the user either to form a 

reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the consumer or 

determine that it cannot do so. A user that employs the policies and 

procedures regarding identification and verification set forth in the 

Customer Identification Program (CIP) rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 

5318(l) under these circumstances satisfies this requirement, whether 

or not the user is subject to the CIP rules.

    (d) Consumer's address (1) Requirement to furnish consumer's 

address to a consumer reporting agency. A user must develop and 

implement reasonable policies and procedures for furnishing an address 

for the consumer that the user has reasonably confirmed is accurate to 

the consumer reporting agency from whom it received the notice of 

address discrepancy when the user:

    (i) Can form a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the 

consumer for whom the consumer report was obtained;

    (ii) Establishes or maintains a continuing relationship with the 

consumer; and

    (iii) Regularly and in the ordinary course of business furnishes 

information to the consumer reporting agency from which the notice of 

address discrepancy



[[Page 40821]]



pertaining to the consumer was obtained.

    (2) Requirement to confirm consumer's address. The user may 

reasonably confirm an address is accurate by:

    (i) Verifying the address with the person to whom the consumer 

report pertains;

    (ii) Reviewing its own records of the address provided to request 

the consumer report;

    (iii) Verifying the address through third-party sources; or

    (iv) Using other reasonable means.

    (3) Timing. The policies and procedures developed in accordance 

with paragraph (d)(1) of this section must provide that the user will 

furnish the consumer's address that the user has reasonably confirmed 

is accurate to the consumer reporting agency as part of the information 

it regularly furnishes:

    (i) With respect to new relationships, for the reporting period in 

which it establishes a relationship with the consumer; and

    (ii) In other circumstances, for the reporting period in which the 

user confirms the accuracy of the address of the consumer.

    5. Add Subpart J to part 717 to read as follows:



Subpart J--Identity Theft Red Flags





Sec.  717.90  Duties regarding the detection, prevention, and 

mitigation of identity theft.



    (a) Purpose and scope. This section implements section 114 of the 

Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681m, which 

amends section 615 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). It applies 

to financial institutions and creditors that are Federal credit unions.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 

definitions apply:

    (1) Account means a continuing relationship established to provide 

a financial product or service that a financial holding company could 

offer by engaging in an activity that is financial in nature or 

incidental to such a financial activity under section 4(k) of the Bank 

Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1843(k). Account includes:

    (i) An extension of credit for personal, family, household or 

business purposes, such as a credit card account, margin account, or 

retail installment sales contract, such as a car loan or lease; and

    (ii) A demand deposit, savings or other asset account for personal, 

family, household, or business purposes, such as a checking or savings 

account.

    (2) The term board of directors includes:

    (i) In the case of a foreign branch or agency of a foreign bank, 

the managing official in charge of the branch or agency; and

    (ii) In the case of any other creditor that does not have a board 

of directors, a designated employee.

    (3) Customer means a person that has an account with a financial 

institution or creditor.

    (4) Identity theft has the same meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).

    (5) Red Flag means a pattern, practice, or specific activity that 

indicates the possible risk of identity theft.

    (6) Service provider means a person that provides a service 

directly to the financial institution or creditor.

    (c) Identity Theft Prevention Program. Each financial institution 

or creditor must implement a written Identity Theft Prevention Program 

(Program). The Program must include reasonable policies and procedures 

to address the risk of identity theft to its customers and the safety 

and soundness of the financial institution or creditor, including 

financial, operational, compliance, reputation, and litigation risks, 

in the manner discussed in paragraph (d) of this section. The Program 

must be:

    (1) Appropriate to the size and complexity of the financial 

institution or creditor and the nature and scope of its activities; and

    (2) Designed to address changing identity theft risks as they arise 

in connection with the experiences of the financial institution or 

creditor with identity theft, and changes in methods of identity theft, 

methods to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft, the types of 

accounts it offers, and business arrangements, including mergers, 

acquisitions, alliances, joint ventures, and service provider 

arrangements.

