Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

IRS finds $32B of Russian elites in sanctions probe

Agency crime-fighting division triples amount found from previous year

- FATIMA HUSSEIN

WASHINGTON — The crime- fighting arm of the Internal Revenue Service, which tracks f inancial crimes and hunts down pricey properties of sanctioned Russian elites, identified more than $32 billion in funds during the past fiscal year for eventual seizure, the agency reported Thursday.

Jim Lee, chief of IRS Criminal Investigat­ion, said that’s a “huge” amount — three times what was identified in the previous year. And the amount of money seized in stolen cryptocurr­ency — more than $7 billion — doubled from the previous year, he said.

The division’s annual report highlights how it has added new responsibi­lities — like investigat­ing sanctioned Russian oligarchs — to its priorities as Russia wages war on Ukraine.

It has opened 20 investigat­ions of sanctioned people since it joined the Justice Department- led task force Kleptocapt­ure in March. The task force targets Russian oligarchs and others who evade sanctions.

Lee said the increase in money identified and changing nature of how crimes are perpetrate­d have posed a challenge to the little-understood agency within Treasury.

“As a division,” Lee said, “we are nimble and able to shift quickly.”

The division has come under increased scrutiny in recent months, particular­ly when Congress was debating the Inflation Reduction Act, which gives the IRS $ 80 billion in additional funding.

Republican­s have conflated the criminal investigat­ion division’s armed agents with the unarmed IRS auditors who go over financial filings for the federal tax collector. Those comparison­s are misleading and false.

“Not only is it wildly inappropri­ate but it’s dangerous,” Lee said.

“Much of the internatio­nal success of CI special agents stems from a robust and aggressive internatio­nal program that includes 11 foreign posts and membership­s in multiple internatio­nal taskforces,” the annual report states. Agents work alongside the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, the Joint Criminal Opioid Darknet Enforcemen­t taskforce and other entities.

Among seizures this past year, the agency assisted in the investigat­ion that led to the February arrest of Ilya Lichtenste­in and Heather Morgan for an alleged conspiracy to launder cryptocurr­ency that was stolen during the 2016 hack of virtual currency exchange Bitfinex, valued at approximat­ely $4.5 billion, the largest single financial seizure in government history.

In August, Alexander Vinnik, a Russian citizen and an alleged operator of the illicit cryptocurr­ency exchange BTC-e, was charged in California with operating a cybercrime and online money laundering firm, alleged to have laundered more than $4 billion.

“If you get in the crosshairs of an IRS CI special agent,” Lee said, “it’s highly likely you’re going to jail.”

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