Search Results for keywords:"proposed amendments"

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Search Results: keywords:"proposed amendments"

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 8968
    Reading Time:about 2 hours

    The United States Sentencing Commission is considering changes to the federal sentencing guidelines, and they are seeking public comments through March 2025. The proposed amendments aim to provide courts with more flexibility in making sentencing decisions, including changes to supervised release terms and drug offense guidelines. These include updating how drug quantities and roles in drug trafficking are assessed, altering the approach to methamphetamine cases, and revising enhancements related to machineguns and fentanyl distribution. The Commission is actively seeking feedback on various aspects of these proposals to better tailor federal sentencing guidelines to current needs.

    Simple Explanation

    The United States Sentencing Commission is thinking about changing rules on how judges in the U.S. decide punishments for crimes, and they want people to share their thoughts about it; these changes are about making sure punishments fit better with today's needs, especially for drug and gun crimes.

  • Type:Proposed Rule
    Citation:86 FR 5063
    Reading Time:about 118 minutes

    The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is proposing to change the rules around selling certain types of securities. They want to revise how the holding period is determined for securities obtained from market-adjustable ones, specifically for companies that are not listed on a national exchange. This means the holding period won't start until the securities are actually received upon conversion. The SEC also plans to require that Form 144 be filed electronically for companies subject to Exchange Act reporting, align the filing deadline for Form 144 with Form 4, and remove the need to file Form 144 for selling securities of companies not subject to Exchange Act reporting. These changes aim to make the process simpler and more transparent for investors and to prevent unregistered sales of securities.

    Simple Explanation

    The SEC wants to make selling some special stocks easier and simpler by changing how they count the time you need to keep them and letting people file forms online. They're also making rules so that smaller companies don’t have to file certain forms if their stocks aren't being watched closely by the big stock bosses.