    (d) Development and implementation of Program. (1) Identification 

and evaluation of Red Flags. (i) Risk-based Red Flags. The Program must 

include policies and procedures to identify Red Flags, singly or in 

combination, that are relevant to detecting a possible risk of identity 

theft to customers or to the safety and soundness of the financial 

institution or creditor, using the risk evaluation set forth in 

paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section. The Red Flags identified must 

reflect changing identity theft risks to customers and to the financial 

institution or creditor as they arise. At a minimum, the Program must 

incorporate any relevant Red Flags from:

    (A) Appendix J to this part;

    (B) Applicable supervisory guidance;

    (C) Incidents of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has experienced; and

    (D) Methods of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has identified that reflect changes in identity theft risks.

    (ii) Risk evaluation. In identifying which Red Flags are relevant, 

the financial institution or creditor must consider:

    (A) Which of its accounts are subject to a risk of identity theft;

    (B) The methods it provides to open these accounts;

    (C) The methods it provides to access these accounts; and

    (D) Its size, location, and customer base.

    (2) Identity theft prevention and mitigation. The Program must 

include reasonable policies and procedures designed to prevent and 

mitigate identity theft in connection with the opening of an account or 

any existing account, including policies and procedures to:

    (i) Obtain identifying information about, and verify the identity 

of, a person opening an account. A financial institution or creditor 

that uses the policies and procedures regarding identification and 

verification set forth in the Customer Identification Program (CIP) 

rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 5318(l), under these circumstances, 

satisfies this requirement whether or not the user is subject to the 

CIP rules;

    (ii) Detect the Red Flags identified pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) 

of this section;

    (iii) Assess whether the Red Flags detected pursuant to paragraph 

(d)(2)(ii) of this section evidence a risk of identity theft. An 

institution or creditor must have a reasonable basis for concluding 

that a Red Flag does not evidence a risk of identity theft; and

    (iv) Address the risk of identity theft, commensurate with the 

degree of risk posed, such as by:

    (A) Monitoring an account for evidence of identity theft;

    (B) Contacting the customer;

    (C) Changing any passwords, security codes, or other security 

devices that permit access to a customer's account;

    (D) Reopening an account with a new account number;

    (E) Not opening a new account;

    (F) Closing an existing account;

    (G) Notifying law enforcement and, for those that are subject to 31 

U.S.C. 5318(g), filing a Suspicious Activity Report in accordance with 

applicable law and regulation;

    (H) Implementing any requirements regarding limitations on credit 

extensions under 15 U.S.C. 1681c-1(h), such as declining to issue an 

additional credit card when the financial institution or creditor 

detects a fraud or active duty alert associated with the opening of an 

account, or an existing account; or



[[Page 40822]]



    (I) Implementing any requirements for furnishers of information to 

consumer reporting agencies under 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2, to correct or 

update inaccurate or incomplete information.

    (3) Staff training. Each financial institution or creditor must 

train staff to implement its Program.

    (4) Oversight of service provider arrangements. Whenever a 

financial institution or creditor engages a service provider to perform 

an activity on its behalf and the requirements of its Program are 

applicable to that activity (such as account opening), the financial 

institution or creditor must take steps designed to ensure that the 

activity is conducted in compliance with a Program that meets the 

requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.

    (5) Involvement of board of directors and senior management. (i) 

Board approval. The board of directors or an appropriate committee of 

the board must approve the written Program.

    (ii) Oversight by board or senior management. The board of 

directors, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior management 

must oversee the development, implementation, and maintenance of the 

Program, including assigning specific responsibility for its 

implementation, and reviewing annual reports prepared by staff 

regarding compliance by the financial institution or creditor with this 

section.

    (iii) Reports. (A) In general. Staff of the financial institution 

or creditor responsible for implementation of its Program must report 

to the board, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior 

management, at least annually, on compliance by the financial 

institution or creditor with this section.

