The Bureau of Industry and Security announced another set of changes to its semiconductor-related export controls Jan. 15, creating new lists of trusted chip designers and service providers, introducing new reporting requirements for certain higher-risk customers and making a host of other revisions, clarifications and updates to its existing restrictions, including its latest advanced AI chip controls released earlier this week.
Gina Sokolovs, a former financial crime compliance associate with financial services firm Societe Generale, has joined the Office of Foreign Assets Control as a sanctions implementation and investigation specialist, she announced on LinkedIn. Sokolovs previously worked as a policy consultant with DHS in 2021.
Former Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo has left the Treasury Department to begin new fellowship roles with Columbia University’s Institute of Global Politics and Center on Global Energy Policy, the school announced on LinkedIn. As Treasury’s top official under Secretary Janet Yellen, Adeyemo helped oversee the Biden administration’s implementation of sanctions against Russia, the price cap on Russian oil, and more.
The EU is “concerned” about the Bureau of Industry and Security's new export controls on advanced AI chips (see 2501130026), which will impose new restrictions on certain EU member states and their companies, the bloc’s top two technology and trade officials said in a joint statement this week.
China criticized new U.S. export controls over certain advanced AI chips released this week (see 2501130026) and announced its own set of export restrictions on American firms the next day, adding seven defense contractors to its so-called unreliable entity list.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control is adjusting its civil monetary penalties for inflation, the agency said in a notice this week. The new amounts include higher maximum penalties for violations of the Trading With the Enemy Act, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act and the Clean Diamond Trade Act. The agency also updated two references to “one-half the IEEPA maximum" penalty, which changed from $184,068 to $188,850. OFAC also adjusted the record-keeping penalty amounts in the agency's Economic Sanctions Enforcement Guidelines. The changes take effect Jan. 15.
The European Council on Jan. 13 extended its sanctions on those who support or enable violent actions taken by Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad for one year, until Jan. 20, 2026. The sanctions cover 12 people and three entities.
A new U.K. general license issued Jan. 14 allows certain people and entities to "make funds available" to sanctioned parties to pay for food and beverages, medicines and medical products, and personal and household products. The license, issued by the U.K.'s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation, authorizes those transactions for up to two months after the party was sanctioned, and the payments can't exceed about $426 per month. The license doesn't apply to certain sanctioned parties, including those designated under a counter-terrorism regime or by the U.N. It takes effect Jan. 15.
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Outgoing Bureau of Industry and Security Undersecretary Alan Estevez said he would advise his successor to continue coordinating export controls with allies and to not immediately turn to extraterritorial restrictions, such as the foreign direct product rule.