Global Magnitsky Sanctions Regulations, 17728-17740 [2024-05207]
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17728
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 49 / Tuesday, March 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Inapplicability of Notice and Delayed
Effective Date
This amendment involves a foreign
affairs function of the United States and
is, therefore, being made without notice
or public procedure under 5 U.S.C.
553(a)(1). For the same reason, a
delayed effective date is not required
under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders 12866 (as amended
by Executive Order 14094) and 13563
direct agencies to assess the costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. CBP has
determined that this document is not a
regulation or rule subject to the
provisions of Executive Orders 12866
and 13563 because it pertains to a
foreign affairs function of the United
States, as described above, and therefore
is specifically exempted by section
3(d)(2) of Executive Order 12866 and, by
extension, Executive Order 13563.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.), as amended by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, requires an agency
to prepare and make available to the
public a regulatory flexibility analysis
that describes the effect of a proposed
rule on small entities (i.e., small
businesses, small organizations, and
small governmental jurisdictions) when
the agency is required to publish a
general notice of proposed rulemaking
for a rule. Since a general notice of
proposed rulemaking is not necessary
for this rule, CBP is not required to
prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis
for this rule.
Signing Authority
This regulation is being issued in
accordance with 19 CFR 0.1(a)(1)
pertaining to the Secretary of the
Treasury’s authority (or that of the
Secretary’s delegate) to approve
regulations related to customs revenue
functions.
Troy A. Miller, the Senior Official
Performing the Duties of the
Commissioner, having reviewed and
approved this document, has delegated
the authority to electronically sign this
document to the Director (or Acting
Director, if applicable) of the
Regulations and Disclosure Law
Division for CBP, for purposes of
publication in the Federal Register.
List of Subjects in 19 CFR Part 12
Cultural property, Customs duties and
inspection, Imports, Prohibited
merchandise, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Amendment to the CBP Regulations
For the reasons set forth above, part
12 of title 19 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (19 CFR part 12), is
amended as set forth below:
PART 12—SPECIAL CLASSES OF
MERCHANDISE
1. The general authority citation for
part 12 and the specific authority
citation for § 12.104g continue to read as
follows:
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Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 19 U.S.C. 66, 1202
(General Note 3(i), Harmonized Tariff
Schedule of the United States (HTSUS)),
1624.
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Sections 12.104 through 12.104i also
issued under 19 U.S.C. 2612;
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2. In § 12.104g, amend the table in
paragraph (a) by revising the entry for
Honduras to read as follows:
■
§ 12.104g Specific items or categories
designated by agreements or emergency
actions.
(a) * * *
State party
Cultural property
Decision No.
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Honduras ........................................
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Archaeological material of Pre-Columbian cultures ranging approximately from 1200 B.C. to 1500 A.D, and ecclesiastical ethnological
materials dating from the Colonial Period, c. A.D. 1502 to 1821.
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CBP Dec. 14–03 extended by CBP
Dec. 24–06.
.
.
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Robert F. Altneu,
Director, Regulations and Disclosure Law
Division, Regulations and Rulings, Office of
Trade, U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Aviva R. Aron-Dine,
Acting Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
for Tax Policy.
[FR Doc. 2024–05345 Filed 3–8–24; 4:15 pm]
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BILLING CODE 9111–14–P
Office of Foreign Assets Control
31 CFR Part 583
Global Magnitsky Sanctions
Regulations
Office of Foreign Assets
Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC) is adopting a final rule
amending the Global Magnitsky
Sanctions Regulations and reissuing
them in their entirety to further
SUMMARY:
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implement the Global Magnitsky
Human Rights Accountability Act and a
December 20, 2017 Executive Order
related to human rights and corruption.
This final rule replaces the regulations
that were published in abbreviated form
on June 29, 2018, with a more
comprehensive set of regulations that
includes additional interpretive
guidance and definitions, general
licenses, and other regulatory provisions
that will provide further guidance to the
public. Due to the number of regulatory
sections being updated or added, OFAC
is reissuing the Global Magnitsky
Sanctions Regulations in their entirety.
DATES: This rule is effective March 12,
2024.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 49 / Tuesday, March 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OFAC: Assistant Director for Licensing,
202–622–2480; Assistant Director for
Regulatory Affairs, 202–622–4855; or
Assistant Director for Compliance, 202–
622–2490.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Availability
This document and additional
information concerning OFAC are
available on OFAC’s website:
www.treas.gov/ofac.
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Background
On June 29, 2018, OFAC issued the
Global Magnitsky Sanctions
Regulations, 31 CFR part 583 (83 FR
30541, June 29, 2018) (the
‘‘Regulations’’), to implement the Global
Magnitsky Human Rights
Accountability Act (22 U.S.C. 10101–
10103 (the ‘‘Global Magnitsky Act’’))
and Executive Order (E.O.) 13818 of
December 20, 2017, ‘‘Blocking the
Property of Persons Involved in Serious
Human Rights Abuse or Corruption’’ (82
FR 60839, December 26, 2017), pursuant
to authorities delegated to the Secretary
of the Treasury. The Regulations were
initially issued in abbreviated form for
the purpose of providing immediate
guidance to the public. OFAC is revising
the Regulations to further implement
the Global Magnitsky Act and E.O.
