[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 92 (Friday, May 12, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30742-30746]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-10110]


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FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION

[Notice 2023-06]


Audit Process for Committees That Do Not Receive Public Funds

AGENCY: Federal Election Commission.

ACTION: Agency procedure.

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SUMMARY: The Federal Election Commission is revising its procedures for 
how it conducts audits of political committees that do not receive 
public funds.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dayna C. Brown, Assistant Staff 
Director, Audit Division, or Jessica Selinkoff, Assistant General 
Counsel, Policy Division, 1050 First Street NE, Washington, DC 20463, 
(202) 694-1200, (202) 694-1650, or (800) 424-9530.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, 
as amended, (the ``Act'') provides that the Federal Election Commission 
(the ``Commission'') ``may conduct audits . . . of any political 
committee required to file a report under section 30104 [of the Act].'' 
52 U.S.C. 30111(b).\1\ The Commission previously set forth its audit 
process for committees that do not receive public funds, in part, in 
Directives 69 and 70, Policy Statement Regarding a Program for 
Requesting Consideration of Legal Questions by the Commission, 84 FR 
36602 (Jul. 19, 2019) (the ``Legal Question Resolution Program''), and 
Procedural Rules for Audit Hearing, 74 FR 33140 (Jul. 10, 2009), as 
amended, 74 FR 79535 (Aug. 7, 2009) (collectively, the ``Previous 
Procedural Documents'').
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    \1\ The Commission also has the statutory authority to conduct 
an audit in instances which, based upon a complaint, ``the 
Commission determines by an affirmative vote of 4 of its members, 
that it has reason to believe that a person has committed, or is 
about to commit, a violation'' of the Act. 52 U.S.C. 30109(a)(2). 
The procedures set forth here do not apply to audits conducted under 
52 U.S.C. 30109 after finding reason to believe a violation has 
occurred, which are instead governed by the Act's enforcement 
provisions. See generally 52 U.S.C. 30109; 11 CFR part 111; 
Guidebook for Complainants and Respondents on the FEC Enforcement 
Process, available at https://www.fec.gov/resources/cms-content/documents/respondent_guide.pdf.
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    The audit procedures set forth herein will take effect June 1, 
2024, and will apply to all audits that begin after this date. An audit 
begins when committees receive an audit notification; \2\ thus, any 
committee that receives an audit notification on or after June 1, 2024 
will be audited under these new audit procedures. Audits that began 
before these procedures went into effect--i.e., a committee received an 
audit notification before June 1, 2024--will continue to be conducted 
according to the processes set forth in the Previous Procedural 
Documents.
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    \2\ See infra, Section I.C (explaining the audit notification).
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    The Previous Procedural Documents are hereby sunset as follows. 
Directive 70, The Legal Question Resolution Program,\3\ and the 
Procedural Rules for Audit Hearings will remain in full effect with 
respect to audits commenced before June 1, 2024.\4\ At the conclusion 
of the last audit to be commenced before June 1, 2024, Directive 70, 
the Legal Question Resolution Program, and the Procedural Rules for 
Audit Hearings will no longer apply.
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    \3\ The Commission is publishing in the Federal Register a new 
version of the Legal Question Resolution Program that will not apply 
to questions from audited committees.
    \4\ Directive 69, which concerns, among other things, staff 
deadlines in audits, is being amended.
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    On January 9, 2023, the Commission published a notice of public 
hearing and request for public comments on its policies and procedures 
regarding the auditing of political committees that do not receive 
public funds.\5\ On February 14, 2023, the Commission held a 
hearing.\6\ In adopting the process set forth below, the Commission 
took into consideration the comments and testimony received during that 
process.\7\
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    \5\ Notice of Public Hearing and Request for Public Comments, 88 
FR 1228 (Jan. 9, 2023).
    \6\ For the recording of the hearing, as well as witness 
testimony, see https://www.fec.gov/updates/february-14-2023-public-hearing/.
    \7\ For a complete list of comments, see https://www.fec.gov/legal-resources/policy-other-guidance/.
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    The goal of the new audit process is to strike the appropriate 
balance, within the constraints of the Act, among efficiency, 
procedural protections for audited committees, orderly development of 
the law, transparency, and the Commission's statutory authority to seek 
voluntary compliance with the Act.

