Financial Privacy under Fire: Protecting and Restoring Americans’ Rights
Featuring

Radius



Emory University School of Law




University of Oklahoma College of Law





National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers

Dorsey & Whitney LLP



DeFi Education Fund

The privacy Americans should enjoy over their financial information has been in steady decline for more than 50 years. Regulatory frameworks, such as the Bank Secrecy Act and the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Consolidated Audit Trail, grant government access to Americans’ financial transactions. As financial services have become increasingly digitized, the volume of financial records to which the government has easy—and often unfettered—access has grown exponentially. And proposals for a central bank digital currency, which involve the government becoming more intimately involved in Americans’ use of money, have the potential to further erode the ability to transact without government surveillance.
As policymakers are confronted with questions about evolving technologies, the question of financial privacy must not be shunted to the side. It is time to rethink financial privacy. Does financial convenience have to come at the cost of financial privacy? Does the Constitution provide the protections needed to limit government access to financial information? Can decentralization provide privacy-protecting solutions? Join us for an outstanding program featuring leading policymakers and experts discussing financial privacy at Cato’s Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives annual conference.
Schedule
Opening Remarks

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Norbert Michel, Vice President and Director, Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives, Cato Institute
Financial Privacy and the Constitution
Morgan Cloud, Emory University School of Law
Stephen Henderson, University of Oklahoma College of Law
Rob Johnson, Institute for Justice
Jumana Musa, National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
Moderated by Brent Skorup, Legal Fellow, Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies, Cato Institute
Evaluating Central Bank Digital Currencies

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Robert Bench, Radius
William Luther, Florida Atlantic University
Natalie Smolenski, Bitcoin Policy Institute
Jay Stanley, American Civil Liberties Union
Moderated by Victoria Guida, Politico
Lunch
Bank Secrecy Act Reform

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Katherine Kirkpatrick Bos, StarkWare
Gregory Lisa, Hogan Lovells
Norbert Michel, Vice President and Director, Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives, Cato Institute
Lanier Saperstein, Dorsey & Whitney LLP
Moderated by Claire Williams, American Banker
Fireside Chat with U.S. Representative Patrick McHenry, Chairman, House Financial Services Committee

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Moderated by Jennifer Schulp, Director of Financial Regulation Studies, Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives, Cato Institute
Decentralization and Financial Privacy

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Paul Brigner, Coinbase Institute
Ahmed Ghappour, Espresso Systems
Ian Miers, University of Maryland
Miller Whitehouse-Levine, DeFi Education Fund
Moderated by Nikhilesh De, CoinDesk
Closing Remarks
Jennifer Schulp, Director of Financial Regulation Studies, Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives, Cato Institute
Reception
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