13818. OFAC is amending and reissuing
the Regulations as a more
comprehensive set of regulations that
includes additional interpretive
guidance and definitions, general
licenses, and other regulatory provisions
that will provide further guidance to the
public. Finally, OFAC is adding the
Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act of
2020, as amended, (22 U.S.C. 6901 note;
Pub. L. 116–145, 134 Stat. 648) to the
authority citation of 31 CFR part 583.
Due to the number of regulatory sections
being updated or added, OFAC is
reissuing the Regulations in their
entirety.
Global Magnitsky Act
On December 23, 2016, the President
signed the Global Magnitsky Act into
law. The Global Magnitsky Act, in
section 1263 (22 U.S.C. 10102),
authorizes the President to impose
targeted sanctions on any foreign person
the President determines, based on
credible evidence: (1) is responsible for
extrajudicial killings, torture, or other
gross violations of internationally
recognized human rights committed
against individuals in any foreign
country who seek (A) to expose illegal
activity carried out by government
officials; or (B) to obtain, exercise,
defend, or promote internationally
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recognized human rights and freedoms,
such as the freedoms of religion,
expression, association, and assembly,
and the rights to a fair trial and
democratic elections; (2) acted as an
agent of or on behalf of foreign persons
in a matter related to an activity
described in (1); (3) is a government
official, or a senior associate of such an
official, that is responsible for, or
complicit in, ordering, controlling, or
otherwise directing, acts of significant
corruption including the expropriation
of private or public assets for personal
gain, corruption related to government
contracts or the extraction of natural
resources, bribery, or the facilitation or
transfer of the proceeds of corruption to
foreign jurisdictions; or (4) has
materially assisted, sponsored, or
provided financial, material, or
technological support for, or goods or
services in support of, an activity
described in (3).
On September 8, 2017, the President
delegated authority to the Secretary of
the Treasury, in coordination with the
Secretary of State, to administer the
financial sanctions under section 1263
of the Global Magnitsky Act (22 U.S.C.
10102), which provides for the blocking
of all property and interests in property
of a foreign person described in section
1263(a) of the Global Magnitsky Act if
such property and interests in property
are in the United States, come within
the United States, or are or come within
the possession of or control of a United
States person (82 FR 45411, September
28, 2017).
E.O. 13818
On December 20, 2017, the President,
invoking the authority of, inter alia, the
International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.)
(IEEPA) and the Global Magnitsky Act,
issued E.O. 13818, effective at 12:01
a.m. eastern standard time on December
21, 2017, to implement and build upon
the Global Magnitsky Act. In E.O.
13818, the President found that the
prevalence and severity of human rights
abuse and corruption that have their
source, in whole or in substantial part,
outside the United States, such as those
committed or directed by persons listed
in the Annex to E.O. 13818, have
reached such scope and gravity that
they threaten the stability of
international political and economic
systems. The President determined that
serious human rights abuse and
corruption around the world constitute
an unusual and extraordinary threat to
the national security, foreign policy, and
economy of the United States and
declared a national emergency to deal
with that threat.
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Section 1(a) of E.O. 13818 blocks,
with certain exceptions, all property
and interests in property that are in the
United States, that come within the
United States, or that are or come within
the possession or control of any U.S.
person of: (i) the persons listed in the
Annex to E.O. 13818; (ii) any foreign
person determined by the Secretary of
the Treasury, in consultation with the
Secretary of State and the Attorney
General: (A) to be responsible for or
complicit in, or to have directly or
indirectly engaged in, serious human
rights abuse; (B) to be a current or
former government official, or a person
acting for or on behalf of such an
official, who is responsible for or
complicit in, or has directly or
indirectly engaged in: (1) corruption,
including the misappropriation of state
assets, the expropriation of private
assets for personal gain, corruption
related to government contracts or the
extraction of natural resources, or
bribery; or (2) the transfer or the
facilitation of the transfer of the
proceeds of corruption; (C) to be or have
been a leader or official of: (1) an entity,
including any government entity, that
has engaged in, or whose members have
engaged in, any of the activities
described in subsection 1(ii)(A), (B)(1),
or (B)(2) of E.O. 13818 relating to the
leader’s or official’s tenure; or (2) an
entity whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to this
order as a result of activities related to
the leader’s or official’s tenure; (D) to
have attempted to engage in any of the
activities described in subsection
1(ii)(A), (B)(1), or (B)(2) of E.O. 13818;
and (iii) any person determined by the
Secretary of the Treasury, in
consultation with the Secretary of State
and the Attorney General: (A) to have
materially assisted, sponsored, or
provided financial, material, or
technological support for, or goods or
services to or in support of: (1) any
activity described in subsection 1(ii)(A),
(B)(1), or (B)(2) of E.O. 13818 that is
conducted by a foreign person; (2) any
person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to E.O.
