Oroville Mercury-Register

US turns to new ways to punish Russian oligarchs

- By Fatima Hussein

WASHINGTON >> The U.S. has begun an aggressive new push to inflict pain on Russia's economy and specifical­ly its oligarchs with the intent of thwarting the Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine.

From the Treasury Department to the Justice Department, U.S. officials will focus on efforts to legally liquidate the property of Russian oligarchs, expand financial penalties on those who facilitate the evasion of sanctions, and close loopholes in the law that allow oligarchs to use shell companies to move through the U.S. financial system.

Andrew Adams, who heads the KleptoCapt­ure task force, designed to enforce the economic restrictio­ns within the U.S. imposed on Russia and its billionair­es, told The Associated Press that the group is prioritizi­ng its efforts to identify those who help

Russians evade sanctions and violate export controls.

“These illicit procuremen­t networks will continue to take up an everincrea­sing amount of our bandwidth,” said Adams, who also serves as acting deputy assistant attorney general.

So far, more than $58 billion worth of sanctioned Russians' assets have been blocked or frozen worldwide, according to a report last week from the Treasury Department. That includes two luxury yachts each worth $300 million in San Diego and Fiji, and six New York and Florida properties worth $75 million owned by sanctioned oligarch Viktor Vekselberg.

The U.S. has begun attempts to punish the associates and wealth managers of oligarchs — in Vekselberg's case, a federal court in New York indicted Vladimir Voronchenk­o after he helped maintain Vekselberg's properties. He was charged in February with conspiring to violate and evade U.S. sanctions.

The case was coordinate­d through the KleptoCapt­ure group.

“I think it can be quite effective to be sanctionin­g facilitato­rs,” Adams said, calling them “profession­al sanctions evasion brokers.”

A February study led by Dartmouth University researcher­s showed that targeting a few key wealth managers would cause far greater damage to Russia than sanctionin­g oligarchs individual­ly.

Other attempts to inflict pain on the Russian economy will come from the efforts to liquidate yachts and other property owned by Russian oligarchs and the Kremlin, turning them into cash to benefit Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has long called for Russian assets to be transferre­d to Ukraine, and former Biden administra­tion official Daleep Singh told the Senate Banking Committee on Feb. 28 that forfeiting Russia's billions in assets held by the U.S. is “something we ought to pursue.”

Singh suggested the U.S. should “use the reserves that we have immobilize­d at the New York Fed, transfer them to Ukraine and allow them to put them up as collateral to raise money.” He ran the White House's Russia sanctions program when he was national security adviser for internatio­nal economics.

Adams said the KleptoCapt­ure task force is pursuing efforts to sell Russians' yachts and other property, despite the legal difficulti­es of turning property whose owners' access has been blocked into forfeited assets that the government can take and sell for the benefit of Ukraine.

He stressed that the U.S. will operate under the rule of law. “Part of what that means is that we will not take assets that are not fully, totally forfeited through the judicial procedures and begin confiscati­ng them without a legal basis,” Adams said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States