TRUTH IN LENDING ACT 3765
1. What is the truth in lending act?
    -an act to require the disclosure of finance charges in connection with
    extensions of credit.
2. What is the purpose of the law?
    -aims to ensure that a borrower will receive a clear and understandable
    layout of certain costs and terms. It lets the borrower to easily compare
    financing costs among different products because it requires lenders to
    lay-out certain terms in a uniform way.
3. What is the policy of the state in the context of RA 3765?
    - It is hereby declared to be the policy of the State to protect its citizens
    from a lack of awareness of the true cost of credit to the user by assuring
    a full disclosure of such cost with a view of preventing the uninformed use
    of credit to the detriment of the national economy.
4. What is the obligation of creditors to persons to whom credit is extended?
    -Any creditor shall furnish to each person to whom credit is extended,
    prior to the consummation of the transaction, a clear statement in writing
    setting forth, to the extent applicable and in accordance with rules and
    regulations prescribed by the Board, the following information:
         (1) the cash price or delivered price of the property or service to be
         acquired;
         (2) the amounts, if any, to be credited as down payment and/or
         trade-in;
         (3) the difference between the amounts set forth under clauses (1)
         and (2);
         (4) the charges, individually itemized, which are paid or to be paid by
         such person in connection with the transaction but which are not
         incident to the extension of credit;
         (5) the total amount to be financed;
         (6) the finance charge expressed in terms of pesos and centavos; and
         (7) the percentage that the finance bears to the total amount to be
         financed expressed as a simple annual rate on the outstanding
         unpaid balance of the obligation.
5. What are the covered transactions?
     -any credit transaction.
6. Is the law applicable only to banks and other financial institutions?
 • Yes. No punishment or penalty provided by this Act shall apply to the
     Philippine Government or any agency or any political subdivision thereof.
7. What are the excluded transactions?
    -nothing contained in this Act or any regulation contained in this Act or
    any regulation thereunder shall affect the validity or enforceability of any
    contract or transactions.
8. Consequences of non-compliance with the requirement of TILA. What are
the penalties in case of violation?
          •   Any creditor who in connection with any credit transaction fails
              to disclose to any person any information in violation of this Act
              or any regulation issued thereunder shall be liable to such person
              in the amount of P100 or in an amount equal to twice the finance
              charged required by such creditor in connection with such
              transaction, whichever is the greater, except that such liability
              shall not exceed P2,000 on any credit transaction.
          •   Any person who willfully violates any provision of this Act or any
              regulation issued thereunder shall be fined by not less than P1,00
              or more than P5,000 or imprisonment for not less than 6 months,
              nor more than one year or both.
          •   A final judgment hereafter rendered in any criminal proceeding
              under this Act to the effect that a defendant has willfully violated
              this Act shall be prima facie evidence against such defendant in
              an action or proceeding brought by any other party against such
              defendant under this Act as to all matters respecting which said
              judgment would be an estoppel as between the parties thereto.
ANTI- MONEY LAUNDERING ACT OF 2001
amended by:
    o   R.A. No. 9194
    o   R.A. No. 10167
Guide Questions:
1. Declared policies of AMLA
    -protect the integrity and confidentiality of bank accounts and to ensure that
    the Philippines shall not be used as a money-laundering site for the proceeds
    of any unlawful activity. Consistent with its foreign policy, the Philippines shall
    extend cooperation in transnational investigations and prosecutions of persons
    involved in money laundering activities wherever committed.
2. Transactions covered by AMLA
           •    A single transaction involving an amount in excess of Four Million
               Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00) or an equivalent amount in
               foreign currency based on the prevailing exchange rate where the
               client is not properly identified and/or the amount is not
               commensurate with his business or financial capacity.
           •   A single transaction involving an amount in excess of Four Million
               Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00) or an equivalent amount in
               foreign currency based on the prevailing exchange rate which has no
               underlying legal or trade obligation, purpose, origin, or economic
               justification.
           •   A series or combination of transactions conducted within five (5)
               consecutive banking days aggregating to a total amount in excess of
               Four million Philippine pesos (Php4,000,000.00) or an equivalent in
               foreign currency based on the prevailing exchange rate where the
               client is not properly identified and/or the amount is not
               commensurate with his business or financial capacity.
           •    A series or combination of transactions conducted within five (5)
               consecutive banking days aggregating to a total amount in excess of
               Four Million Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00) or an equivalent
               amount in foreign currency based on the prevailing exchange rate
               where most, if not all the transactions, do not have any underlying
               legal or trade obligation, purpose, origin, or economic justification.
           •   A single unusually large and complex transaction in excess of Four
               Million Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00), especially a cash deposit
               or investment having no credible purpose or origin, underlying trade
               obligation or contract, regardless of whether or not the client is
               properly identified and/or the amount is commensurate with his
               business or financial capacity.
           •    A series, combination or pattern of unusually large and complex
               transactions aggregating to, without reference to any period, a total
               amount in excess of Four Million Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00),
               especially cash deposits and/or investments having no credible
              purpose or origin, underlying trade obligation or contract, regardless
              of whether or not the client is properly identified and/or the amount
              is commensurate with his business or financial capacity.
3. Define the following terms:
    a)   Covered institution
          •   Banks, offshore banking units, quasi-banks, trust entities, non-stock
              savings and loan associations, pawnshops, and all other institutions,
              including their subsidiaries and affiliates supervised and/or regulated
              by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).
