> On Jul 12, 2018, at 3:57 PM, Ronald F. Guilmette <r...@tristatelogic.com> 
> wrote:
> I am deeply curious to know whether or not ARIN, as part
> of its day-to-day normal operations, requires the production of any
> specific documentation of, or information about the beneficial owners of
> corporate/LLC legal entities to which it assigns number resources.

So, speaking generically, this is called “Know Your Customer” or KYC 
regulation, and is common in banking and other financial services industries, 
mostly in an attempt to regulate money laundering.

> Does it?

To my observation, ARIN does more than most organizations, but less than 
organizations that are actually mandated to perform KYC checks by regulatory 
agencies.  ARIN does not, for instance, visit the premises of its customers to 
meet and positively identify their executives, which is a process I have to go 
through with respect to some banks, for instance.  I will note that that’s not 
a cheap process for banks to implement, and the thing at stake there is money, 
rather than IP addresses.

> And if so, how may these records be accessed?

That may be going in a different direction, which may not be a reasonable one…  
banks that follow KYC processes to identify their customers are responsible to 
banking regulators if they’re audited, they don’t publish the information to 
the public.

> Certainly I've never seen any such information within any WHOIS record.

So if you want to unmask the owners of corporations, I think you have a lot of 
hurdles to get over…  I don’t think you can use ARIN as a magical shortcut to 
financial transparency.

> Is it trivially
> possible for persons or entities within, say, Russia, China, Iran, or
> North Korea to obtain a U.S. shell company and then proceed to leverage
> that in order to obtain number resources from ARIN?

I suppose that depends on your opinion of what constitutes triviality.  There 
are two steps there: establish a US corporation (which is very easy, compared 
with other countries) and apply for ARIN resources (and you already know how 
difficult, or easy, that is).


                                -Bill

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