A Senate bill with bipartisan support could apply secondary sanctions on anyone transacting or transporting gold from Russia’s central bank holdings or selling gold in Russia. The Stop Russian Government and Oligarchs from Limiting Democracy Act, introduced this week, would look to close a “loophole” in U.S. sanctions that allows Russian oligarchs to launder money through gold, the sponsoring senators said March 8. The bill would authorize secondary sanctions to “deter the purchase of Russian gold and close this loophole that allows the Russian Federation to soften the financial impact of sanctions.”
A group of countries aligned with the EU's Feb. 21 decision to add two individuals and two entities to its ISIL (Da'esh) and al-Qaida sanctions regime, the European Council said. The countries of North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Ukraine, Moldova, Armenia and Georgia aligned with the decision.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control announced sanctions on 26 Russian individuals and seven entities connected with cyber attacks and election interference in the U.S. OFAC determined that the property and interests in property subject to U.S. jurisdiction of the designated persons and entities are blocked.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control announced sanctions on eight Russian individuals, six entities, one water vessel and one aircraft. OFAC determined that the property and interests in property subject to U.S. jurisdiction of the designated persons and entities are blocked. The sanctions were pursuant to Executive Order 14024, which targets members of the Russian government, technology sector, and their families and businesses.
The Bureau of Industry and Security is preparing to issue new export control decisions involving emerging technologies agreed to at the 2021 Wassenaar Arrangement plenary. The interim final rule, sent for interagency review March 8, will harmonize the Commerce Control List with a portion of Wassenaar’s 2021 decisions for certain “recently developed or developing technologies,” BIS said. BIS will implement the remaining Wassenaar 2021 control decisions in a separate rule.
The Bureau of Industry and Security sent a final rule for interagency review March 8 related to its new export controls over certain cybersecurity items (see 2110200036). BIS in January delayed the effective date for the rule to March 7 (see 2201110025) after receiving feedback from industry, which said the new controls should be tweaked so they don’t impede certain activities in the cybersecurity sector, including information sharing and exports to certain government end-users (see 2112130028). BIS said last month it was planning to make minor revisions to the rule to address some public comments (see 2202100026).
The EU announced new sanctions targeting the Belarusian financial sector to expand on existing restrictions on the country in response to its role in the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The new restrictions apply to three banks -- Belagroprombank, Bank Dabrabyt and the Development Bank of the Republic of Belarus, along with their Belarusian subsidiaries -- and keep them using SWIFT, the interbank messaging service.
The EU ambassador to Washington, Stavros Lambrinidis, said that settling trade irritants between the U.S. and Europe and setting up the EU-U.S. Trade and Technology Council made it easy to get a unified front on export controls done quickly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The TTC "ensured every player that’s important in this field could get on the phone and get it done," he said during a March 9 webinar hosted by the World Trade Center in Washington, D.C., and the Washington Intergovernmental Professional Group.
President Joe Biden issued an executive order March 9 that will require several agencies to study how cryptocurrency can be used to evade sanctions. The order, part of a “priority effort” underway by the administration to counter illegal uses of virtual currencies, comes amid concerns from lawmakers that Russia could turn to cryptocurrency to evade U.S. and global financial restrictions (see 2203030047).
B. Stephanie Siegmann, former National Security chief for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts, joined Hinckley Allen as a partner in its International Trade & Global Security practice, the firm announced. Siegmann worked on investigations into violations of export control laws, sanctions, intellectual property, money laundering and national security.