          •   Insurance companies, insurance agents, insurance brokers,
              professional reinsurers, reinsurance brokers, holding companies,
              holding company systems and all other persons and entities
              supervised and/or regulated by the Insurance Commission (IC).
                          •   An insurance company includes those entities
                             authorized to transact insurance business in the
                             Philippines, whether life or non-life and whether
                             domestic, domestically incorporated or branch of a
                             foreign entity. A contract of insurance is an agreement
                             whereby one undertakes for a consideration to
                             indemnify another against loss, damage or liability
                             arising from an unknown or contingent event.
                             Transacting insurance business includes making or
                             proposing to make, as insurer, any insurance contract,
                             or as surety, any contract of suretyship as a vocation
                             and not as merely incidental to any other legitimate
                             business or activity of the surety, doing any kind of
                             business specifically recognized as constituting the
                             doing of an insurance business within the meaning of
                             Presidential Decree (P.D.) No. 612, as amended,
                             including a reinsurance business and doing or
                             proposing to do any business in substance equivalent
                             to any of the foregoing in a manner designed to evade
                             the provisions of P.D. No. 612, as amended.
                         •   An insurance agent includes any person who solicits or
                             obtains insurance on behalf of any insurance company
                             or transmits for a person other than himself an
                             application for a policy or contract of insurance to or
                             from such company or offers or assumes to act in the
                             negotiation of such insurance.
                         •   An insurance broker includes any person who acts or
                             aids in any manner in spliciting, negotiating or
                             procuring the making of any insurance contract or in
                             placing risk or taking out insurance, on behalf of an
                             insured other than himself.
               •    A professional reinsurer includes any person,
                   partnership, association or corporation that transacts
                   solely and exclusively reinsurance business in the
                   Philippines,   whether       domestic,     domestically
                   incorporated or a branch of a foreign entity. A contract
                   of reinsurance is one by which an insurer procures a
                   third person to insure him against loss or liability by
                   reason of such original insurance.
               •   A reinsurance broker includes any person who, not
                   being a duly authorized agent, employee or officer of
                   an insurer in which any reinsurance is effected, acts or
                   aids in any manner in negotiating contracts of
                   reinsurance or placing risks of effecting reinsurance,
                   for any insurance company authorized to do business
                   in the Philippines.
               •   A holding company includes any person who directly
                   or indirectly controls any authorized insurer. A holding
                   company system includes a holding company together
                   with its controlled insurers and controlled persons.
•   Securities dealers, brokers, salesmen, associated persons of brokers
    or dealers, investment houses, investment agents and consultants,
    trading advisors, and other entities managing securities or rendering
    similar services, (ii) mutual funds or open-end investment companies,
    close-end investment companies, common trust funds, pre-need
    companies or issuers and other similar entities; (iii) foreign exchange
    corporations, money changers, money payment, remittance, and
    transfer companies and other similar entities, and (iv) other entities
    administering or otherwise dealing in currency, commodities or
    financial derivatives based thereon, valuable objects, cash
    substitutes and other similar monetary instruments or property
    supervised and/or regulated by the Securities and Exchange
    Commission (SEC).
               •   A securities broker includes a person engaged in the
                   business of buying and selling securities for the
                   account of others.
               •   A securities dealer includes any person who buys and
                   sells securities for his/her account in the ordinary
                   course of business.
               •   A securities salesman includes a natural person,
                   employed as such or as an agent, by a dealer, issuer or
                   broker to buy and sell securities.
               •   An associated person of a broker or dealer includes an
                   employee thereof who directly exercises control or
                   supervisory authority, but does not include a
                   salesman, or an agent or a person whose functions are
                   solely clerical or ministerial.
•   An investment house includes an enterprise which
    engages or purports to engage, whether regularly or
    on an isolated basis, in the underwriting of securities
    of another person or enterprise, including securities of
    the Government and its instrumentalities.
•   A mutual fund or an open-end investment company
    includes an investment company which is offering for
    sale or has outstanding, any redeemable security of
    which it is the issuer.
•   A closed-end investment company includes an
    investment company other than open-end investment
    company.
•    A common trust fund includes a fund maintained by
    an entity authorized to perform trust functions under
    a written and formally established plan, exclusively for
    the collective investment and reinvestment of certain
    money representing participation in the plan received
    by it in its capacity as trustee, for the purpose of
    administration, holding or management of such funds
    and/or properties for the use, benefit or advantage of
    the trustor or of others known as beneficiaries.
•    A pre-need company or issuer includes any
    corporation supervised and/or regulated by the SEC
    and is authorized or licensed to sell or offer for sale
    pre-need plans. Pre-need, plans are contracts which
    provide for the performance of future service(s) or
    payment of future monetary consideration at the time
    of actual need, payable either in cash or installment by
    the planholder at prices stated in the contract with or
    without interest or insurance coverage and includes
    life, pension, education, internment and other plans,
    which the Commission may, from time to time,
    approve.
•    A foreign exchange corporation includes any
    enterprise which engages or purports to engage,
    whether regularly or on an isolated basis, in the sale
    and purchase of foreign currency notes and such other
    foreign-currency denominated non-bank deposit
    transactions as may be authorized under its articles of
    incorporation.
