Tag Archives: Gina Parlovecchio

Federal Court Declares the Corporate Transparency Act Unconstitutional

by Gina Parlovecchio, Brad Resnikoff, Matthew Bisanz, and Daisy Gray

From left to right: Gina Parlovecchio, Brad Resnikoff, Matthew Bisanz, and Daisy Gray (Photos courtesy of Mayer Brown LLP).

On March 1, 2024, the US District Court for the Northern District of Alabama declared the Corporate Transparency Act (“CTA”) unconstitutional, and suspended its enforcement against the plaintiffs in that case. While most companies remain subject to its requirements for now, this decision may presage more broadly applicable relief through subsequent judicial or administrative action.

The CTA requires many entities conducting business in the United States to disclose beneficial ownership information to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”), a law enforcement arm of the US Department of Treasury. The court, in enjoining the CTA’s enforcement against the plaintiffs, found that the CTA exceeds constitutional limits on Congress’s power. In the wake of the decision, FinCEN announced that it intends to respect the court’s decision and will not enforce the CTA beneficial ownership requirements against the plaintiffs, but its silence as to other parties implies that everyone else must continue to comply.

In this Legal Update, we discuss the case, National Small Business Association, et al. v. Yellen, FinCEN’s response, and our predictions for what will come next.

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White Collar Defense Attorneys React to DOJ and SEC Enforcement Actions for Misuse of 10b5-1 Plans

Editor’s Note: Recently, both the DOJ and the SEC brought, for the first time ever, criminal and civil insider trading charges against a corporate executive for his alleged fraudulent misuse of a 10b5-1 trading plan, which typically allows corporate insiders to pre-schedule sales of company shares to avoid accusations of insider trading. In this post, several former federal prosecutors and white collar defense attorneys provide their reactions to this case and its implications for future insider trading cases.

Photos of the authors

Top row from left to right: Brian Jacobs, Gina Parlovecchio, Rachel Maimin, and Kathleen McGee.
Bottom row from left to right: Robert Johnston, Marc Rein, and Katherine Goldstein. (photos courtesy of authors’ respective firms)

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