I. Revised Audit Process

A. Overview

    The audit process begins with a review of a committee's reports by 
the Commission's Reports Analysis Division (``RAD''). If RAD determines 
that a committee's reporting errors exceed Commission-approved 
compliance thresholds, RAD will refer the

[[Page 30743]]

committee to the Commission's Audit Division. The Audit Division will 
recommend that the Commission authorize audits of committees within the 
resource limitations of the Division. If the Commission votes to 
authorize an audit, Audit staff will send a notification letter to the 
audited committee explaining the process, informing the committee of 
its right to be represented by counsel, setting forth the basis upon 
which the Commission initiated the audit, and requesting records.
    Following an Entrance Conference and audit fieldwork, Audit staff 
will prepare an Exit Conference Report containing proposed findings and 
recommended corrective action. The Exit Conference Report, which will 
attach OGC's written legal analysis of each proposed finding, will be 
provided to the committee at the Exit Conference. The committee may 
submit a written response to the Exit Conference Report addressing any 
factual or legal issue. Audit staff and OGC will work diligently to 
informally resolve any issues identified in the audited committee's 
response. If any issue remains unresolved, the committee may request an 
Audit Hearing to present arguments directly before the commissioners.
    Following the response period and Audit Hearing, if any, Audit 
staff will prepare an Audit Division Recommendation Report, which will 
contain Audit's proposed findings, incorporate OGC's legal analysis of 
each proposed finding, document informal efforts to resolve issues 
raised by the audited committee, and note any corrective action the 
committee has taken since the exit conference. Audit staff will also 
prepare a proposed Final Audit Report of the Commission as an 
attachment. The Commission will vote on the proposed audit findings and 
approve a Final Audit Report of the Commission. Following the 
conclusion of the audit, the Commission will publish the audit 
documents on the Commission's website, as outlined in Section III 
below. Commission-approved audit findings may be referred to the 
Commission's Alternative Dispute Resolution Office (``ADRO''), 
Administrative Fine Program (``AF'') or OGC pursuant to Commission-
approved thresholds.

B. RAD Audit Referral

    Pursuant to the Act, the Commission ``shall perform an internal 
review of reports filed by select committees to determine if the 
reports filed by a particular committee meet the threshold requirements 
for substantial compliance with the Act. Such thresholds for compliance 
shall be established by the Commission.'' \8\ 52 U.S.C. 30111(b). RAD 
issues Requests for Additional Information (``RFAIs'') to committees 
based on these Commission-approved thresholds for compliance when 
additional clarification is needed or a potential error, omission, or 
possible prohibited activity is identified. A committee's failure to 
respond, and inadequate or late responses to RFAIs, may result in a 
committee accruing one or more audit points. When a committee 
accumulates audit points that meet Commission-established thresholds 
for an election cycle, RAD will refer the committee to the Audit 
Division for an audit (``RAD Audit Referral''), consistent with the 
Commission-approved RAD Procedures. Audit staff review the RAD Audit 
Referrals and submit a request to the Commission to authorize an audit 
of committees meeting the thresholds subject to the Audit Division's 
resource limitations. Audits must be authorized by an affirmative vote 
of four or more commissioners. The Act provides that ``audit[s] shall 
be commenced within 30 days of such vote, except that any audit of an 
authorized committee of a candidate . . . shall be commenced within 6 
months of the election for which such committee is authorized.'' Id.
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    \8\ The Commission publishes criteria for substantial compliance 
on its website, via redacted versions of the RAD Review and Referral 
Procedures (``RAD Procedures''). See FEC, Documents on enforcement 
and compliance practices, Reports Analysis Division documents, 
https://www.fec.gov/legal-resources/enforcement/procedural-materials/.
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C. Notification to the Audited Committee