13818; or (3) any entity, including any
government entity, that has engaged in,
or whose members have engaged in, any
of the activities described in subsection
1(ii)(A), (B)(1), or (B)(2) of E.O. 13818,
where the activity is conducted by a
foreign person; (B) to be owned or
controlled by, or to have acted or
purported to act for or on behalf of,
directly or indirectly, any person whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to this order; or (C) to
have attempted to engage in any of the
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activities described in subsection
1(iii)(A) or (B) of E.O. 13818. The
property and interests in property that
are in the United States, that come
within the United States, or that are or
come within the possession or control of
any United States person, of the persons
described above may not be transferred,
paid, exported, withdrawn, or otherwise
dealt in.
Section 1(b) of E.O. 13818 provides
that the prohibitions in Section 1(a) of
E.O. 13818 apply except to the extent
provided by statutes, or in regulations,
orders, directives, or licenses that may
be issued pursuant to E.O. 13818, and
notwithstanding any contract entered
into or any license or permit granted
before the effective date of E.O. 13818.
In Section 3 of E.O. 13818, the
President determined that the making of
donations of the types of articles
specified in section 203(b)(2) of IEEPA
(50 U.S.C. 1702(b)(2)), by, to, or for the
benefit of any person whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to E.O. 13818 would seriously
impair the President’s ability to deal
with the national emergency declared in
E.O. 13818. The President therefore
prohibited the donation of such items
except to the extent provided by
statutes, or in regulations, rulings,
instructions, orders, directives, or
licenses that may be issued pursuant to
E.O. 13818.
Section 4 of E.O. 13818 provides that
the prohibition on any transaction or
dealing in blocked property or interests
in property includes the making of any
contribution or provision of funds,
goods, or services by, to, or for the
benefit of any person whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to E.O. 13818, and the receipt
of any contribution or provision of
funds, goods, or services from any such
person.
Section 5 of E.O. 13818 prohibits any
transaction that evades or avoids, has
the purpose of evading or avoiding,
causes a violation of, or attempts to
violate any of the prohibitions set forth
in E.O. 13818, as well as any conspiracy
formed to violate such prohibitions.
Section 8 of E.O. 13818 authorizes the
Secretary of the Treasury, in
consultation with the Secretary of State,
to take such actions, including adopting
rules and regulations, and to employ all
powers granted to the President by
IEEPA and the Global Magnitsky Act, as
may be necessary to implement E.O.
13818 and section 1263(a) of the Global
Magnitsky Act (22 U.S.C. 10102(a)).
Section 8 of E.O. 13818 also provides
that the Secretary of the Treasury may
redelegate any of these functions to
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other officers and agencies of the United
States.
Current Regulatory Action
To further implement the Global
Magnitsky Act and E.O. 13818, OFAC is
amending and reissuing the Regulations.
The Regulations implement targeted
sanctions that are directed at persons
determined to meet the criteria set forth
in § 583.201(a) of the Regulations, as
well as sanctions that may be set forth
in any further Executive orders issued
pursuant to the national emergency
declared in E.O. 13818. The sanctions in
E.O. 13818 do not generally prohibit
trade or the provision of banking or
other financial services to a certain
country. Instead, the sanctions in E.O.
13818 apply where the transaction or
service in question involves property or
interests in property that are blocked
pursuant to these authorities.
Subpart A of the Regulations clarifies
the relation of this part to other laws
and regulations. Subpart B of the
Regulations implements the
prohibitions contained in sections 1, 3,
4, and 5 of E.O. 13818, which
implement and build upon the
prohibitions set forth in the Global
Magnitsky Act, the prohibitions
contained in any further Executive
orders issued pursuant to the national
emergency declared in E.O. 13818.
Persons identified in the Annex to E.O.
13818, designated by or under the
authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury pursuant to E.O. 13818, or
otherwise blocked pursuant to E.O.
13818, as well as persons who are
blocked pursuant to any further
Executive orders issued pursuant to the
national emergency declared in E.O.
13818, are referred to throughout the
Regulations as ‘‘persons whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201.’’ The names of
persons designated or identified as
blocked pursuant to E.O. 13818, or any
further Executive orders issued
pursuant to the national emergency
declared therein, are published on
OFAC’s SDN List, which is accessible
via OFAC’s website. Those names also
are published in the Federal Register as
they are added to the SDN List.
Sections 583.202 and 583.203 of
subpart B detail the effect of transfers of
blocked property in violation of the
Regulations and set forth the
requirement to hold blocked funds, such
as currency, bank deposits, or liquidated
financial obligations, in interest-bearing
blocked accounts. Section 583.204 of
subpart B provides that all expenses
incident to the maintenance of blocked
tangible property shall be the
responsibility of the owners and
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operators of such property, and that
such expenses shall not be met from
blocked funds, unless otherwise
authorized. The section further provides
that blocked property may, in OFAC’s
discretion, be sold or liquidated and the
net proceeds placed in a blocked
interest-bearing account in the name of
the owner of the property.
