The U.K. last week issued new guidance about the information-sharing provisions in its Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act, a law meant to increase detection and enforcement of sanctions evasion, terrorism financing, money laundering and other economic crimes. The guidance outlines the “voluntary” measures within the law that are designed to give “greater clarity and comfort” to companies when sharing information about potentially risky customers, the U.K. said, and describes how companies “can ensure that they are protected by the provisions when undertaking direct and indirect sharing.”
Four Kentucky residents were arrested on Oct. 4 after conspiring to ship firearms to Iraq without obtaining an export license, DOJ said. They were indicted on conspiracy to violate the Export Control Reform Act and smuggle goods from the U.S., among other charges.
The Bureau of Industry and Security on Oct. 4 again renewed the temporary denial order for Russian airline Ural Airlines, saying it has continued to illegally operate aircraft on flights within Russia and to and from Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. The order, first issued in October 2022 (see 2210170009) and renewed twice (see 2310100017), bars the airline from participating in transactions with items subject to the Export Administration Regulations.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control may be preparing to increase its use of private blocking notices, which the agency sometimes sends to companies instead of publicly sanctioning a party on its Specially Designated Nationals List, Paul Weiss said in an October client alert.
The U.S. is increasingly expecting companies to monitor government guidance as well as export violations committed by others, and to use those cases as “lessons learned” to improve their own compliance programs, lawyers said this week.
The EU General Court on Oct. 2 upheld the validity of the EU prohibition on the provision of legal advisory services to the Russian government and to entities established in Russia. The court said the sanction doesn't undermine the right of all persons to be advised by a lawyer for "conducting, pre-empting or anticipating judicial proceedings."
The District Court for the Northern District of Texas on Oct. 1 unsealed an indictment against Russian citizen Aleksandr Ryzhenkov, the "second-in-command" of the Russian cybercriminal group Evil Corp., for using the BitPaymer ransomware variant against various U.S. individuals to "hold their sensitive data for ransom," DOJ announced.
A Russian citizen living in North Georgia, Feliks Medvedev, was sentenced on Oct. 2 to three years and 10 months in prison for conducting an "unlicensed money transmitting business," which saw the transfer of over $150 million in Russian money. Medvedev was also sentenced to three years of supervised release following his prison sentence and told to pay a $10,000 fine, DOJ said.
Senate Banking Committee ranking member Tim Scott, R-S.C., and Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., asked the Federal Reserve this week to explain how it reportedly failed to prevent money from flowing to U.S.-sanctioned entities, including Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
A bipartisan group of four senators announced this week that they will introduce a bill that would require the Biden administration to develop a “comprehensive strategy” to use sanctions and other tools to protect civilians from Sudan’s "brutal" civil war.