•   Investment Advisor/Agent/Consultant shall refer to
    any person:
        (1) who for an advisory fee is engaged in the
        business of advising others, either directly or
        through circulars, reports, publications or
        writings, as to the value of any security and as to
        the advisability of trading in any security; or
                             (2) who for compensation and as part of a regular
                             business, issues or promulgates, analyzes reports
                             concerning the capital market, except:
                                            (a) any bank or trust company;
                                            (b) any journalist, reporter,
                                            columnist,       editor,     lawyer,
                                            accountant, teacher;
                                            (c) the publisher of any bonafide
                                            newspaper, news, business or
                                            financial publication of general and
                                            regular circulation, including their
                                            employees;
                                            (d) any contract market;
                                            (e) such other person not within the
                                            intent of this definition, provided
                                            that the furnishing of such service
                                            by the foregoing persons is solely
                                            incidental to the conduct of their
                                            business or profession.
                             (3) any person who undertakes the management
                             of portfolio securities of investment companies,
                             including the arrangement of purchases, sales or
                             exchanges of securities.
                    •   A moneychanger includes any person in the business
                        of buying or selling foreign currency notes.
                    •   A money payment, remittance and transfer company
                        includes any person offering to pay, remit or transfer
                        transmit money on behalf of any person to another
                        person.
                    •   "Customer" refers to any person or entity that keeps
                        an account, or otherwise transacts business, with a
                        covered institution and any person or entity on whose
                        behalf an account is maintained or a transaction is
                        conducted, as well as the beneficiary of said
                        transactions. A customer also includes the beneficiary
                        of a trust, an investment fund, a pension fund or a
                        company or person whose assets are managed by an
                        asset manager, or a grantor of a trust. It includes any
                        insurance policy holder, whether actual or prospective.
                    •   "Property" includes any thing or item of value, real or
                        personal, tangible or intangible, or any interest therein
                        or any benefit, privilege, claim or right with respect
                        thereto
b)   Covered transaction
 o   A single transaction involving an amount in excess of Four Million
     Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00) or an equivalent amount in foreign
     currency based on the prevailing exchange rate where the client is not
     properly identified and/or the amount is not commensurate with his
     business or financial capacity.
 o   A single transaction involving an amount in excess of Four Million
     Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00) or an equivalent amount in foreign
     currency based on the prevailing exchange rate which has no underlying
     legal or trade obligation, purpose, origin, or economic justification.
 o   A series or combination of transactions conducted within five (5)
     consecutive banking days aggregating to a total amount in excess of Four
     million Philippine pesos (Php4,000,000.00) or an equivalent in foreign
     currency based on the prevailing exchange rate where the client is not
     properly identified and/or the amount is not commensurate with his
     business or financial capacity.
 o    A series or combination of transactions conducted within five (5)
     consecutive banking days aggregating to a total amount in excess of Four
     Million Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00) or an equivalent amount in
     foreign currency based on the prevailing exchange rate where most, if not
     all the transactions, do not have any underlying legal or trade obligation,
     purpose, origin, or economic justification.
 o   A single unusually large and complex transaction in excess of Four Million
     Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00), especially a cash deposit or
     investment having no credible purpose or origin, underlying trade
     obligation or contract, regardless of whether or not the client is properly
     identified and/or the amount is commensurate with his business or
     financial capacity.
 o    A series, combination or pattern of unusually large and complex
     transactions aggregating to, without reference to any period, a total
     amount in excess of Four Million Philippine Pesos (Php4,000,000.00),
     especially cash deposits and/or investments having no credible purpose or
     origin, underlying trade obligation or contract, regardless of whether or
     not the client is properly identified and/or the amount is commensurate
     with his business or financial capacity.
c)    Monetary instrument
     -refers to:
                 • Coins or currency of legal tender of the Philippines, or of any
                   other country;
                 • Drafts, checks and notes;
                 • Securities or negotiable instruments, bonds, commercial
                   papers, deposit certificates, trust certificates, custodial
                   receipts or deposit substitute instruments, trading orders,
                   transactions tickets and confirmations of sale or
                   investments and money market instruments;
                 • Contracts or policies of insurance, life or non-life, and
                   contracts of suretyship; and
                •   Other similar instruments where title thereto passes to
                    another by endorsement, assignment or delivery.
d)   Offender- any person who commits a money laundering offense.
e)   Person- refers to any natural or juridical person.
f)     Proceeds- refers to an amount derived or realized from an unlawful
activity. It includes:
                   •   All material results, profits, effects and any amount
                      realized from any unlawful activity;
                   • All monetary, financial or economic means, devices,
                      documents, papers or things used in or having any relation
                      to any unlawful activity; and
                   • All moneys, expenditures, payments, disbursements, costs,
                      outlays, charges, accounts, refunds and other similar items
                      for the financing, operations, and maintenance of any
                      unlawful activity.
g) Supervising Authority- refers to the BSP, the SEC and the IC. Where the
BSP, SEC or IC supervision applies only to the registration of the covered
institution, the BSP, the SEC or the IC, within the limits of the AMLA, shall have
the authority to require and ask assistance from the government agency
having regulatory power and/or licensing authority over said covered
institution for the implementation and enforcement of the AMLA and these
Rules.
h)     Transaction- refers to any act establishing any right or obligation or
giving rise to any contractual or legal relationship between the parties thereto.