    The audit process begins with a notification letter to the 
committee that the Commission has authorized an audit of the committee 
(``Notification''). The Notification sets forth the basis upon which 
the Commission initiated the audit, requests records, informs the 
committee of its right to be represented by counsel, directs the 
committee to appropriate Commission resources, and advises the 
committee that any records and/or correspondence the committee provides 
to the Commission are subject to the Commission's disclosure policies, 
set forth below in Section III, and may also be shared with other law 
enforcement agencies.
    The initial request for records will be relevant to Audit's 
gathering of background information about the committee (such as its 
organization and compliance contacts), initial review of the 
committee's disclosure reports for mathematical and other errors, 
reconciliation of bank records and committee databases to reported 
activity to ensure activity has been reported accurately, 
reconciliation of committee databases to bank records, and 
determination of a testing plan based on the noncompliance identified 
in the RAD Audit Referral. The initial request for records may include 
the following: bank statements, committee reconciliations, 
documentation for all accounts (including the federal and Levin 
account, if applicable), receipt and disbursement databases, credit 
card merchant statements, invoices, canceled checks, committee credit 
card records, contributor check copies, communications soliciting and 
receiving contributions, signed contracts, payroll journals, deposit 
batches, debit and credit memos, source documentation for 
contributions, and loan/line of credit information.\9\
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    \9\ The list of records is not exhaustive.
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    Committees are expected to provide all requested records in an 
electronic format that can be accessed and read by Audit staff, except 
that committees may submit paper records to the extent the committee 
maintained the records in paper format and it is impractical to convert 
the records to an electronic format.
    The committee has 30 calendar days from the date of the 
Notification to provide the records requested in the Notification.\10\ 
Audit staff will grant a 15-calendar day extension upon the written 
request of the committee, for a total of 45 days. Extensions sought for 
longer than 15 calendar days may be granted by Audit staff subject to 
the committee agreeing, in writing, to toll the applicable statute of 
limitations for the duration of the extension granted. Audit staff will 
attempt, for a period of no more than 30 calendar days, to resolve 
informally with the committee any disputes over the production of 
records as early as possible in the process.
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    \10\ For this and all deadlines discussed herein, if the 
deadline falls on a weekend or legal holiday, as defined at 11 CFR 
111.2, the deadline will be the next business day.
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    If any disputes over records requests remain upon the expiration of 
the 30-calendar day informal resolution period, Audit staff may request 
that OGC draft subpoenas, requests for written answers, or other 
compulsory process for Commission approval. Audit staff will make such 
request by memorandum within 5 days of the expiration of the informal 
resolution period. Within 10 calendar days of Audit staff's request, 
OGC shall circulate to the Commission

[[Page 30744]]

a recommendation memorandum, attaching Audit's memorandum to OGC, all 
communications with the audited committee relevant to the records 
dispute, and drafts of the compulsory process documents OGC requests 
that the Commission authorize, on a 48-hour no objection basis. If any 
commissioner objects, the Commission shall consider the recommendation 
memorandum in the next executive session. If a committee does not 
comply with approved compulsory process, the Commission shall consider 
any recommendation to initiate civil enforcement of such compulsory 
process on a 48-hour no objection basis. If any commissioner objects, 
the Commission shall consider the request for civil enforcement of 
compulsory process in the next executive session.

D. Entrance Conference and Fieldwork

    Within 60 days of the date by which the committee provides Audit 
staff with requested documents, an Entrance Conference shall be held 
between representatives of Audit, RAD, OGC, and the committee. At the 
Entrance Conference, Audit staff will explain the Commission's audit 
process. Additional meetings between Commission staff and committee 
personnel may be held during fieldwork to discuss possible audit 
findings and to resolve issues arising during the audit.
    If, during fieldwork, Audit staff discover, in the normal course of 
their review, evidence suggesting additional instances of material non-
compliance, Audit staff will circulate a request to approve an expanded 
audit scope to the Commission on a 48-hour no objection basis. The 
request will include a brief summary of the evidence and the relevant 
Commission-approved compliance thresholds. If any commissioner objects, 
the Commission shall consider the request in executive session. If the 
request is approved by an affirmative vote of four or more 
commissioners, Audit staff shall send the committee a Supplemental 
Notification that sets forth the expanded scope of the audit and basis 
therefore, and a supplemental request for records commensurate with the 
expanded scope.
    In the event of a Supplemental Notification, the committee must 
provide the requested records, in the format described above, within 30 
calendar days. The committee may request a 15-calendar day extension to 
provide the additional records, for a total of 45 calendar days. 
Extensions sought for longer than 15 calendar days may be granted by 
Audit staff subject to the committee agreeing, in writing, to toll the 
applicable statute of limitations for the duration of the extension 
granted. Audit staff shall attempt to informally resolve with the 
committee any disputes over supplemental records requests in the same 
manner as set forth above. If the committee has not provided the 
additional records requested within 45 calendar days of the 
Supplemental Notification, Audit staff may request that OGC draft 
subpoenas, requests for written answers, or other compulsory process 
for Commission approval, pursuant to the process described above.