    (B) Contents of report. The report must discuss material matters 

related to the Program and evaluate issues such as: the effectiveness 

of the policies and procedures of the financial institution or creditor 

in addressing the risk of identity theft in connection with the opening 

of accounts and with respect to existing accounts; service provider 

arrangements; significant incidents involving identity theft and 

management's response; and recommendations for changes in the Program.





Sec.  717.91  Duties of card issuers regarding changes of address.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to a person described in Sec.  

717.90(a) that issues a debit or credit card.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:

    (1) Cardholder means a consumer who has been issued a credit or 

debit card.

    (2) Clear and conspicuous means reasonably understandable and 

designed to call attention to the nature and significance of the 

information presented.

    (c) In general. A card issuer must establish and implement 

reasonable policies and procedures to assess the validity of a change 

of address if it receives notification of a change of address for a 

consumer's debit or credit card account and within a short period of 

time afterwards (during at least the first 30 days after it receives 

such notification), the card issuer receives a request for an 

additional or replacement card for the same account. Under these 

circumstances, the card issuer may not issue an additional or 

replacement card, unless, in accordance with its reasonable policies 

and procedures and for the purpose of assessing the validity of the 

change of address, the card issuer:

    (1) Notifies the cardholder of the request at the cardholder's 

former address and provides to the cardholder a means of promptly 

reporting incorrect address changes;

    (2) Notifies the cardholder of the request by any other means of 

communication that the card issuer and the cardholder have previously 

agreed to use; or

    (3) Uses other means of assessing the validity of the change of 

address, in accordance with the policies and procedures the card issuer 

has established pursuant to section 717.90.

    (d) Form of notice. Any written or electronic notice that the card 

issuer provides under this paragraph shall be clear and conspicuous and 

provided separately from its regular correspondence with the 

cardholder.

    6. Reserve appendices A through I to part 717.

    7. Add Appendix J to part 717 to read as follows:



Appendix J to Part 717--Interagency Guidelines on Identity Theft 

Detection, Prevention, and Mitigation



Red Flags in Connection With an Account Application or an Existing 

Account Information From a Consumer Reporting Agency



    1. A fraud or active duty alert is included with a consumer 

report.

    2. A notice of address discrepancy is provided by a consumer 

reporting agency.

    3. A consumer report indicates a pattern of activity that is 

inconsistent with the history and usual pattern of activity of an 

applicant or customer, such as:

    a. A recent and significant increase in the volume of inquiries.

    b. An unusual number of recently established credit 

relationships.

    c. A material change in the use of credit, especially with 

respect to recently established credit relationships.

    d. An account was closed for cause or identified for abuse of 

account privileges by a financial institution or creditor.



Documentary Identification



    4. Documents provided for identification appear to have been 

altered.

    5. The photograph or physical description on the identification 

is not consistent with the appearance of the applicant or customer 

presenting the identification.

    6. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information provided by the person opening a new account or 

customer presenting the identification.

    7. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information that is on file, such as a signature card.



Personal Information



    8. Personal information provided is inconsistent when compared 

against external information sources. For example:

    a. The address does not match any address in the consumer 

report; or

    b. The Social Security Number (SSN) has not been issued, or is 

listed on the Social Security Administration's Death Master File.

    9. Personal information provided is internally inconsistent. For 

example, there is a lack of correlation between the SSN range and 

date of birth.

    10. Personal information provided is associated with known 

fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is the same as the address 

provided on a fraudulent application; or

    b. The phone number on an application is the same as the number 

provided on a fraudulent application.

    11. Personal information provided is of a type commonly 

associated with fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is fictitious, a mail drop, or 

prison.

    b. The phone number is invalid, or is associated with a pager or 

answering service.

    12. The address, SSN, or home or cell phone number provided is 

the same as that submitted by other persons opening an account or 

other customers.

    13. The person opening the account or the customer fails to 

provide all required information on an application.

    14. Personal information provided is not consistent with 

information that is on file.

