FINANCIAL TRANSACTION REPORTS ACT 1988 - SECT 28 Failure to provide information
FINANCIAL TRANSACTION REPORTS ACT 1988 - SECT 28
Failure to provide information(1) A cash dealer commits an offence against this section if the cash dealer refuses or fails:
(a) to communicate information to the AUSTRAC CEO when and as required under Part II or III; or
(b) to comply with a notice as required by subsection 27E(3).
(c) to retain reports as required under subsection 17B(5).
(2) A financial institution commits an offence against this section if the institution:
(a) fails to maintain an exemption register as required under Division 1 of Part II; or
(b) refuses or fails to comply with a notice under subsection 13(1) or (5).
(3) If a solicitor, a solicitor corporation or a partnership of solicitors refuses or fails:
(a) to communicate information to the AUSTRAC CEO when required under section 15A; or
(b) to comply with a notice as required by subsection 27E(3);
the solicitor or corporation, or each member of the partnership, as the case may be, commits an offence against this section.
(4) A person who commits an offence against this section is punishable, upon conviction, by imprisonment for not more than 2 years.
Note: Subsection 4B(2) of the Crimes Act 1914 allows a court to
impose in respect of an offence an appropriate fine instead of, or in addition
to, a term of imprisonment. The maximum fine that a court can impose on an
individual is worked out by multiplying the maximum term of imprisonment (in
months) by 5, and then multiplying the resulting number by the amount of a
penalty unit. The amount of a penalty unit is stated in section 4AA of
that Act. If a body corporate is convicted of an offence, subsection
4B(3) of that Act allows a court to impose a fine that is not greater than 5
times the maximum fine that could be imposed by the court on an individual
convicted of the same offence.