The Office of Foreign Assets Control should clarify its rules surrounding sanctioned ransomware groups, which are vague and are leading to industry confusion, a senior FBI official said this week. Bryan Vorndran, assistant director of the FBI’s Cyber Division, said the FBI has specifically urged OFAC to change its procedures around ransom payments and incident reporting for victims.
The EU this week adopted new sanctions and export controls against Russia in an effort to tighten existing restrictions against the country for its war in Ukraine. The package imposes new bans on the purchase, import or transfer of gold originating in Russia and restricts more exports of dual-use technologies. The measures also extend the EU’s port access ban to better limit Russia’s ability to evade sanctions and expand the scope of restrictions surrounding certain deposits.
Although the U.S. should be concerned about university espionage and research theft, it shouldn’t place restrictions on fundamental research, said Arati Prabhakar, President Joe Biden’s nominee for director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, speaking during a Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation hearing this week. She said the U.S. has some “real issues” involving research security, which “have to be wrestled with” but not in a way that stifles innovation and hurts American competitiveness.
MidFirst Bank violated the U.S. Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferators Sanctions Regulations when it processed payments for two sanctioned people after they were designated by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, OFAC said in a July 21 enforcement notice. OFAC said the bank, headquartered in Oklahoma City, maintained accounts for the people and processed 34 of their payments in the two weeks after they were added to the Specially Designated Nationals List.
Ivan Komaritsky, former corporate regulatory attorney at DLA Piper, has joined Rimon PC as counsel in the New York office, the firm announced. Komaritsky's practice centers around Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. and U.S. economic sanctions matters. Throughout his career, Komaritsky has conducted internal investigations and FCPA corporate audits in countries around the globe, including in Russia, the Middle East, Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia, the firm said.
The Bureau of Industry and Security recently revoked export privileges for two people after they illegally exported controlled items from the U.S.
Although climate advocate Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., has hopes of introducing a bipartisan carbon border adjustment tax, he said it may take American exports being hit with carbon border tariffs in Europe to get Congress to move.
The U.N. Security Council this week amended one entry on its sanctions list. The change revises the entry for Abu Zayd Umar Dorda, a Libyan official, to reflect his presumed death.
The U.K. adopted an amendment to its Russian sanctions regime that alters the designation criteria for listing an individual or entity. The new criteria expand the definition of "involved in obtaining a benefit from or supporting the Government of Russia," to include working as a "manager" of or "holding the right, directly or indirectly," to nominate a director, trustee or equivalent of a Russian government-affiliated entity; an entity conducting business as a government affiliate; or an entity conducting business of economic significance to the Russian state.
The Biden administration should sanction Hong Kong government prosecutors for trying political cases and undermining democracy in the region, U.S. lawmakers said in a July 20 letter to the White House. Hong Kong’s Justice Department and criminal prosecutors have played a significant part in “undermining the rule of law and detaining political prisoners” under its so-called national security law (see 2107160030), and have even created a “Special Duties team” to exclusively handle political cases, said the letter, signed by bipartisan members of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China.