    15. The person opening the account or the customer cannot 

provide authenticating information beyond that which generally would 

be available from a wallet or consumer report.



Address Changes



    16. Shortly following the notice of a change of address for an 

account, the institution or creditor receives a request for new, 

additional, or replacement checks, convenience checks, cards, or a 

cell phone, or for the addition of authorized users on the account.

    17. Mail sent to the customer is returned as undeliverable 

although transactions continue to be conducted in connection with 

the customer's account.



[[Page 40823]]



Anomalous Use of the Account



    18. A new revolving credit account is used in a manner commonly 

associated with fraud. For example:

    a. The majority of available credit is used for cash advances or 

merchandise that is easily convertible to cash (e.g., electronics 

equipment or jewelry); or

    b. The customer fails to make the first payment or makes an 

initial payment but no subsequent payments.

    19. An account is used in a manner that is not consistent with 

established patterns of activity on the account. There is, for 

example:

    a. Nonpayment when there is no history of late or missed 

payments;

    b. A material increase in the use of available credit;

    c. A material change in purchasing or spending patterns;

    d. A material change in electronic fund transfer patterns in 

connection with a deposit account; or

    e. A material change in telephone call patterns in connection 

with a cellular phone account.

    20. An account that has been inactive for a reasonably lengthy 

period of time is used (taking into consideration the type of 

account, the expected pattern of usage and other relevant factors).



Notice From Customers or Others Regarding Customer Accounts



    21. The financial institution or creditor is notified of 

unauthorized charges in connection with a customer's account.

    22. The financial institution or creditor is notified that it 

has opened a fraudulent account for a person engaged in identity 

theft.

    23. The financial institution or creditor is notified that the 

customer is not receiving account statements.

    24. The financial institution or creditor is notified that its 

customer has provided information to someone fraudulently claiming 

to represent the financial institution or creditor or to a 

fraudulent Web site.

    25. Electronic messages are returned to mail servers of the 

financial institution or creditor that it did not originally send, 

indicating that its customers may have been asked to provide 

information to a fraudulent Web site that looks very similar, if not 

identical, to the Web site of the financial institution or creditor.



Other Red Flags



    26. The name of an employee of the financial institution or 

creditor has been added as an authorized user on an account.

    27. An employee has accessed or downloaded an unusually large 

number of customer account records.

    28. The financial institution or creditor detects attempts to 

access a customer's account by unauthorized persons.

    29. The financial institution or creditor detects or is informed 

of unauthorized access to a customer's personal information.

    30. There are unusually frequent and large check orders in 

connection with a customer's account.

    31. The person opening an account or the customer is unable to 

lift a credit freeze placed on his or her consumer report.



Federal Trade Commission



16 CFR Part 681



    For the reasons discussed in the joint preamble, the Commission 

proposes to add part 681 of title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations 

as follows:



PART 681--IDENTITY THEFT RULES



Sec.

681.1 Duties of users of consumer reports regarding address 

discrepancies.

681.2 Duties regarding the detection, prevention, and mitigation of 

identity theft.

681.3 Duties of card issuers regarding changes of address.

Appendix A to Part 681 Interagency Guidelines on Identity Theft 

Detection, Prevention, and Mitigation



    Authority: Pub. L. 108-159, sec 114 and sec 315; 15 U.S.C. 

1681m(e) and 15 U.S.C. 1681c(h).





Sec.  681.1  Duties of users of consumer reports regarding address 

discrepancies.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to users of consumer reports that 

are subject to administrative enforcement of the FCRA by the Federal 

Trade Commission pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1681s(a)(1) (referred to as 

``users'').

    (b) Definition. For purposes of this section, a notice of address 

discrepancy means a notice sent to a user of a consumer report by a 

consumer reporting agency pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1681c(h)(1), that 

informs the user of a substantial difference between the address for 

the consumer that the user provided to request the consumer report and 

the address(es) in the agency's file for the consumer.

