FYI from NAPT.
BOI Update Alert: Appeals Court Reinstates BOI Filing Requirement
The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals has granted the government's emergency motion to stay a Texas district court's nationwide injunction against the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA). CTA requires nonexempt companies to report their beneficial owners. Before the Texas court’s injunction, specified businesses formed prior to 2024 were required to file their initial beneficial ownership information (BOI) report with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) by Jan. 1, 2025, and new businesses were required to file within 30 days.
The stay means the CTA is now in effect. The court found that the government is likely to succeed on appeal, that leaving the injunction in place could cause significant harm, and that the public interest in preventing financial crimes outweighs any harm to the plaintiffs. The case will proceed quickly to the next available oral argument panel. FinCEN has yet to issue a response to the 5th Circuit’s order.
In its budget discussions of last week, Congress did not extend the BOI compliance deadline for existing businesses to Jan. 1, 2026, so the original deadline of Jan. 1, 2025, remains in place. As a result, the 5th Circuit’s decision has immediate implications for affected businesses.
Jan 13th is the new date they posted.
From the FinCen website
In light of a December 23, 2024, federal Court of Appeals decision, reporting companies, except as indicated below, are once again required to file beneficial ownership information with FinCEN. However, because the Department of the Treasury recognizes that reporting companies may need additional time to comply given the period when the preliminary injunction had been in effect, we have extended the reporting deadline as follows:
On Tuesday, December 3, 2024, in the case of Texas Top Cop Shop, Inc., et al. v. Garland, et al., No. 4:24-cv-00478 (E.D. Tex.), the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Sherman Division, issued an order granting a nationwide preliminary injunction. On December 23, 2024, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit granted a stay of the district court’s preliminary injunction enjoining the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) entered in the case of Texas Top Cop Shop, Inc. v. Garland, pending the outcome of the Department of the Treasury’s ongoing appeal of the district court’s order. Texas Top Cop Shop is only one of several cases that have challenged the CTA pending before courts around the country. Several district courts have denied requests to enjoin the CTA, ruling in favor of the Department of the Treasury. The government continues to believe—consistent with the conclusions of the U.S. District Courts for the Eastern District of Virginia and the District of Oregon—that the CTA is constitutional. For that reason, the Department of Justice, on behalf of the Department of the Treasury, filed a Notice of Appeal on December 5, 2024 and separately sought of stay of the injunction pending that appeal with the district court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
This is worse than watching sausage being made....
Appeals court reinstates injunction that halts BOI enforcement
If the BOI requirement makes it through the current game of pop goes the weasel, I'm going to guess the federal government is going to be doing a lot of hiring next year. Between running down immigrants and hardened BOI failure to file criminals, they are going to be busy. Of course, I suppose they could just transfer all of the extra people that won't have jobs once the IRS is dismantled.
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