The Guardian (USA)

US spends more than $7m a year to keep up superyacht seized from Russian oligarch

- Reuters in New York

The US government has said it is spending more than $7m a year to maintain a superyacht it seized from a sanctioned Russian oligarch, and urged a judge to let it auction the vessel before a dispute over its ownership is resolved.

Authoritie­s in Fiji seized the 348ft (106-meter), $300m Amadea in May 2022, pursuant to a US warrant alleging it was owned by Suleiman Kerimov, a multibilli­onaire sanctioned by the US treasury department in 2014 and 2018 in response to Russia’s activities in Syria and Ukraine.

Efforts to auction the yacht are being challenged by Eduard Khudainato­v, who led Russian state oil and gas company Rosneft from 2010 to 2013.

Khudainato­v claims ownership of the Amadea, and has said it cannot not be forfeited because he has not been sanctioned.

In a court filing late on Friday federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan told the US district judge Dale Ho that the $600,000 average monthly maintenanc­e bill for the Amadea has been “excessive”, justifying an auction. They also said talks to have Khudainato­v pay for the yacht’s upkeep have broken down.

Prosecutor­s have said in previous court filings that Khudainato­v is acting as the Amadea’s “straw owner” to disguise Kerimov’s role, and that maintenanc­e payments are essential to preserving a yacht’s value.

Khudainato­v has until 23 February to reply to prosecutor­s’ request. In a statement, his lawyers said the motion to sell the vessel was “premature” and urged Ho to deny it until he “determines whether the seizure was unconstitu­tional”.

The seizure came as Washington ramped up sanctions enforcemen­t against people close to Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president, to pressure Moscow to halt its war against Ukraine.

If the US government succeeded in auctioning the yacht, it would likely eventually transfer sale proceeds to Ukraine.

Prosecutor­s have said Kerimov violated US sanctions by making more than $1m in maintenanc­e payments for the Amadea through the US financial system, making the vessel now docked in San Diego subject to forfeiture.

Kerimov and his family are worth $10.7bn, according to Forbes magazine. He amassed his fortune through Russian gold miner Polyus, though he is no longer a shareholde­r.

 ?? ?? The Russian-owned super yacht Amadea docks in Honolulu, Hawaii on 17 June 2022. Photograph: Marco Garcia/Reuters
The Russian-owned super yacht Amadea docks in Honolulu, Hawaii on 17 June 2022. Photograph: Marco Garcia/Reuters

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