To Ensure Our
Security, Congress Must Shine More Light on Anonymous Companies
By Frank Knapp
They also use them to cheat small
businesses.
For example, from 2004 to 2012 a
large Virginia-based security firm used a shell company to fraudulently obtain
$31 million in federal contracts -- contracts that should have gone to
minority-owned small businesses under the SBA's section 8(a) set-aside program.
In a second case, a Maryland woman
used multiple shell companies to win contracts to supply the government with
paint and other goods. She got subcontractors to supply the goods, billed the
government, and then walked away with $2.3 million in payments she owed the
subs.
The first crime used one shell
company; the second, more than a dozen, incorporated in six states.
Anonymous companies are also used to
poison our politics. Last year more than 200 Limited Liability Companies (LLCs)
donated $11 million to presidential candidates super PACs, according to the
Wall Street Journal. The use of LLCs -- whose owners can be hidden -- defeats
federal election rules that require super PACS to identify most of their
contributors.
Anonymous companies are also used to
fund terrorism. Last July, Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance Jr. told a House terrorism
hearing that identifying shell companies' beneficial owners would vastly
improve law enforcement's efforts to stop terrorism funding.
All of this is possible because our
states rank among the world's easiest places to create anonymous shell
companies. To protect our small businesses, defend our democracy and to ensure
our security, that must change.
The solution is to require every
corporation and LLC to disclose its beneficial owners, when it is formed. The
states won't do this alone, in part because states are afraid that if they act
unilaterally, they will lose incorporation fees to states that do not act.
As a result, Congress must force
them to do this by passing the bipartisan Incorporation Transparency and Law
Enforcement Assistance Act (ITLEAA) -- which requires all states to identify
the beneficial owners of the companies they create.
Taking this action would
create a level playing field for all states, and make it harder for criminal
and corrupt actors to exploit company formation law to conduct business that no
state truly wants within its borders.
Complying with the Act would not
burden small businesses. Rather it would help to level the playing field
between them and large businesses -- for example, by providing them with better
information when they negotiate with larger partners.
Our presidential campaigns have been
dominated by security concerns and yet no candidate has called on Congress to
pass the ITLEAA. It's a straightforward, low-cost way to stop the misuse of
anonymous companies and the crimes they enable.
By passing this Act, Congress can
take a common sense step to boost our security on multiple fronts -- and our
presidential candidates who care about small businesses, our democracy and our
security, should call on Congress to do so.