Regulations last checked for updates: May 24, 2025

Title 12 - Banks and Banking last revised: May 21, 2025
§ 1075.109 - When payments to victims are impracticable.

(a) Individual payments. Making a payment to an individual victim will be deemed impracticable if:

(1) The payment to the victim would be of such a small amount that the victim would not be likely to redeem the payment;

(2) The payment to the victim is too small to justify the cost of locating the victim and making the payment;

(3) The victim cannot be located with effort that is reasonable in light of the amount of the payment;

(4) The victim does not timely submit information that a distribution plan requires to be submitted before a payment will be made;

(5) The victim does not redeem the payment within a reasonable time; or

(6) The Fund Administrator determines that other circumstances make it unreasonable to make a payment to the victim.

(b) Payments to a class of victims. Making payments to a class of victims will be deemed impracticable if:

(1) The expected aggregate actual payment to the class of victims is too small to justify the costs of locating the victims in the class and making payments to them;

(2) It would be impracticable under paragraph (a) of this section to make a payment to any victim in the class; or

(3) The Fund Administrator determines that other circumstances make it unreasonable to make payments to the class.

authority: 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1), 5497(d)
source: 78 FR 26501, May 7, 2013, unless otherwise noted.
cite as: 12 CFR 1075.109