    (c) Requirement to form a reasonable belief. A user must develop 

and implement reasonable policies and procedures for verifying the 

identity of the consumer for whom it has obtained a consumer report and 

for whom it receives a notice of address discrepancy. These policies 

and procedures must be designed to enable the user either to form a 

reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the consumer or 

determine that it cannot do so. A user that employs the policies and 

procedures regarding identification and verification set forth in the 

Customer Identification Program (CIP) rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 

5318(l) under these circumstances satisfies this requirement, whether 

or not the user is subject to the CIP rules.

    (d) Consumer's address

    (1) Requirement to furnish consumer's address to a consumer 

reporting agency. A user must develop and implement reasonable policies 

and procedures for furnishing an address for the consumer that the user 

has reasonably confirmed is accurate to the consumer reporting agency 

from whom it received the notice of address discrepancy when the user:

    (i) Can form a reasonable belief that it knows the identity of the 

consumer for whom the consumer report was obtained;

    (ii) Establishes or maintains a continuing relationship with the 

consumer; and

    (iii) Regularly and in the ordinary course of business furnishes 

information to the consumer reporting agency from which the notice of 

address discrepancy pertaining to the consumer was obtained.

    (2) Requirement to confirm consumer's address. The user may 

reasonably confirm an address is accurate by:

    (i) Verifying the address with the person to whom the consumer 

report pertains;

    (ii) Reviewing its own records of the address provided to request 

the consumer report;

    (iii) Verifying the address through third-party sources; or

    (iv) Using other reasonable means.

    (3) Timing. The policies and procedures developed in accordance 

with paragraph (d)(1) of this section must provide that the user will 

furnish the consumer's address that the user has reasonably confirmed 

is accurate to the consumer reporting agency as part of the information 

it regularly furnishes:

    (i) With respect to new relationships, for the reporting period in 

which it establishes a relationship with the consumer; and

    (ii) In other circumstances, for the reporting period in which the 

user confirms the accuracy of the address of the consumer.





Sec.  681.2  Duties regarding the detection, prevention, and mitigation 

of identity theft.



    (a) Purpose and scope. This section implements section 114 of the 

Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681m, which 

amends section 615 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA). It applies 

to financial institutions and creditors that are subject to 

administrative enforcement of the FCRA by the Federal Trade Commission 

pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 1681s(a)(1).

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 

definitions apply:

    (1) Account means a continuing relationship established to provide 

a financial product or service that a



[[Page 40824]]



financial holding company could offer by engaging in an activity that 

is financial in nature or incidental to such a financial activity under 

section 4(k) of the Bank Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1843(k). 

Account includes:

    (i) An extension of credit for personal, family, household or 

business purposes, such as a credit card account, margin account, or 

retail installment sales contract, such as a car loan or lease; and

    (ii) A demand deposit, savings or other asset account for personal, 

family, household, or business purposes, such as a checking or savings 

account.

    (2) The term board of directors includes:

    (i) In the case of a foreign branch or agency of a foreign bank, 

the managing official in charge of the branch or agency; and

    (ii) In the case of any other creditor that does not have a board 

of directors, a designated employee.

    (3) Customer means a person that has an account with a financial 

institution or creditor.

    (4) Identity theft has the same meaning as in 16 CFR 603.2(a).

    (5) Red Flag means a pattern, practice, or specific activity that 

indicates the possible risk of identity theft.

    (6) Service provider means a person that provides a service 

directly to the financial institution or creditor.

    (c) Identity Theft Prevention Program. Each financial institution 

or creditor must implement a written Identity Theft Prevention Program 

(Program). The Program must include reasonable policies and procedures 

to address the risk of identity theft to its customers and the safety 

and soundness of the financial institution or creditor, including 

financial, operational, compliance, reputation, and litigation risks, 

in the manner discussed in paragraph (d) of this section. The Program 

must be:

    (1) Appropriate to the size and complexity of the financial 

institution or creditor and the nature and scope of its activities; and

    (2) Designed to address changing identity theft risks as they arise 

in connection with the experiences of the financial institution or 

creditor with identity theft, and changes in methods of identity theft, 

methods to detect, prevent, and mitigate identity theft, the types of 

accounts it offers, and business arrangements, including mergers, 

acquisitions, alliances, joint ventures, and service provider 

arrangements.