Section 583.205 of subpart B prohibits
any transaction that evades or avoids,
has the purpose of evading or avoiding,
causes a violation of, or attempts to
violate any of the prohibitions set forth
in section 583.201 of the Regulations,
and any conspiracy formed to violate
such prohibitions.
Section 583.206 of subpart B details
transactions that are exempt from the
prohibitions of the Regulations pursuant
to section 203(b) of IEEPA (50 U.S.C.
1702(b)).
In subpart D, which contains
interpretive sections regarding the
Regulations, certain provisions have
been renumbered and others added to
those in the prior abbreviated set of
regulations. Section 583.411 of subpart
D explains that the property and
interests in property of an entity are
blocked if the entity is directly or
indirectly owned, whether individually
or in the aggregate, 50 percent or more
by one or more persons whose property
and interests in property are blocked,
whether or not the entity itself is
incorporated into OFAC’s SDN List.
Transactions otherwise prohibited by
the Regulations but found to be
consistent with U.S. policy may be
authorized by one of the general
licenses contained in or issued pursuant
to subpart E of the Regulations or by a
specific license issued pursuant to the
procedures described in subpart E of 31
CFR part 501. General licenses and
statements of licensing policy relating to
this part also may be available through
the Global Magnitsky sanctions page on
OFAC’s website: www.treas.gov/ofac.
Subpart F of the Regulations refers to
subpart C of part 501 for recordkeeping
and reporting requirements. Subpart G
of the Regulations describes the civil
and criminal penalties applicable to
violations of the Regulations, as well as
the procedures governing the potential
imposition of a civil monetary penalty
or issuance of a Finding of Violation.
Subpart G also refers to appendix A of
part 501 for a more complete
description of these procedures.
Subpart H of the Regulations refers to
subpart E of part 501 for applicable
provisions relating to administrative
procedures and contains a delegation of
certain authorities of the Secretary of
the Treasury. Subpart I of the
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Regulations sets forth a Paperwork
Reduction Act notice.
Public Participation
Because the Regulations involve a
foreign affairs function, the provisions
of E.O. 12866 of September 30, 1993,
‘‘Regulatory Planning and Review’’ (58
FR 51735, October 4, 1993), as
amended, and the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) requiring
notice of proposed rulemaking,
opportunity for public participation,
and delay in effective date are
inapplicable. Because no notice of
proposed rulemaking is required for this
rule, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601–612) does not apply.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collections of information related
to the Regulations are contained in 31
CFR part 501 (the ‘‘Reporting,
Procedures and Penalties Regulations’’).
Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507), those
collections of information have been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget under control number 1505–
0164. An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a valid control number.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 583
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Blocking of
assets, Corruption, Credit, Foreign trade,
Global Magnitsky, Human rights,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sanctions, Securities,
Services.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, OFAC revises 31 CFR part
583 to read as follows:
PART 583—GLOBAL MAGNITSKY
SANCTIONS REGULATIONS
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Subpart A—Relation of This Part to Other
Laws and Regulations
Sec.
583.101 Relation of this part to other laws
and regulations.
583.102 Records and Reports.
583.103 Procedures.
583.104 Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
583.105 [Reserved]
583.106 Delegation of certain authorities of
the Secretary of the Treasury.
Subpart B—Prohibitions
583.201 Prohibited transactions.
583.202 Effect of transfers violating the
provisions of this part.
583.203 Holding of funds in interestbearing accounts; investment and
reinvestment.
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583.204 Expenses of maintaining blocked
tangible property; liquidation of blocked
property.
583.205 Evasions; attempts; causing
violations; conspiracies.
583.206 Exempt transactions.
Subpart C—General Definitions
583.300 Applicability of definitions.
583.301 Blocked account; blocked property.
583.302 Effective date.
583.303 Entity.
583.304 Financial, material, or
technological support.
583.305 Foreign person.
583.306 [Reserved]
583.307 Interest.
583.308 Licenses; general and specific.
583.309 OFAC.
583.310 Person.
583.311 Property; property interest.
583.312 Transfer.
583.313 United States.
583.314 United States person; U.S. person.
583.315 U.S. financial institution.
Subpart D—Interpretations
583.401 Reference to amended sections.
583.402 Effect of amendment.
583.403 Termination and acquisition of an
interest in blocked property.
583.404 Transactions ordinarily incident to
a licensed transaction.
583.405 Provision and receipt of services.
583.406 Offshore transactions involving
blocked property.
583.407 Payments from blocked accounts to
satisfy obligations prohibited.
583.408 Charitable contributions.
583.409 Credit extended and cards issued
by financial institutions to a person
whose property and interests in property
are blocked.
583.410 Setoffs prohibited.
583.411 Entities owned by one or more
persons whose property and interests in
property are blocked.
583.412 Entities of which one or more
blocked persons is a member, leader,
official, senior executive officer, or
otherwise exercises control.
Subpart E—Licenses, Authorizations, and
Statements of Licensing Policy
583.501 General and specific licensing
procedures.
583.502 Effect of license or other
authorization.
583.503 Exclusion from licenses.
583.504 Payments and transfers to blocked
accounts in U.S. financial institutions.
