Law 10/2010 AML, obligated subjects, due diligence, reporting to SEPBLAC, record keeping and sanctions regime.
Law 10/2010 of April 28, on the prevention of money laundering and terrorist financing (AML/CTF), transposes European legislation into Spanish law. Its implementing regulation is Royal Decree 304/2014.
The core objective is to prevent legitimate financial channels from being used to integrate funds of criminal origin. For lawyers, knowledge of this regulation is doubly relevant: as advisors to obligated clients and, in many cases, as obligated subjects themselves.
Article 2 lists over 30 categories of obligated subjects. The most relevant for legal practice are:
A law firm becomes an obligated subject when it participates in real estate transactions, company formation or management, bank account management, or the organization of capital contributions for business creation.
Due diligence is the operational pillar of AML. It comprises four main obligations:
Every obligated subject must identify clients using reliable documents (ID card, passport, NIE) before establishing the business relationship.
The obligated subject must determine who effectively controls the client legal entity. A beneficial owner is any natural person who directly or indirectly holds or controls more than 25% of the capital or voting rights.
The subject must understand the client's professional or business activity and the nature of the business relationship. A generic form is not sufficient: the consistency of transactions with the declared profile must be verified.
Due diligence does not end at the initial stage. There is an obligation to periodically update documentation and review transactions to detect inconsistencies with the client's risk profile.
SEPBLAC is Spain's financial intelligence unit. Obligated subjects must report:
Reporting is confidential: the obligated subject is prohibited from disclosing the report to the client (tipping off). Failure to report constitutes a serious infringement.
Article 25 requires the retention for 10 years of all documentation related to due diligence obligations and transactions. This includes copies of identification documents, transaction receipts, and records of SEPBLAC communications.
The regime distinguishes three levels:
A law firm is engaged to incorporate an SL with 100,000 euros in capital contributed entirely by a non-resident individual. The protocol must include:
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A corporate client asks your firm to set up a company. Upon investigation, the sole director holds 15% of the capital and you cannot identify any individual with more than 25%. Who is considered the beneficial owner?
A regular client (real estate developer) asks you to manage the purchase of three commercial premises in cash for 45,000 euros each, paid on three consecutive days. What is your primary obligation?
How long must an obligated subject retain due diligence documentation under Law 10/2010?
Your firm discovers signs that a client may be using a corporate structure for money laundering. You report to SEPBLAC, but the client directly asks if you have made any report. What should you do?
A law firm fails to establish internal AML procedures and SEPBLAC detects this during an inspection. What type of infringement does this constitute?
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