    (d) Development and implementation of Program.

    (1) Identification and evaluation of Red Flags.

    (i) Risk-based Red Flags. The Program must include policies and 

procedures to identify Red Flags, singly or in combination, that are 

relevant to detecting a possible risk of identity theft to customers or 

to the safety and soundness of the financial institution or creditor, 

using the risk evaluation set forth in paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this 

section. The Red Flags identified must reflect changing identity theft 

risks to customers and to the financial institution or creditor as they 

arise. At a minimum, the Program must incorporate any relevant Red 

Flags from:

    (A) Appendix A to this part;

    (B) Applicable supervisory guidance;

    (C) Incidents of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has experienced; and

    (D) Methods of identity theft that the financial institution or 

creditor has identified that reflect changes in identity theft risks.

    (ii) Risk evaluation. In identifying which Red Flags are relevant, 

the financial institution or creditor must consider:

    (A) Which of its accounts are subject to a risk of identity theft;

    (B) The methods it provides to open these accounts;

    (C) The methods it provides to access these accounts; and

    (D) Its size, location, and customer base.

    (2) Identity theft prevention and mitigation. The Program must 

include reasonable policies and procedures designed to prevent and 

mitigate identity theft in connection with the opening of an account or 

any existing account, including policies and procedures to:

    (i) Obtain identifying information about, and verify the identity 

of, a person opening an account. A financial institution or creditor 

that uses the policies and procedures regarding identification and 

verification set forth in the Customer Identification Program (CIP) 

rules implementing 31 U.S.C. 5318(l), under these circumstances, 

satisfies this requirement whether or not the user is subject to the 

CIP rules;

    (ii) Detect the Red Flags identified pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) 

of this section;

    (iii) Assess whether the Red Flags detected pursuant to paragraph 

(d)(2)(ii) of this section evidence a risk of identity theft. An 

institution or creditor must have a reasonable basis for concluding 

that a Red Flag does not evidence a risk of identity theft; and

    (iv) Address the risk of identity theft, commensurate with the 

degree of risk posed, such as by:

    (A) Monitoring an account for evidence of identity theft;

    (B) Contacting the customer;

    (C) Changing any passwords, security codes, or other security 

devices that permit access to a customer's account;

    (D) Reopening an account with a new account number;

    (E) Not opening a new account;

    (F) Closing an existing account;

    (G) Notifying law enforcement and, for those that are subject to 31 

U.S.C. 5318(g), filing a Suspicious Activity Report in accordance with 

applicable law and regulation;

    (H) Implementing any requirements regarding limitations on credit 

extensions under 15 U.S.C. 1681c-1(h), such as declining to issue an 

additional credit card when the financial institution or creditor 

detects a fraud or active duty alert associated with the opening of an 

account, or an existing account; or

    (I) Implementing any requirements for furnishers of information to 

consumer reporting agencies under 15 U.S.C. 1681s-2, to correct or 

update inaccurate or incomplete information.

    (3) Staff training. Each financial institution or creditor must 

train staff to implement its Program.

    (4) Oversight of service provider arrangements. Whenever a 

financial institution or creditor engages a service provider to perform 

an activity on its behalf and the requirements of its Program are 

applicable to that activity (such as account opening), the financial 

institution or creditor must take steps designed to ensure that the 

activity is conducted in compliance with a Program that meets the 

requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.

    (5) Involvement of board of directors and senior management. (i) 

Board approval. The board of directors or an appropriate committee of 

the board must approve the written Program.