583.505 Entries in certain accounts for
normal service charges.
583.506 Investment and reinvestment of
certain funds.
583.507 Provision of certain legal services.
583.508 Payments for legal services from
funds originating outside the United
States.
583.509 Emergency medical services.
583.510 Official business of the United
States government.
583.511 Official business of certain
international organizations and entities.
583.512 Certain transactions in support of
nongovernmental organizations’
activities.
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583.513 Transactions related to the
provision of agricultural commodities,
medicine, medical devices, replacement
parts and components, or software
updates for personal, non-commercial
use.
Subpart F—[Reserved]
Subpart G—Penalties and Findings of
Violation
583.701 Penalties.
583.702 Pre-Penalty Notice; settlement.
583.703 Penalty imposition.
583.704 Administrative collection; referral
to United States Department of Justice.
583.705 Findings of Violation.
Authority: 3 U.S.C. 301; 22 U.S.C. 10101–
10103; 31 U.S.C. 321(b); 50 U.S.C. 1601–
1651, 1701–1706; Pub. L. 101–410, 104 Stat.
890, as amended (28 U.S.C. 2461 note); Pub.
L. 116–145, 134 Stat. 651, as amended (22
U.S.C. 6901 note); Pub. L. 117–78, 135 Stat.
1531 (22 U.S.C. 6901 note); E.O. 13818, 82 FR
60839, 3 CFR, 2017 Comp. p. 399.
Subpart A—Relation of This Part to
Other Laws and Regulations
§ 583.101 Relation of this part to other
laws and regulations.
This part is separate from, and
independent of, the other parts of this
chapter, with the exception of part 501
of this chapter, the recordkeeping and
reporting requirements and license
application and other procedures of
which apply to this part. Actions taken
pursuant to part 501 of this chapter with
respect to the prohibitions contained in
this part are considered actions taken
pursuant to this part. Differing foreign
policy and national security
circumstances may result in differing
interpretations of similar language
among the parts of this chapter. No
license or authorization contained in or
issued pursuant to those other parts
authorizes any transaction prohibited by
this part. No license or authorization
contained in or issued pursuant to any
other provision of law or regulation
authorizes any transaction prohibited by
this part. No license or authorization
contained in or issued pursuant to this
part relieves the involved parties from
complying with any other applicable
laws or regulations.
§ 583.102
Records and reports.
For provisions relating to required
records and reports, see part 501,
subpart C, of this chapter.
Recordkeeping and reporting
requirements imposed by part 501 of
this chapter with respect to the
prohibitions contained in this part are
considered requirements arising
pursuant to this part.
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583.103 Procedures.
For license application procedures
and procedures relating to amendments,
modifications, or revocations of
licenses; administrative decisions;
rulemaking; and requests for documents
pursuant to the Freedom of Information
and Privacy Acts (5 U.S.C. 552 and
552a), see part 501, subpart E, of this
chapter.
§ 583.104
Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
For approval by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3507) of information
collections relating to recordkeeping
and reporting requirements, licensing
procedures, and other procedures, see
§ 501.901 of this chapter. An agency
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless it
displays a valid control number
assigned by OMB.
§ 583.105
[Reserved]
§ 583.106 Delegation of certain authorities
of the Secretary of the Treasury.
Any action that the Secretary of the
Treasury is authorized to take pursuant
to E.O. 13818, any further Executive
orders relating to the national
emergency declared therein, or
Presidential Memorandum of December
7, 2023: Delegation of Certain Functions
and Authorities Under the Uyghur
Human Rights Policy Act of 2020 and
Public Law 117–78, may be taken by the
Director of OFAC or by any other person
to whom the Secretary of the Treasury
has delegated authority to so act.
Subpart B—Prohibitions
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§ 583.201
Prohibited transactions.
(a) All property and interests in
property that are in the United States,
that come within the United States, or
that are or come within the possession
or control of any U.S. person of the
following persons are blocked and may
not be transferred, paid, exported,
withdrawn, or otherwise dealt in:
(1) Executive Order (E.O.) 13818
Annex. The persons listed in the Annex
to E.O. 13818 of December 20, 2017.
(2) E.O. 13818. Any foreign person
determined by the Secretary of the
Treasury, in consultation with the
Secretary of State and the Attorney
General:
(i) To be responsible for or complicit
in, or to have directly or indirectly
engaged in, serious human rights abuse;
(ii) To be a current or former
government official, or a person acting
for or on behalf of such an official, who
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is responsible for or complicit in, or has
directly or indirectly engaged in:
(A) Corruption, including the
misappropriation of state assets, the
expropriation of private assets for
personal gain, corruption related to
government contracts or the extraction
of natural resources, or bribery; or
(B) The transfer or the facilitation of
the transfer of the proceeds of
corruption;
(iii) To be or have been a leader or
official of:
(A) An entity, including any
government entity, that has engaged in,
or whose members have engaged in, any
of the activities described in paragraph
(a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), or (a)(2)(ii)(B) of
this section relating to the leader’s or
official’s tenure; or
(B) An entity whose property and
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to this order as a result of
activities related to the leader’s or
official’s tenure;
(iv) To have attempted to engage in
any of the activities described in
paragraph (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), or
(a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section; and
(v) To have materially assisted,
sponsored, or provided financial,
material, or technological support for, or
goods or services to or in support of:
(A) Any activity described in
paragraph (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), or
(a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section that is
conducted by a foreign person;
(B) Any person whose property and
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section;
or
(C) Any entity, including any
government entity, that has engaged in,
or whose members have engaged in, any
of the activities described in paragraph
(a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), or (a)(2)(ii)(B) of
this section, where the activity is
conducted by a foreign person;
(vi) To be owned or controlled by, or
to have acted or purported to act for or
on behalf of, directly or indirectly, any
person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section; or
(vii) To have attempted to engage in
any of the activities described in
paragraph (a)(2)(v) or (a)(2)(vi) of this
section.
