John Carlin, former acting deputy attorney general at DOJ, has joined Paul Weiss as co-head of the Cybersecurity & Data Protection practice and partner in the Litigation Department, the firm announced. Carlin's practice will focus on cyber incident responses, crisis management, national security issues, white collar defense and the work of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., the firm said. At DOJ, he held the acting deputy AG position from January to April 2021, later serving as principal associate deputy AG under Deputy AG Lisa Monaco and AG Merrick Garland. Carlin's work centered on oversight of the FBI, leading an initiative to stop corporate crime, and cracking down on individuals and entities helping Russia evade sanctions, the firm said.
The top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., said the administration has "a strong case for what they're doing" in restricting U.S. technology that aids the Chinese semiconductor industry (see 2210070049), but he questions how effective it will be unless the Netherlands and Japan go along.
A measure that would impose sanctions on people or companies involved in Russian gold trade could pass as part of a package with the Senate's fiscal year 2023 National Defense Authorization Act. The measure, included as an amendment, would sanction people that “knowingly participated in a significant transaction” involving the “sale, supply, or transfer” of gold to or from Russia and the Russian government or transactions that “otherwise involved gold in which the Government of the Russian Federation had any interest.” The entire package of 75 amendments will be decided with one vote.
The Biden administration wants to improve the effectiveness of multilateral export controls and is building toward the creation of an outbound investment screening regime, the White House said in its national security strategy published this week. Along with a range of domestic and foreign policy issues, the long-awaited strategy outlines the administration’s approach to trade and emerging technologies and its efforts to outcompete in its rivalry with China and continue to sanction Russia.
U.K. businessman Graham Bonham-Carter was indicted Oct. 11 for conspiring to violate U.S. sanctions on Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, wire fraud connected to funding Deripaska's American properties and working to expatriate Deripaska's U.S.-based artwork through misrepresentations, DOJ announced. The charges stem from the work of Task Force KleptoCapture, the law enforcement group tasked with enforcing the U.S.'s sanctions against Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.
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The U.K. on Oct. 6 amended a Russia-related General License covering "basic needs, routine holding and maintenance and the payment of legal fees," the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation said. The amendment alters the license to "allow any payments in connection with the Insolvency Proceedings of VTB Capital plc and its UK subsidiaries."
The European Commission updated its FAQs on the import, purchase and transfer of listed goods related to certain energy-related products to third countries from Russia. The commission said that only some goods shall be allowed to be transferred to third countries to ensure energy security goods, and these include energy products falling under CN codes 4401 (fuel wood) and 4402 (charcoal) and all the items listed in Annex XXII (coal and related products). EU sanctions will not target the trade in agricultural and food products, including wheat and fertilizers, between Russia and third countries, the FAQs said.
After the EU agreed to its eighth sanctions package on Russia over its war in Ukraine (see 2210050053), Russia said the restrictions would come with consequences and could lead to a temporary cut in the country's production of oil. The sanctions package includes a price cap on Russian oil. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, speaking to Bloomberg TV, said Russia won't sell oil to any countries to impose a price cap, Bloomberg reported Oct. 5.
A June joint alert by the Treasury and Commerce departments could signal new government expectations for banking industry sanctions compliance, experts with FTI Consulting said. The alert, which put companies and entities “on notice” about the types of red flags they should be monitoring for potential Russia sanctions and export control evasion tactics (see 2206280056, and 2207130014), may also force some financial institutions to reinforce their compliance and due-diligence processes, they said.