It also includes any movement of funds by any means with a covered
institution.
i)   Unlawful activity- refers to any act or omission or series or combination
thereof involving or having relation, to the following:
          (A)           Kidnapping for ransom
          Kidnapping
          for ransom
          under Article
          267 of Act
          No.    3815,
          otherwise
          known      as
          the Revised
          Penal Code,
          as amended;
          (B)            •   Importation of prohibited drugs;
          Dangerous      •   Sale of prohibited drugs;
                         •   Administration of prohibited drugs;
Drugs Act of     •       Delivery of prohibited drugs
1972             •       Distribution of prohibited drugs
                 •       Transportation of prohibited drugs
                 •       Maintenance of a Den, Dive or Resort for
                         prohibited users
                 •       Manufacture of prohibited drugs
                 •       Possession of prohibited drugs
                 •       Use of prohibited drugs
                 •       Cultivation of plants which are sources of
                         prohibited drugs
                 •       Culture of plants which are sources of prohibited
                         drugs
( C ) 3019, as
amended,             •    Directly or indirectly requesting or receiving any
otherwise                 gift, present, share, percentage or benefit for
known       as            himself or for any other person in connection
the      Anti-            with any contract or transaction between the
Graft     and             Government and any party, wherein the public
Corrupt                   officer in his official capacity has to intervene
Practices                 under the law;
Act;                 •    Directly or indirectly requesting or receiving any
                          gift, present or other pecuniary or material
                          benefit, for himself or for another, from any
                          person for whom the public officer, in any
                          manner or capacity, has secured or obtained, or
                          will secure or obtain, any government permit or
                          license, in consideration for the help given or to
                          be given, without prejudice to Section 13 of R.A.
                          3019;
                     •    Causing any undue injury to any party, including
                          the government, or giving any private party any
                          unwarranted benefits, advantage or preference
                          in the discharge of his official, administrative or
                          judicial functions through manifest partiality,
                          evident bad faith or gross inexcusable
                          negligence;
                     •    Entering, on behalf of the government, into any
                          contract or transaction manifestly and grossly
                          disadvantageous to the same, whether or not
                          the public officer profited or will profit thereby;
                     •    Directly or indirectly having financial or
                          pecuniary interest in any business contract or
                          transaction in connection with which he
                          intervenes or takes part in his official capacity, or
                          in which he is prohibited by the Constitution or
                          by any law from having any interest;
                     •    Directly or indirectly becoming interested, for
                          personal gain, or having material interest in any
                          transaction or act requiring the approval of a
                         board, panel or group of which he is a member,
                         and which exercise of discretion in such
                         approval, even if he votes against the same or he
                         does not participate in the action of the board,
                         committee, panel or group.
(D) Plunder
under               •    Plunder through misappropriation, conversion,
Republic Act             misuse or malversation of public funds or raids
No. 7080, as             upon the public treasury;
amended;            •    Plunder by receiving, directly or indirectly, any
                         commission, gift, share, percentage, kickbacks
                         or any other form of pecuniary benefit from any
                         person and/or entity in connection with any
                         government contract or project or by reason of
                         the office or position of the public officer
                         concerned;
                    •    Plunder by the illegal or fraudulent conveyance
                         or disposition of assets belonging to the National
                         Government or any of its subdivisions, agencies,
                         instrumentalities or government-owned or
                         controlled corporations or their subsidiaries;
                    •    Plunder by obtaining, receiving or accepting,
                         directly or indirectly, any shares of stock, equity
                         or any other form of interest or participation
                         including the promise of future employment in
                         any business enterprise or undertaking;
                    •    Plunder by establishing agricultural, industrial or
                         commercial monopolies or other combinations
                         and/or implementation of decrees and orders
                         intended to benefit particular persons or special
                         interests;
                    •    Plunder by taking undue advantage of official
                         position, authority, relationship, connection or
                         influence to unjustly enrich himself or
                         themselves at the expense and to the damage
                         and prejudice of the Filipino people and the
                         republic of the Philippines.
( E ) Robbery   •       Robbery with violence or intimidation of persons;
and             •       Robbery with physical injuries, committed in an
extortion               uninhabited place and by a band, or with use of
Act                     firearms on a street, road or alley;
                •       Robbery in an uninhabited house or public
                        building or edifice devoted to worship.
(F) Jueteng     •       Jueteng;
and Masiao      •        Masiao.
punished as
illegal
gambling
under    PD
no. 1602
(G) Piracy      •       Piracy on the high seas
on the high     •       Piracy in inland Philippine waters;
seas PD no.     •       Aiding and abetting pirates and brigands.