E. Exit Conference & Response

    At the conclusion of fieldwork, Audit staff will assess whether the 
audit has uncovered apparent findings of noncompliance.
    For audits in which Audit staff preliminarily identify at least one 
finding, Audit staff will provide OGC a preliminary Exit Conference 
Report, setting forth Audit's preliminary findings for legal review. 
OGC shall provide Audit its legal analysis of the preliminary findings, 
in writing, which shall be incorporated, with redactions as appropriate 
(but to the least extent possible), into the Exit Conference Report as 
an attachment. Thereafter, Audit staff, OGC, RAD, and the committee 
will meet for an Exit Conference. During this meeting, the committee 
will receive the Exit Conference Report, setting forth Audit's 
preliminary findings and recommended corrective actions, if any.
    Absent a dispute about any proposed finding or recommended 
corrective action, committees are encouraged to take the recommended 
corrective action promptly, and to the extent they do, the Commission 
may take those actions into account in any subsequent OGC enforcement 
action, including reducing the civil penalty if the findings are 
referred for enforcement. To receive these benefits, the committee must 
take the recommended corrective action within 30 calendar days of 
receipt of the Exit Conference Report, or within 30 calendar days 
following the resolution of a dispute over a recommended corrective 
action, whichever occurs later.
    Within 30 calendar days of the Exit Conference, the committee may 
file a response to the Exit Conference Report (``Response''), 
addressing any factual or legal issues, including any recommended 
corrective action. The committee may request a 15-calendar day 
extension to respond to the Exit Conference Report, for a total of 45 
calendar days. Extensions sought for longer than 15 calendar days may 
be granted by Audit staff subject to the committee agreeing, in 
writing, to toll the applicable statute of limitations for the duration 
of the extension granted. If the committee's Response disputes any 
factual finding, question of law, or recommended corrective action set 
forth in the Exit Conference Report, Audit staff, in consultation with 
OGC for disputes over questions of law, shall attempt to resolve the 
issue informally with the committee for a period of no more than 30 
calendar days. If any issue of fact, law, or recommended corrective 
action remains unresolved at the end of the informal resolution period, 
the committee may request an Audit Hearing as described further below.
    For audits in which Audit staff, in accordance with Commission-
approved thresholds, determine (1) at the conclusion of fieldwork, or 
(2) after receipt of the Exit Conference Report Response, that the 
committee is in substantial compliance with the Act and there are no 
proposed findings, Audit staff will circulate to the Commission an 
Audit Division Recommendation Report stating that the committee is in 
substantial compliance with the Act and attach a proposed Final Audit 
Report of the Commission on a 72-hour no-objection basis no later than 
15 calendar days from the Exit Conference or after Audit staff 
determines that the committee is in substantial compliance, whichever 
occurs earlier. If a commissioner objects, the Audit Division 
Recommendation Report shall be considered at the next open meeting. 
After the Commission has approved the Final Audit Report of the 
Commission by the affirmative vote of four or more commissioners, Audit 
staff will publish the file pursuant to the process described in 
Section III below, but will include on the public record only the Audit 
Division Recommendation Report, Final Audit Report of the Commission, 
the Exit Conference Report (if applicable), Response (if applicable), 
and the Vote Certification for the Final Audit Report of the 
Commission.

F. Audit Hearing

    The Commission is continuing to provide audited committees with the 
opportunity to address the Commission directly before the Commission 
considers adopting any finding that the committee has not complied with 
the Act or Commission regulations.
    Committees may, within 10 calendar days of the conclusion of the 
informal resolution period following the Exit Conference Report 
Response, submit a written request to the Commission Secretary for an 
Audit Hearing. The request should be sent to