(b) The prohibitions in paragraph (a)
of this section include prohibitions on
the following transactions:
(1) The making of any contribution or
provision of funds, goods, or services
by, to, or for the benefit of any person
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section; and
(2) The receipt of any contribution or
provision of funds, goods, or services
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from any person whose property and
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Unless authorized by this part or
by a specific license expressly referring
to this part, any dealing in securities (or
evidence thereof) held within the
possession or control of a U.S. person
and either registered or inscribed in the
name of, or known to be held for the
benefit of, or issued by, any person
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section is
prohibited. This prohibition includes
the transfer (including the transfer on
the books of any issuer or agent thereof),
disposition, transportation, importation,
exportation, or withdrawal of, or the
endorsement or guaranty of signatures
on, any securities on or after the
effective date. This prohibition applies
irrespective of the fact that at any time
(whether prior to, on, or subsequent to
the effective date) the registered or
inscribed owner of any such securities
may have or might appear to have
assigned, transferred, or otherwise
disposed of the securities.
(d) The prohibitions in paragraph (a)
of this section apply except to the extent
provided by statutes, or in regulations,
rulings, instructions, orders, directives,
or licenses that may be issued pursuant
to this part, and notwithstanding any
contract entered into or any license or
permit granted prior to the effective
date.
(e) All transactions prohibited
pursuant to any Executive order issued
after December 20, 2017 pursuant to the
national emergency declared in E.O.
13818 of December 20, 2017 are
prohibited pursuant to this part.
Note 1 to § 583.201. The names of persons
designated or identified as blocked pursuant
to E.O. 13818, or any further Executive orders
issued pursuant to the national emergency
declared therein, whose property and
interests in property therefore are blocked
pursuant to this section, are published in the
Federal Register and incorporated into
OFAC’s Specially Designated Nationals and
Blocked Persons List (SDN List) using the
following identifiers: for E.O. 13818:
‘‘[GLOMAG]’’; and for any further Executive
orders issued pursuant to the national
emergency declared in E.O. 13818: using the
identifier formulation ‘‘[GLOMAG–E.O. [E.O.
number pursuant to which the person’s
property and interests in property are
blocked]]’’. The SDN List is accessible
through the following page on OFAC’s
website: www.treas.gov/sdn. Additional
information pertaining to the SDN List can be
found in appendix A to this chapter. See
§ 583.411 concerning entities that may not be
listed on the SDN List but whose property
and interests in property are nevertheless
blocked pursuant to this section.
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Note 2 to § 583.201. The International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C.
1701 et seq.), in section 203 (50 U.S.C. 1702)
authorizes the blocking of property and
interests in property of a person during the
pendency of an investigation. The names of
persons whose property and interests in
property are blocked pending investigation
pursuant to this section also are published in
the Federal Register and incorporated into
the SDN List using the following identifiers:
for E.O. 13818: ‘‘[BPI–GLOMAG]’’; for any
further Executive orders issued pursuant to
the national emergency declared in E.O.
13818: using the identifier formulation
‘‘[BPI–GLOMAG–E.O. [E.O. number pursuant
to which the person’s property and interests
in property are blocked pending
investigation]].’’
Note 3 to § 583.201. Sections 501.806 and
501.807 of this chapter describe the
procedures to be followed by persons
seeking, respectively, the unblocking of
funds that they believe were blocked due to
mistaken identity, or administrative
reconsideration of their status as persons
whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to this section.
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§ 583.202 Effect of transfers violating the
provisions of this part.
(a) Any transfer after the effective date
that is in violation of any provision of
this part or of any regulation, ruling,
instruction, order, directive, or license
issued pursuant to this part, and that
involves any property or interest in
property blocked pursuant to § 583.201,
is null and void and shall not be the
basis for the assertion or recognition of
any interest in or right, remedy, power,
or privilege with respect to such
property or interest in property.
(b) No transfer before the effective
date shall be the basis for the assertion
or recognition of any right, remedy,
power, or privilege with respect to, or
any interest in, any property or interest
in property blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201, unless the person who holds
or maintains such property, prior to that
date, had written notice of the transfer
or by any written evidence had
recognized such transfer.