532
(H) Qualified
theft under         •    Qualified Theft
Article 310
of        the
Revised
Penal Code,
as amended;
(I) Swindling   •       Estafa with unfaithfulness or abuse of confidence
under Article           by altering the substance, quality or quantity of
315 of the              anything of value which the offender shall deliver
Revised                 by virtue of an obligation to do so, even though
Penal Code,             such obligation be based on an immoral or illegal
as amended;             consideration
                •       Estafa with unfaithfulness or abuse of confidence
                        by misappropriating or converting, to the
                        prejudice of another, money, goods or any other
                        personal property received by the offender in trust
                        or on commission, or for administration, or under
                        any other obligation involving the duty to make
                        delivery or to return the same, even though such
                        obligation be totally or partially guaranteed by a
                        bond; or by denying having received such money,
                        goods, or other property
                •        Estafa with unfaithfulness or abuse of confidence
                        by taking undue advantage of the signature of the
                        offended party in blank, and by writing any
                        document above such signature in blank, to the
                        prejudice of the offended party or any third
                        person;
                •        Estafa by using a fictitious name, or falsely
                        pretending to possess power, influence,
                        qualifications, property, credit, agency, business
                        or imaginary transactions, or by means of other
                        similar deceits;
                •        Estafa by altering the quality, fineness or weight
                        of anything pertaining to his art or business;
                •        by pretending to have bribed any government
                        employee;
               •        by postdating a check, or issuing a check in
                       payment of an obligation when the offender has
                       no funds in the bank, or his funds deposited
                       therein were not sufficient to cover the amount of
                       the check;
               •        by inducing another, by means of deceit, to sign
                       any document;
               •        by resorting to some fraudulent practice to
                       ensure success in a gambling game;
               •        by removing, concealing or destroying, in whole
                       or in part, any court record, office files, document
                       or any other papers.
(J)            •       Fraudulent importation of any vehicle;
Smuggling      •       Fraudulent exportation of any vehicle;
under          •        Assisting in any fraudulent importation;
Republic Act   •       Assisting in any fraudulent exportation;
Nos.     455   •       Receiving smuggled article after fraudulent
and 1937;              importation;
               •       Concealing smuggled article after fraudulent
                       importation;
               •       Buying smuggled article after fraudulent
                       importation;
               •       Selling smuggled article after fraudulent
                       importation;
               •       Transportation of smuggled article after
                       fraudulent importation;
               •       Fraudulent practices against customs revenue.
(K)
Electronic         •    Hacking or cracking, which refers to:
Commerce                 o unauthorized access into or interference in
Act of 2000                 a computer system/server or information
no. 8792                    and communication system; or
                         o any access in order to corrupt, alter, steal,
                            or destroy using a computer or other similar
                            information and communication devices,
                            without the knowledge and consent of the
                            owner of the computer or information and
                            communications system, including
                         o the introduction of computer viruses and
                            the like, resulting in the corruption,
                            destruction, alteration, theft or loss of
                            electronic data messages or electronic
                            document;
                   •    Piracy, which refers to:
                          o the        unauthorized        dissemination,
                             distribution,
                    o   the unauthorized importation,
                    o   the unauthorized use, removal, alteration,
                        substitution, modification,
                    o   the unauthorized storage, uploading,
                        downloading, communication, making
                        available to the public, or
                    o   the     unauthorized      broadcasting, of
                        protected material, electronic signature or
                        copyrighted works including legally
                        protected sound recordings or phonograms
                        or information material on protected works,
                        through the use of telecommunication
                        networks, such as, but not limited to, the
                        internet, in a manner that infringes
                        intellectual property rights.
                    o   the unauthorized copying, reproduction,
(L)           through transactions covered by or using electronic
Violations of data messages or electronic documents:
the             • Sale of any adulterated or mislabeled product
Consumer          using electronic documents;
Act        or • Adulteration or misbranding of any consumer
Republic Act      product;
No. 7394        • Forging, counterfeiting or simulating any mark,
                  stamp, tag, label or other identification device;
                • Revealing trade secrets;
                • Alteration or removal of the labeling of any drug
                  or device held for sale;
                • Sale:
                    o of any drug or device not registered in
                       accordance with the provisions of the E-
                       Commerce Act;
                    o   of any drug or device by any person not
                       licensed in accordance with the provisions
                       of the E- Commerce Act;
                    o of any drug or device beyond its expiration
                       date;
                • Introduction into commerce of any mislabeled
                  or banned hazardous substance;
                • Alteration or removal of the labeling of a
                  hazardous substance;
                • Deceptive sales acts and practices;
                • Unfair or unconscionable sales acts and
                  practices;
                • Fraudulent practices relative to weights and
                  measures;
                    •    False representations in advertisements as the
                         existence of a warranty or guarantee; (80)
                         Violation of price tag requirements;
                    •    Mislabeling consumer products;
                    •    False, deceptive or misleading advertisements;
                    •     Violation of required disclosures on consumer
                         loans;
                    •    Other violations of the provisions of the E-
                         Commerce Act;
(M)             •       Hijacking;
Hijacking       •       Destructive arson;
and other       •       Murder;
violations      •       Hijacking, destructive arson or murder
under                   perpetrated by terrorists against non-combatant
Republic Act            persons and similar targets;
NO. 6235
(N)Securities   •       Sale, offer or distribution of securities within the
Regulation              Philippines without a registration statement duly
Code       of           filed with and approved by the SEC;
2000-           •       Sale or offer to the public of any pre-need plan not
Fraudulent              in accordance with the rules and regulations