    (ii) Oversight by board or senior management. The board of 

directors, an appropriate committee of the board, or senior management 

must oversee the development, implementation, and maintenance of the 

Program, including assigning specific responsibility for its 

implementation, and reviewing annual reports prepared by staff 

regarding compliance by the financial institution or creditor with this 

section.

    (iii) Reports.

    (A) In general. Staff of the financial institution or creditor 

responsible for implementation of its Program must report to the board, 

an appropriate committee of the board, or senior management, at least 

annually, on compliance by the financial institution or creditor with 

this section.



[[Page 40825]]



    (B) Contents of report. The report must discuss material matters 

related to the Program and evaluate issues such as: the effectiveness 

of the policies and procedures of the financial institution or creditor 

in addressing the risk of identity theft in connection with the opening 

of accounts and with respect to existing accounts; service provider 

arrangements; significant incidents involving identity theft and 

management's response; and recommendations for changes in the Program.





Sec.  681.3  Duties of card issuers regarding changes of address.



    (a) Scope. This section applies to a person described in Sec.  

681.2(a) that issues a debit or credit card.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:

    (1) Cardholder means a consumer who has been issued a credit or 

debit card.

    (2) Clear and conspicuous means reasonably understandable and 

designed to call attention to the nature and significance of the 

information presented.

    (c) In general. A card issuer must establish and implement 

reasonable policies and procedures to assess the validity of a change 

of address if it receives notification of a change of address for a 

consumer's debit or credit card account and within a short period of 

time afterwards (during at least the first 30 days after it receives 

such notification), the card issuer receives a request for an 

additional or replacement card for the same account. Under these 

circumstances, the card issuer may not issue an additional or 

replacement card, unless, in accordance with its reasonable policies 

and procedures and for the purpose of assessing the validity of the 

change of address, the card issuer:

    (1) Notifies the cardholder of the request at the cardholder's 

former address and provides to the cardholder a means of promptly 

reporting incorrect address changes;

    (2) Notifies the cardholder of the request by any other means of 

communication that the card issuer and the cardholder have previously 

agreed to use; or

    (3) Uses other means of assessing the validity of the change of 

address, in accordance with the policies and procedures the card issuer 

has established pursuant to this section.

    (d) Form of notice. Any written or electronic notice that the card 

issuer provides under this paragraph shall be clear and conspicuous and 

provided separately from its regular correspondence with the 

cardholder.



Appendix A to Part 681--Interagency Guidelines on Identity Theft 



Detection, Prevention, and MitigationRed Flags in Connection With 

an Account Application or an Existing Account



Information From a Consumer Reporting Agency



    1. A fraud or active duty alert is included with a consumer 

report.

    2. A notice of address discrepancy is provided by a consumer 

reporting agency.

    3. A consumer report indicates a pattern of activity that is 

inconsistent with the history and usual pattern of activity of an 

applicant or customer, such as:

    a. A recent and significant increase in the volume of inquiries.

    b. An unusual number of recently established credit 

relationships.

    c. A material change in the use of credit, especially with 

respect to recently established credit relationships.

    d. An account was closed for cause or identified for abuse of 

account privileges by a financial institution or creditor.



Documentary Identification



    4. Documents provided for identification appear to have been 

altered.

    5. The photograph or physical description on the identification 

is not consistent with the appearance of the applicant or customer 

presenting the identification.

    6. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information provided by the person opening a new account or 

customer presenting the identification.

    7. Other information on the identification is not consistent 

with information that is on file, such as a signature card.



Personal Information



    8. Personal information provided is inconsistent when compared 

against external information sources. For example:

    a. The address does not match any address in the consumer 

report; or

    b. The Social Security Number (SSN) has not been issued, or is 

listed on the Social Security Administration's Death Master File.

    9. Personal information provided is internally inconsistent. For 

example, there is a lack of correlation between the SSN range and 

date of birth.

    10. Personal information provided is associated with known 

fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is the same as the address 

provided on a fraudulent application; or

    b. The phone number on an application is the same as the number 

provided on a fraudulent application.

