The passage of the bill to amend the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (Cth) (AML/CTF Act) through the Federal Parliament during the final sitting week for 2024 marks a significant milestone on the journey to reform Australia’s AML/CTF regime. AUSTRAC has moved quickly to release its consultation paper on the new AML/CTF Rules (Consultation Paper), as well as publishing the first exposure draft of the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Rules on 11 December 2024 (Draft Rules). As much of the granular detail required to comply with the AML/CTF Act is captured in the AML/CTF Rules, AUSTRAC have proposed a wholesale rewrite in the Draft Rules to align with the reforms in the AML/CTF Amendment Act.
In this article, we have considered the requirements proposed in the Draft Rules in connection with:
- AML/CTF programs;
- reporting groups (formerly ‘designated business groups’);
- customer due diligence;
- reliance arrangements;
- reporting groups and lead entities;
- offshore operations
- transfers of value and the travel rule; and
- keep open notices (formerly ‘Chapter 75 notices’).
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