practices               which the SEC shall prescribe;
and other
violations               •   Violation of reportorial requirements
under                        imposed upon issuers of securities;
Republic Act             •   Manipulation of security prices by creating a
No. 8799                     false or misleading appearance of active
                             trading in any listed security traded in an
                             Exchange or any other trading market;
                         •   Manipulation of security prices by effecting,
                             alone or with others, a series of transactions
                             in securities that raises their prices to induce
                             the purchase of a security, whether of the
                             same or different class, of the same issuer or
                             of a controlling, controlled or commonly
                             controlled company by others;
                         •   Manipulation of security prices by effecting,
                             alone or with others, a series of transactions
                             in securities that depresses their price to
                             induce the sale of a security, whether of the
                             same or different class, of the same issuer or
                             of a controlling, controlled or commonly
                             controlled company by others;
                         •   Manipulation of security prices by effecting,
                             alone or with others, a series of transactions
                             in securities that creates active trading to
                             induce such a purchase or sale though
    manipulative devices such as marking the
    close, painting the tape, squeezing the float,
    hype and dump, boiler room operations and
    such other similar devices;
•   Manipulation of security prices by circulating
    or disseminating information that the price of
    any security listed in an Exchange will or is
    likely to rise or fall because of manipulative
    market operations of any one or more
    persons conducted for the purpose of raising
    or depressing the price of the security for the
    purpose of inducing the purchase or sale of
    such security;
•   Manipulation of security prices by making
    false or misleading statements with respect
    to any material fact, which he knew or had
    reasonable ground to believe was so false
    and misleading, for the purpose of inducing
    the purchase or sale of any security listed or
    traded in an Exchange;
•   Manipulation of security prices by effecting,
    alone or with others, any series of
    transactions for the purchase and/or sale of
    any security traded in an Exchange for the
    purpose of pegging, fixing or stabilizing the
    price of such security, unless otherwise
    allowed by the Securities Regulation Code or
    by the rules of the SEC;
•    Sale or purchase of any security using any
    manipulative        deceptive     device     or
    contrivance;
•   Execution of short sales or stop-loss order in
    connection with the purchase or sale of any
    security not in accordance with such rules
    and regulations as the SEC may prescribe as
    necessary and appropriate in the public
    interest or the protection of the investors;
•   Employment of any device, scheme or artifice
    to defraud in connection with the purchase
    and sale of any securities;
•   Obtaining money or property in connection
    with the purchase and sale of any security by
    means of any untrue statement of a material
    fact or any omission to state a material fact
    necessary in order to make the statements
    made, in the light of the circumstances under
    which they were made, not misleading;
•   Engaging in any act, transaction, practice or
    course of action in the sale and purchase of
                          any security which operates or would operate
                          as a fraud or deceit upon any person;
                      •   Insider trading;
                      •   Engaging in the business of buying and
                          selling securities in the Philippines as a broker
                          or dealer, or acting as a salesman, or an
                          associated person of any broker or dealer
                          without any registration from the
                          Commission;
                      •   Employment by a broker or dealer of any
                          salesman or associated person or by an issuer
                          of any salesman, not registered with the SEC;
                      •   Effecting any transaction in any security, or
                          reporting such transaction, in an Exchange or
                          using the facility of an Exchange which is not
                          registered with the SEC;
                      •   Making use of the facility of a clearing agency
                          which is not registered with the SEC; (109)
                          Violations of margin requirements;
                      •   Violations on the restrictions on borrowings
                          by members, brokers and dealers; (111)
                          Aiding and Abetting in any violations of the
                          Securities Regulation Code;
                      •   Hindering, obstructing or delaying the filing
                          of any document required under the
                          Securities Regulation Code or the rules and
                          regulations of the SEC;
                      •   Violations of any of the provisions of the
                          implementing rules and regulations of the
                          SEC;
                      •    Any other violations of any of the provisions
                          of the Securities Regulation Code.
(O) Felonies
or offenses      In determining whether or not a felony or offense
of a similar     punishable under the penal laws of other countries,
nature      to   is "of a similar nature", as to constitute the same as
the afore-       an unlawful activity under the AMLA, the
mentioned        nomenclature of said felony or offense need not be
unlawful         identical to any of the predicate crimes listed above.
activities
that       are
punishable
under the
penal laws
of      other
countries.
4. Institutions covered by AMLA
  • Banks, offshore banking units, quasi-banks, trust entities, non-stock savings
    and loan associations, pawnshops, and all other institutions, including their
    subsidiaries and affiliates supervised and/or regulated by the Bangko Sentral
    ng Pilipinas (BSP).
                • A subsidiary means an entity more than fifty percent (50%) of
                   the outstanding voting stock of which is owned by a bank, quasi-
                   bank, trust entity or any other institution supervised or
                   regulated by the BSP.
                • An affiliate means an entity at least twenty percent (20%) but
                   not exceeding fifty percent (50%) of the voting stock of which is
                   owned by a bank, quasi-bank, trust entity, or any other
                   institution supervised and/or regulated by the BSP.
 •   Insurance companies, insurance agents, insurance brokers, professional
     reinsurers, reinsurance brokers, holding companies, holding company systems
     and all other persons and entities supervised and/or regulated by the Insurance
     Commission (IC).
5. Obligations of covered institutions
     a) Prevention of money laundering- Customer Identification Requirements
     and Record Keeping.
     b) Customer identification requirements-
     -Covered institutions shall establish and record the true identity of its clients
     based on official documents. They shall maintain a system of verifying the true
     identity of their clients and, in case of corporate clients, require a system of
     verifying their legal existence and organizational structure, as well as the
     authority and identification of all persons purporting to act on their behalf.
     Covered institutions shall establish appropriate systems and methods based on
     internationally compliant standards and adequate internal controls for
     verifying and recording the true and full identity of their customers.