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secretary@fec.gov. The Commission Secretary's Office shall notify 
commissioners, Audit staff, and OGC of any such request within five 
calendar days of receipt. All timely requests for an Audit Hearing 
shall be granted, and the Audit Hearing will be scheduled as soon as 
practicable, but no later than 60 calendar days following receipt of 
the request. Late requests for an Audit Hearing will not be accepted 
absent good cause to be determined by the affirmative votes of four or 
more commissioners, and unless the committee agrees to toll the 
applicable statute of limitations. Audit Hearings are voluntary, and 
the Commission will not draw an adverse inference based on the 
committee's request for, or lack of request for, an Audit Hearing.
    Any request for an Audit Hearing shall specify what issue(s) the 
committee expects to address and should include citations to any 
authorities (including prior Commission actions) on which the committee 
is relying or intends to rely at the Audit Hearing. The committee may 
incorporate by specific reference any information or arguments set 
forth in its Response to the Exit Conference Report. Audit staff will 
provide to the Commission prior to the Audit Hearing the committee's 
request for an Audit Hearing, the Exit Conference Report and attached 
OGC legal analysis, the Response, and Audit and OGC's analysis of the 
Response. If the committee discovers new information after submission 
of their request for an Audit Hearing, it should provide the new 
information to Audit staff as soon as possible, prior to the Audit 
Hearing. Audit staff will, in turn, notify the Commission. If the 
committee submits documents within 48 hours of the Audit Hearing, the 
Commission may ask the committee to toll the applicable statute of 
limitations so that it may consider such late-submitted documents.
    The purpose of the Audit Hearing is to provide a committee 
undergoing an audit with an opportunity to present its arguments 
directly to the commissioners when the Audit Division proposes a 
finding that the committee has not complied with the Act or Commission 
regulations, but before the Commission adopts a Final Audit Report of 
the Commission containing any findings of non-compliance. A committee 
may be represented by counsel, at the committee's own expense, or may 
appear pro se at the hearing. A committee (or its counsel) will have 
the opportunity to present arguments. Commissioners will have the 
opportunity to pose questions to the audited committee or their 
counsel, if represented. At the Audit Hearing, absent prior notice to 
the Audit Division and for good cause shown, committees may raise only 
issues that were identified in their Response to the Exit Conference 
Report or request for an Audit Hearing. Similarly, absent good cause, 
committees may not introduce any new documents at the Audit Hearing 
that were not previously provided to Audit staff at least 48 hours 
prior to the Audit Hearing. Good cause will be decided by the 
Commission at its sole discretion. If the Commission determines that 
there is good cause to allow the committee to raise additional issues 
or to introduce new documents, the committee may be asked to agree to 
toll the applicable statute of limitations to allow time for the 
Commission and Audit to consider the new information or issues.
    The Commission will conduct the Audit Hearing in an executive 
session and will have a transcript made of the hearing. The transcript 
will become part of the record of that audit and may be relied upon for 
Commission determinations. Committees may be bound by any 
representations made by the committee or its counsel at the Audit 
Hearing. The Commission will make the transcript available to the 
committee for inspection as soon as is practical after the hearing. A 
committee may purchase copies of its Audit Hearing transcript from the 
court reporter.
    Committees should notify the Commission Secretary at least one week 
prior to the scheduled date of the Audit Hearing if they intend to use 
charts, handouts, or audio-visual aids during their presentation to the 
Commission, to allow the Commission time to coordinate the handling of 
these arrangements.
    The Commission will determine the format and time allotted for each 
hearing at its discretion. Among the non-exclusive factors that the 
Commission may consider are agency time constraints and the complexity 
of the issues to be raised. The Commission will determine the amount of 
time allocated for each portion of the hearing; the time limit may vary 
between Audit Hearings. The Commission anticipates that most Audit 
Hearings will begin with a brief opening statement by the committee or 
its counsel. Thereafter, commissioners will have the opportunity to 
pose questions to the audited committee, Audit staff and OGC 
representatives, as necessary, to clarify any issue of fact or question 
of law. Audit Hearings will normally conclude with closing remarks from 
the committee or its counsel. Third-party witnesses may not be called 
to testify at the Audit Hearing. However, any commissioner may invite 
the committee to submit supplementary information or briefing after the 
Audit Hearing. The Commission discourages voluminous submissions. 
Supplementary information shall be submitted no more than 10 calendar 
days after the Audit Hearing unless the request for information imposes 
a different deadline. Requests to supplement the record may be made by 
the audited committee within 10 calendar days of the Audit Hearing, but 
no supplemental information will be accepted absent Commission approval 
of such a request by four or more affirmative votes. Materials 
requested by the Commission and materials considered by the Commission 
in making its determination may be made part of the public record.