    11. Personal information provided is of a type commonly 

associated with fraudulent activity. For example:

    a. The address on an application is fictitious, a mail drop, or 

prison.

    b. The phone number is invalid, or is associated with a pager or 

answering service.

    12. The address, SSN, or home or cell phone number provided is 

the same as that submitted by other persons opening an account or 

other customers.

    13. The person opening the account or the customer fails to 

provide all required information on an application.

    14. Personal information provided is not consistent with 

information that is on file.

    15. The person opening the account or the customer cannot 

provide authenticating information beyond that which generally would 

be available from a wallet or consumer report.



Address Changes



    16. Shortly following the notice of a change of address for an 

account, the institution or creditor receives a request for new, 

additional or replacement checks, convenience checks, cards, or cell 

phone, or for the addition of authorized users on the account.

    17. Mail sent to the customer is returned as undeliverable 

although transactions continue to be conducted in connection with 

the customer's account.



Anomalous Use of the Account



    18. A new revolving credit account is used in a manner commonly 

associated with fraud. For example:

    a. The majority of available credit is used for cash advances or 

merchandise that is easily convertible to cash (e.g., electronics 

equipment or jewelry); or

    b. The customer fails to make the first payment or makes an 

initial payment but no subsequent payments.

    19. An account is used in a manner that is not consistent with 

established patterns of activity on the account. There is, for 

example:

    a. Nonpayment when there is no history of late or missed 

payments;

    b. A material increase in the use of available credit;

    c. A material change in purchasing or spending patterns;

    d. A material change in electronic fund transfer patterns in 

connection with a deposit account; or

    e. A material change in telephone call patterns in connection 

with a cellular phone account.

    20. An account that has been inactive for a reasonably lengthy 

period of time is used (taking into consideration the type of 

account, the expected pattern of usage and other relevant factors).



Notice From Customers or Others Regarding Customer Accounts



    21. The financial institution or creditor is notified of 

unauthorized charges in connection with a customer's account.

    22. The financial institution or creditor is notified that it 

has opened a fraudulent account for a person engaged in identity 

theft.

    23. The financial institution or creditor is notified that the 

customer is not receiving account statements.

    24. The financial institution or creditor is notified that its 

customer has provided information to someone fraudulently claiming 

to represent the financial institution or creditor or to a 

fraudulent Web site.

    25. Electronic messages are returned to mail servers of the 

financial institution or creditor that it did not originally send,



[[Page 40826]]



indicating that its customers may have been asked to provide 

information to a fraudulent Web site that looks very similar, if not 

identical, to the Web site of the financial institution or creditor.



Other Red Flags



    26. The name of an employee of the financial institution or 

creditor has been added as an authorized user on an account.

    27. An employee has accessed or downloaded an unusually large 

number of customer account records.

    28. The financial institution or creditor detects attempts to 

access a customer's account by unauthorized persons.

    29. The financial institution or creditor detects or is informed 

of unauthorized access to a customer's personal information.

    30. There are unusually frequent and large check orders in 

connection with a customer's account.

    31. The person opening an account or the customer is unable to 

lift a credit freeze placed on his or her consumer report.



    Dated: May 8, 2006.

John C. Dugan,

Comptroller of the Currency.

    By Order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 

System, July 5, 2006.

Jennifer J. Johnson,

Secretary of the Board.

    By Order of the Board of Directors.



    Dated at Washington, DC, the 9th day of May, 2006. Federal 

Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Robert E. Feldman,

Executive Secretary.

    Dated: April 10, 2006.



    By the Office of Thrift Supervision.

John M. Reich,

Director.

    By the National Credit Union Administration Board on June 15, 

2006.

Mary Rupp,

Secretary of the Board.

    By direction of the Commission.

Donald S. Clark,

Secretary.

[FR Doc. 06-6187 Filed 7-17-06; 8:45 am]



BILLING CODE 4810-33-P