     For this purpose, they shall develop clear customer acceptance policies and
     procedures when conducting business relations or specific transactions, such
     as, but not limited to, opening deposit accounts, accepting deposit substitutes,
     entering into trust and other fiduciary transactions, renting safety deposit
     boxes, performing remittances and other large cash transactions.
6. What is prohibited under the law?
 •   Prohibition against Certain Accounts. – Covered institutions shall maintain
     accounts only in the true and full name of the account owner or holder. The
     provisions of existing laws to the contrary notwithstanding, anonymous
     accounts, accounts under fictitious names, and all other similar accounts shall
     be absolutely prohibited.
 •   Prohibition against opening of Account without Face-to-face Contact. – No
     new accounts shall be opened and created without face-to-face contact and
     full compliance with the requirements under Rule 9.1.c of these Rules.
 •   Numbered Accounts. – Peso and foreign currency non-checking numbered
     accounts shall be allowed: Provided, That the true identity of the customers of
     all peso and foreign currency non-checking numbered accounts are
     satisfactorily established based on official and other reliable documents and
     records, and that the information and documents required under the provisions
     of these Rules are obtained and recorded by the covered institution. No peso
     and foreign currency non-checking advisors, consultants or associates shall not
     be deemed to have violated R.A. No. 1405, as amended, R.A. No. 6426, as
     amended, R.A. No. 8791 and other similar laws.
7. How to prevent money laundering?
    -Know Your Customers. Financial institutions must also have “know your
    customer” policies in place to help prevent money laundering. This involves
    monitoring the activity of clients and understanding the types of transactions
    that should raise red flags.
8. Requirements for customer identification
     The following minimum information/documents shall be obtained from
     individual customers:
     (1) Name;
     (2) Present address;
     (3) Permanent address;
     (4) Date and place of birth;
     (5) Nationality;
     (6) Nature of work and name of employer or nature of self-
     employment/business;
     (7) Contact numbers;
     (8) Tax identification number, Social Security System number or Government
     Service and Insurance System number;
     (9) Specimen signature;
     (10) Source of fund(s); and
     (11) Names of beneficiaries in case of insurance contracts and whenever
     applicable.
     The following minimum information/documents shall be obtained from
     customers that are corporate or juridical entities, including shell companies
     and corporations:
     (1) Articles of Incorporation/Partnership;
     (2) By-laws;
     (3) Official address or principal business address;
     (4) List of directors/partners;
     (5) List of principal stockholders owning at least two percent (2%) of the capital
     stock;
     (6) Contact numbers;
     (7) Beneficial owners, if any; and
     (8) Verification of the authority and identification of the person purporting to
     act on behalf of the client.
Trustee, Nominee and Agent Accounts.
Trustee, Nominee and Agent Accounts. – When dealing with customers who are
acting as trustee, nominee, agent or in any capacity for and on behalf of another,
covered institutions shall verify and record the true and full identity of the person(s)
on whose behalf a transaction is being conducted. Covered institutions shall also
establish and record the true and full identity of such trustees, nominees, agents
and other persons and the nature of their capacity and duties. In case a covered
institution has doubts as to whether such persons are being used as dummies in
circumvention of existing laws, it shall immediately make the necessary inquiries to
verify the status of the business relationship between the parties.
Rule 9.1.c. Minimum Information/Documents Required for Individual
Customers. – Covered institutions shall require customers to produce original
accounts shall be allowed without the establishment of such identity and in the
manner herein provided. The BSP may conduct annual testing for the purpose of
determining the existence and true identity of the owners of such accounts. The SEC
and the IC may conduct similar testing more often than once a year and covering
such other related purposes as may be allowed under their respective charters.
9. How long shall the records be kept?
a) Existing and New Accounts and New Transactions.-
All records of existing and new accounts and of new transactions shall be
maintained and safely stored for five (5) years from October 17, 2001 or from the
dates of the accounts or transactions, whichever is later.
b) Closed Accounts.
With respect to closed accounts, the records on customer identification, account
files and business correspondence shall be preserved and safely stored for at least
five (5) years from the dates when they were closed.
c)     Retention of Records in Case a Money Laundering Case has been filed
inCourt.
If a money laundering case based on any record kept by the covered institution
concerned has been filed in court, said file must be retained beyond the period
stipulated in the three (3) immediately preceding sub-Rules, as the case may be,
until it is confirmed that the case has been finally resolved or terminated by the
court.
d) Form of Records.
Records shall be retained as originals in such forms as are admissible in court
pursuant to existing laws and the applicable rules promulgated by the Supreme
Court.
10. Rule regarding reporting of covered and suspicious transactions (reportorial
requirements)?
     As may be directed by the AMLC and/or in the exercise of their supervisory
     and/or regulatory powers over covered institutions under their respective
     jurisdictions, supervising authorities may require all suspicious transactions
    with covered institutions, irrespective of the amounts involved, to be reported
    to the AMLC when there is reasonable belief that any money laundering
    activity or any money laundering offense or any violation of this Act under
    Section 4 and Section 7 (5) is about to be, is being or has been committed.
    Administrative sanctions for non-compliance with such suspicious transaction
    reporting requirements may be imposed by supervising authorities as
    authorized under their respective charters.
11. How is money-laundering crime committed?
 • The act provides that any person who attempts to transact any monetary
     instrument or property representing, involving or relating to the proceeds of
     any unlawful activity shall be prosecuted for a money laundering offense.
