On September 16, 2009, the accounting firm Holtz Rubenstein Reminick (HRR) hosted a seminar on reporting of foreign bank accounts, for both income tax and anti-money laundering purposes. Reporting on foreign income has become headline news of late. Notably, in February 2009, UBS, the largest Swiss bank by assets, reached a settlement with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in which UBS agreed to give the IRS hundreds of names of Americans suspected of using UBS accounts to evade U.S. income taxes. Several UBS clients have been prosecuted. The HRR seminar was chiefly designed to address the issue of whether people who have accounts with UBS or other foreign banks should make voluntary disclosure to the IRS of the existence of such accounts and other data with respect to such accounts. Panelists also briefly discussed the still-undecided issue of whether an interest in an offshore hedge fund must, under the Bank Secrecy Act, be reported in a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR). See “IRS Indicates that U.S. Persons May be Required to Report Interests in Offshore Hedge Funds in Reports of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts,” Hedge Fund Law Report, Vol. 2, No. 26 (Jul. 2, 2009). We detail the relevant points from the conference.