IRS - Internal Revenue Service

02/24/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 02/24/2026 09:30

IRS-CI data shows BSA filings are used in nearly all its investigations

Date: Feb. 24, 2026

Contact: [email protected]

WASHINGTON - Behind nearly every major financial crime investigated by IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) is Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) data. New fiscal year 2025 (FY25) metrics PDF reveal that 94% of IRS-CI cases were searched against BSA data in FY25 - resulting in more than 3.9 million searches of BSA filings - underscoring the integral role BSA data has in uncovering and prosecuting financial crimes across the country.

"BSA data is often the first signal that something isn't right," said IRS-CI Chief Guy Ficco. "These filings become essential puzzle pieces in identifying patterns, following financial trails and building cases that protect taxpayers."

Financial data builds criminal cases

BSA filings are being used to build criminal cases, against fraudsters engaged in money laundering, cybercrimes, abuse of government programs, narcotics trafficking and more. In FY25:

  • Almost 89% of investigations conducted by IRS-CI had BSA filings associated with the primary subject,
  • Nearly 80% of IRS-CI investigations had primary subjects associated with suspicious activity reports (SARs) and nearly 67% had primary subjects associated with currency transaction reports (CTRs), and
  • 11.7% of IRS-CI investigations originated directly from a BSA filing.

For example, from FY23-FY25, IRS-CI investigated 1,394 cases of refund fraud with alleged fraud totaling $2.9 billion. Ninety-nine percent of these cases had a BSA filing associated with the primary subject. Additionally, IRS-CI opened 1,006 employment tax evasion cases during this same timeframe with alleged fraud totaling $1.4 billion. Sixty-three percent of these investigations had a BSA filing associated with the primary subject.

BSA metrics drive prosecutions, seizures and convictions

BSA data enables strong prosecutions, which results in high conviction rates, multiyear prison sentences, and millions in restitution for victims. From FY23-FY25, IRS-CI cases using BSA filings resulted in:

  • A 98% conviction rate and average prison sentences of 42 months,
  • More than $450 million in asset forfeitures, and
  • Nearly $500 million in restitution for crime victims.

Current CTR thresholds remain key indicator of financial crime

CTRs provide law enforcement standardized, threshold-based transaction data that is used to identify patterns, trends, and criminal networks. Financial institutions file a CTR when a cash transaction total more than $10,000 or an aggregated CTR when a customer makes multiple cash transactions totaling over $10,000 in a single business day, even if the transactions occur at different times, locations, or accounts. In FY25:

  • 66.8% of the investigations IRS-CI opened had a primary subject with a CTR, with 89.1% of those investigations having at least one aggregated CTR on a primary subject.
  • Nearly half of the investigations IRS-CI opened had a primary subject with a CTR under $20,000, and
  • Median cash-in and cash-out dollar amounts for CTRs used in IRS-CI investigations ranged between $12,000 to $12,543.

"Criminals deliberately structure transactions tied to illicit activity to avoid detection," said Ficco. "CTRs provide concrete transactional data that often serves as evidence when proving criminal activity took place."

Nationwide focus to tackle financial crime

IRS-CI leads or participates in SAR Review Teams in 94 federal judicial districts across the country. These teams consist of law enforcement partners, and they meet regularly to analyze BSA data; identify actionable SARs, CTRs and Forms 8300; and assign leads to the appropriate federal agency for further investigation. These teams seized assets valued at $385.4 million between FY23-FY25.

Additionally, in March 2025, IRS-CI announced CI-FIRST (Feedback in Response to Strategic Threats), a flagship public-private partnership to modernize how IRS-CI works with financial institutions by delivering actionable feedback on BSA reporting to financial institutions, facilitate knowledge exchange through CI-FIRST forums and FinTAX crime alerts, and strengthen coordination to better disrupt and combat financial crime.

IRS-CI's Optimizing Financial Records Requests initiative, commonly known as OFRR, accelerates investigative timelines by streamlining and standardizing how IRS-CI requests and how financial institutions respond to legal order and subpoena requests.

IRS - Internal Revenue Service published this content on February 24, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on February 24, 2026 at 15:30 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]