     Accordingly, the reports required under Rule 9.3 (a) and (b) of these Rules shall
     include those pertaining to any attempt by any person to transact any
     monetary instrument or property representing, involving or relating to the
     proceeds of any unlawful activity.
     -Money laundering is a crime whereby the proceeds of an unlawful activity are
     transacted, thereby making them appear to have originated from legitimate
     sources. It is committed by the following:
          (a) Any person knowing that any monetary instrument or property
          represents, involves, or relates to, the proceeds of any unlawful activity,
          transacts or attempts to transact said monetary instrument or property.
          (b) Any person knowing that any monetary instrument or property
          involves the proceeds of any unlawful activity, performs or fails to perform
          any act as a result of which he facilitates the offense of money laundering
          referred to in paragraph (a) above.
          (c) Any person knowing that any monetary instrument or property is
          required under this Act to he disclosed and filed with the Anti-Money
          Laundering Council (AMLC), fails to do so.
13. What are penalties and other consequences for violating AMLA?
Penalties for the Crime of Money Laundering.
a. Penalties under Section 4 (a) of the AMLA. – The penalty of imprisonment
ranging from seven (7) to fourteen (14) years and a fine of not less than Three
Million Philippine Pesos (Php3,000,000.00) but not more than twice the value of the
monetary instrument or property involved in the offense, shall be imposed upon a
person convicted under Section 4 (a) of the AMLA.
b. Penalties under section 4 (b) of the AMLA. – The penalty of imprisonment from
four (4) to seven (7) years and a fine of not less than One Million Five Hundred
Thousand Philippine Pesos (Php1,500,000.00) but not more than Three Million
Philippine Pesos (Php3,000,000.00), shall be imposed upon a person convicted
under Section 4 (b) of the AMLA.
c. Penalties under Section 4 (c) of the AMLA. – The penalty of imprisonment from
six (6) months to four (4) years or a fine of not less than One Hundred Thousand
Philippine Pesos (Php100,000.00) but not more than Five Hundred Thousand
Philippine Pesos (Php500,000.00), or both, shall be imposed on a person convicted
under Section 4 (c) of the AMLA.
D. Penalties for Failure to Keep Records under Section 9 (b) of the AMLA. – The
penalty of imprisonment from six (6) months to one (1) year or a fine of not less
than One Hundred Thousand Philippine Pesos (Php100,000.00) but not more than
Five Hundred Thousand Philippine Pesos (Php500,000.00), or both, shall be imposed
on a person convicted under Section 9 (b) of the AMLA.
14. Consequences of malicious reporting
 • Any person who, with malice, or in bad faith, reports or files a completely
     unwarranted or false information relative to money laundering transaction
     against any person shall be subject to a penalty of six (6) months to four (4)
     years imprisonment and a fine of not less than One Hundred Thousand
     Philippine Pesos (Php100,000.00) but not more than Five Hundred Thousand
     Philippine Pesos (Php500,000.00), at the discretion of the court: Provided, That
     the offender is not entitled to avail the benefits of the Probation Law.
15. When is freezing of accounts ordered?
     -The AMLC is authorized under Sections 7 (6) and 10 of the AMLA to freeze any
     account or any monetary instrument or property subject thereof, irrespective
     of the amount or value involved, upon determination that probable cause
     exists that the same is in any way related to any unlawful activity and/or
     money laundering offense. The AMLC may issue a freeze order on any account
     or any monetary instrument or property subject thereof prior to the institution,
     or in the course of, the criminal proceedings involving the unlawful activity
     and/or money laundering offense to which said account, monetary instrument
     or property is any way related.
     -The freeze order on such account shall be effective immediately for a period
     not exceeding fifteen (15) days.
15. When examination of accounts under AMLA is done notwithstanding the
provisions of secrecy of bank deposits
 • When reporting covered transactions to the AMLC, banks and their officers,
    employees, representatives, agents, documents of identity issued by an
    official authority, bearing a photograph of the customer. Examples of such
    documents are identity cards and passports.
 •   Confidentiality Provisions. – When reporting covered transactions or
     suspicious transactions to the AMLC, covered institutions and their officers,
     employees, representatives, agents, advisors, consultants or associates are
     prohibited from communicating, directly or indirectly, in any manner or by any
     means, to any person, entity, or the media, the fact that a covered transaction
     report was made, the contents thereof, or any other information in relation
     thereto. Neither may such reporting be published or aired in any manner or
     form by the mass media, electronic mail, or other similar devices. In case of
     violation hereof, the concerned officer, employee, representative, agent,
     advisor, consultant or associate of the covered institution, or media shall be
     held criminally liable.
16. Does AMLA provide safe harbor provision?
 • Yes.
 • No administrative, criminal or civil proceedings shall lie against any covered
     institution, their personnel, directors or officers or any person for having made
     a covered transaction report or a suspicious transaction report in the regular
     performance of his duties and in good faith, whether or not such reporting
     results in any criminal prosecution under this Act or any other Philippine law.
 • The Safe Harbor Provision under the BSA shields financial institutions, their
     officers and employees from civil liability for filing Suspicious Activity Reports
     (SARs). It provides immunity to “any financial institution that makes a
     voluntary disclosure of any possible violation of law or regulation to a
     government agency.”1 While the language suggests absolute immunity, some
     courts have read a good faith requirement into the statute.