(c) Unless otherwise provided, a
license or other authorization issued by
OFAC before, during, or after a transfer
shall validate such transfer or make it
enforceable to the same extent that it
would be valid or enforceable but for
the provisions of this part and any
regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, or license issued pursuant to
this part.
(d) Transfers of property that
otherwise would be null and void or
unenforceable by virtue of the
provisions of this section shall not be
deemed to be null and void or
unenforceable as to any person with
whom such property is or was held or
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maintained (and as to such person only)
in cases in which such person is able to
establish to the satisfaction of OFAC
each of the following:
(1) Such transfer did not represent a
willful violation of the provisions of this
part by the person with whom such
property is or was held or maintained
(and as to such person only);
(2) The person with whom such
property is or was held or maintained
did not have reasonable cause to know
or suspect, in view of all the facts and
circumstances known or available to
such person, that such transfer required
a license or authorization issued
pursuant to this part and was not so
licensed or authorized, or, if a license or
authorization did purport to cover the
transfer, that such license or
authorization had been obtained by
misrepresentation of a third party or
withholding of material facts or was
otherwise fraudulently obtained; and
(3) The person with whom such
property is or was held or maintained
filed with OFAC a report setting forth in
full the circumstances relating to such
transfer promptly upon discovery that:
(i) Such transfer was in violation of
the provisions of this part or any
regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, license, or other authorization
issued pursuant to this part;
(ii) Such transfer was not licensed or
authorized by OFAC; or
(iii) If a license did purport to cover
the transfer, such license had been
obtained by misrepresentation of a third
party or withholding of material facts or
was otherwise fraudulently obtained.
(e) The filing of a report in accordance
with the provisions of paragraph (d)(3)
of this section shall not be deemed
evidence that the terms of paragraphs
(d)(1) and (2) of this section have been
satisfied.
(f) Unless licensed pursuant to this
part, any attachment, judgment, decree,
lien, execution, garnishment, or other
judicial process is null and void with
respect to any property or interest in
property blocked pursuant to § 583.201.
§ 583.203 Holding of funds in interestbearing accounts; investment and
reinvestment.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(e) or (f) of this section, or as otherwise
directed or authorized by OFAC, any
U.S. person holding funds, such as
currency, bank deposits, or liquidated
financial obligations, subject to
§ 583.201 shall hold or place such funds
in a blocked interest-bearing account
located in the United States.
(b)(1) For the purposes of this section,
the term blocked interest-bearing
account means a blocked account:
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(i) In a federally insured U.S. bank,
thrift institution, or credit union,
provided the funds are earning interest
at rates that are commercially
reasonable; or
(ii) With a broker or dealer registered
with the Securities and Exchange
Commission under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et
seq.), provided the funds are invested in
a money market fund or in U.S.
Treasury bills.
(2) Funds held or placed in a blocked
account pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section may not be invested in
instruments the maturity of which
exceeds 180 days.
(c) For the purposes of this section, a
rate is commercially reasonable if it is
the rate currently offered to other
depositors on deposits or instruments of
comparable size and maturity.
(d) For the purposes of this section, if
interest is credited to a separate blocked
account or subaccount, the name of the
account party on each account must be
the same.
(e) Blocked funds held in instruments
the maturity of which exceeds 180 days
at the time the funds become subject to
§ 583.201 may continue to be held until
maturity in the original instrument,
provided any interest, earnings, or other
proceeds derived therefrom are paid
into a blocked interest-bearing account
in accordance with paragraph (a) or (f)
of this section.
(f) Blocked funds held in accounts or
instruments outside the United States at
the time the funds become subject to
§ 583.201 may continue to be held in the
same type of accounts or instruments,
provided the funds earn interest at rates
that are commercially reasonable.
(g) This section does not create an
affirmative obligation for the holder of
blocked tangible property, such as real
or personal property, or of other blocked
property, such as debt or equity
securities, to sell or liquidate such
property. However, OFAC may issue
licenses permitting or directing such
sales or liquidation in appropriate cases.
(h) Funds blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201 may not be held, invested, or
reinvested in a manner that provides
financial or economic benefit or access
to any person whose property and
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201, nor may their
holder cooperate in or facilitate the
pledging or other attempted use as
collateral of blocked funds or other
assets.
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or more by one or more persons whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to § 583.201.
§ 583.204 Expenses of maintaining
blocked tangible property; liquidation of
blocked property.
(a) Except as otherwise authorized,
and notwithstanding the existence of
any rights or obligations conferred or
imposed by any international agreement
or contract entered into or any license
or permit granted prior to the effective
date, all expenses incident to the
maintenance of tangible property
blocked pursuant to § 583.201 shall be
the responsibility of the owners or
operators of such property, which
expenses shall not be met from blocked
funds.
(b) Property blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201 may, in the discretion of
OFAC, be sold or liquidated and the net
proceeds placed in a blocked interestbearing account in the name of the
owner of the property.
§ 583.205 Evasions; attempts; causing
violations; conspiracies.