G. Audit Division Recommendation Report and Proposed Final Audit Report 
of the Commission

    No later than 60 calendar days after the Exit Conference Report 
Response deadline, the expiration of the 30 calendar day period for 
informal resolution of disputes, the Audit Hearing, or the expiration 
of the committee's opportunity to request an Audit Hearing, whichever 
occurs later, Audit staff will circulate to the Commission an Audit 
Division Recommendation Report. The Audit Division Recommendation 
Report is a consolidated and updated (to the extent necessary) 
presentation of Audit's proposed findings and OGC's legal analysis, 
prepared for Commission consideration prior to voting on any 
recommended findings. Specifically, the Audit Division Recommendation 
Report will include, for each proposed finding, Audit staff's factual 
findings, OGC's legal analysis, and whether the committee implemented 
Audit's recommended corrective actions. The Audit Division 
Recommendation Report will also include, as an attachment, a proposed 
Final Audit Report of the Commission. The proposed Final Audit Report 
of the Commission shall contain any proposed findings and legal 
analysis that Audit staff recommend that the Commission adopt and shall 
include, as attachments, any non-financial materials relevant to the 
Commission's decision and not otherwise incorporated into the proposed 
Final Audit Report (such as copies of materials produced by the

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committee).\11\ The Audit Division Recommendation Report and proposed 
Final Audit Report of the Commission will be circulated to the 
Commission for a vote on a one-week tally. If any commissioner objects 
during the tally vote, the Audit Division Recommendation Report shall 
be placed on the Commission's next open session agenda.
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    \11\ As used here and in Section III, below, ``non-financial 
materials'' include, but are not limited to, public communications 
described in 11 CFR 100.26 and solicitations for contributions. 
``Financial materials'' include, but are not limited to, bank 
records, committee databases and spreadsheets, cancelled checks, 
loan documentation, credit card merchant statements, invoices, 
contributor check copies, credit card receipts, signed contracts, 
payroll journals, and deposit batches.
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II. Final Audit Report of the Commission

    The Final Audit Report of the Commission will include all findings 
receiving four or more affirmative votes of the commissioners. If no 
findings are approved, the Final Audit Report of the Commission shall 
so state.
    Any proposed audit finding that is rejected by four or more votes 
will not be included in the Final Audit Report of the Commission. Any 
proposed audit finding the disposition of which does not receive four 
or more votes will be included in the Final Audit Report of the 
Commission under the heading ``Issues Not Agreed Upon by a Majority of 
the Commission.'' Any commissioner may issue a statement describing the 
reasons for their vote on any recommendation made by the Audit staff. 
Any such statement of reasons shall be made part of the file.

III. Publication of the Audit File

    Within 30 calendar days of the conclusion of the audit by adoption 
of a Final Audit Report of the Commission, the Commission will publish 
the audit file on its website. The Commission will disclose the 
following audit materials as a matter of regular practice, subject to 
redactions, as necessary, for confidentiality under 52 U.S.C. 30109 and 
applicable privileges: (1) the Exit Conference Report and accompanying 
OGC legal analysis, (2) the Audit Division Recommendation Report, (3) 
memoranda requesting compulsory process, (4) the Final Audit Report of 
the Commission, (5) committee responses, including attached 
declarations and affidavits but not including any financial materials, 
(6) the committee request for an Audit Hearing, (7) the transcript of 
the Audit Hearing, (8) Vote Certifications, (9) Statements of any 
commissioners, and (10) any other non-financial materials and documents 
upon which commissioners relied.

IV. Potential Enforcement

    Within 30 calendar days of the adoption of the Final Audit Report 
of the Commission, Audit staff will assess whether any Commission-
approved audit findings meet Commission approved thresholds for 
referral to one of the Commission's enforcement processes in OGC, ADRO, 
or AF. Such referrals are considered ``information ascertained in the 
ordinary course of the Commission's supervisory responsibilities.'' 52 
U.S.C. 30109(a)(2). To the extent the committee took the recommended 
corrective action as set forth in Section I.E., the Commission may 
reduce the civil penalty in an OGC enforcement action. To receive this 
benefit, the committee must have taken the recommended corrective 
action within 30 calendar days of receipt of the Exit Conference 
Report, or within 30 calendar days following the resolution of a 
dispute over a recommended corrective action, whichever occurs later.

    On behalf of the Commission.
Dara S. Lindenbaum,
Chair, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. 2023-10110 Filed 5-11-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715-01-P