Shadowy shell companies targeted by US Senate bill

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – State governments would have  to identify persons forming corporations under legislation that  was reintroduced yesterday in the U.S. Senate, taking aim at  shadowy shell companies and anonymous corporate owners.

The 50 U.S. states could no longer allow the formation of  corporations by unidentified persons, with some important  exceptions, under the bipartisan bill that was put forward by  senators Carl Levin and Charles Grassley.

“Today, it takes more information to obtain a driver’s  license or open a U.S. bank account than it does to form a U.S.  corporation,” said Levin,  a Democrat.

“Our states don’t require anyone to name the owners of the  corporations being formed under their laws, practically  inviting people to misuse our corporations,” he said.

The Levin-Grassley measure has been introduced twice before  in Congress, in 2008 and 2009. President Barack Obama supported  it when he was a senator, but it has never gained enough  backing to emerge from study at the committee level.State governments, which make money from incorporation  fees, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the nation’s largest  business lobbying group, have opposed the measure in the past.

This time around, the bill exempts many types of  corporations, including banks, brokers, insurers, registered  investment funds, charities and publicly traded companies,  which already disclose vital information to U.S. regulators.

A Reuters special report in June found more than 2,000  companies were registered at the address of a small, brick  house in Cheyenne, Wyoming. It was the headquarters of a  business-incorporation firm that establishes shell companies,  and a variant called “shelf” corporations — seasoned shell  companies made to look more legitimate by giving them credit  and tax histories.

Reuters found scores of shell companies registered to the  house in Cheyenne used nominee officers and directors to hide  the identity of the real or “beneficial” owners — the very  practice which the Levin-Grassley bill seeks to end.

Delaware, Wyoming and Nevada are hotbeds of such activity,  belying the popular image of such corporate secrecy being  centered in offshore havens such as the Cayman Islands.

U.S. state governments allow the formation each year of  almost 2 million corporations and limited liability companies  without asking for the owners’ identity, according to a  statement from Levin and Grassley, a Republican.