(a) Any transaction on or after the
effective date that evades or avoids, has
the purpose of evading or avoiding,
causes a violation of, or attempts to
violate any of the prohibitions set forth
in this part is prohibited.
(b) Any conspiracy formed to violate
the prohibitions set forth in this part is
prohibited.
§ 583.206
Exempt transactions.
The prohibitions contained in this
part do not apply to any transactions
that are exempt pursuant to section
203(b) of the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C.
1702(b)).
Subpart C—General Definitions
§ 583.300
Applicability of definitions.
The definitions in this subpart apply
throughout the entire part.
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§ 583.301
property.
Blocked account; blocked
The terms blocked account and
blocked property mean any account or
property subject to the prohibitions in
§ 583.201 held in the name of a person
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201, or in which such person has
an interest, and with respect to which
payments, transfers, exportations,
withdrawals, or other dealings may not
be made or effected except pursuant to
a license or other authorization from
OFAC expressly authorizing such
action.
Note 1 to § 583.301. See § 583.411
concerning the blocked status of property
and interests in property of an entity that is
directly or indirectly owned, whether
individually or in the aggregate, 50 percent
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§ 583.302
Effective date.
(a) The term effective date refers to
the effective date of the applicable
prohibitions and directives contained in
this part as follows:
(1) With respect to a person whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to § 583.201(a)(1),
12:01 a.m. eastern standard time on
December 21, 2017; and
(2) With respect to a person whose
property and interests in property are
otherwise blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201, the earlier of the date of
actual or constructive notice that such
person’s property and interests in
property are blocked.
(b) For the purposes of this section,
constructive notice is the date that a
notice of the blocking of the relevant
person’s property and interests in
property is published in the Federal
Register.
§ 583.303
Entity.
§ 583.306
[Reserved]
§ 583.307
Interest.
Except as otherwise provided in this
part, the term interest, when used with
respect to property (e.g., ‘‘an interest in
property’’), means an interest of any
nature whatsoever, direct or indirect.
§ 583.308
Licenses; general and specific.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in
this part, the term license means any
license or authorization contained in or
issued pursuant to this part.
(b) The term general license means
any license or authorization the terms of
which are set forth in subpart E of this
part or made available on OFAC’s
website: https://ofac.treasury.gov.
(c) The term specific license means
any license or authorization issued
pursuant to this part but not set forth in
subpart E of this part or made available
on OFAC’s website: https://ofac.
treasury.gov.
Note 1 to § 583.308. See § 501.801 of this
chapter on licensing procedures.
§ 583.309
OFAC.
The term entity means a partnership,
association, trust, joint venture,
corporation, group, subgroup, or other
organization.
The term OFAC means the
Department of the Treasury’s Office of
Foreign Assets Control.
§ 583.304 Financial, material, or
technological support.
The term person means an individual
or entity.
The term financial, material, or
technological support means any
property, tangible or intangible,
including currency, financial
instruments, securities, or any other
transmission of value; weapons or
related materiel; chemical or biological
agents; explosives; false documentation
or identification; communications
equipment; computers; electronic or
other devices or equipment;
technologies; lodging; safe houses;
facilities; vehicles or other means of
transportation; or goods.
‘‘Technologies’’ as used in this section
means specific information necessary
for the development, production, or use
of a product, including related technical
data such as blueprints, plans, diagrams,
models, formulae, tables, engineering
designs and specifications, manuals, or
other recorded instructions.
§ 583.305
Foreign person.
The term foreign person means any
citizen or national of a foreign state
(including any such individual who is
also a citizen or national of the United
States), or any entity not organized
solely under the laws of the United
States or existing solely in the United
States, but does not include a foreign
state.
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§ 583.310
§ 583.311
Person.
Property; property interest.
The terms property and property
interest include money, checks, drafts,
bullion, bank deposits, savings
accounts, debts, indebtedness,
obligations, notes, guarantees,
debentures, stocks, bonds, coupons, any
other financial instruments, bankers
acceptances, mortgages, pledges, liens
or other rights in the nature of security,
warehouse receipts, bills of lading, trust
receipts, bills of sale, any other
evidences of title, ownership, or
indebtedness, letters of credit and any
documents relating to any rights or
obligations thereunder, powers of
attorney, goods, wares, merchandise,
chattels, stocks on hand, ships, goods on
ships, real estate mortgages, deeds of
trust, vendors’ sales agreements, land
contracts, leaseholds, ground rents, real
estate and any other interest therein,
options, negotiable instruments, trade
acceptances, royalties, book accounts,
accounts payable, judgments, patents,
trademarks or copyrights, insurance
policies, safe deposit boxes and their
contents, annuities, pooling agreements,
services of any nature whatsoever,
contracts of any nature whatsoever, and
any other property, real, personal, or
mixed, tangible or intangible, or interest
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or interests therein, present, future, or
contingent.
§ 583.312
Transfer.
The term transfer means any actual or
purported act or transaction, whether or
not evidenced by writing, and whether
or not done or performed within the
United States, the purpose, intent, or
effect of which is to create, surrender,
release, convey, transfer, or alter,
directly or indirectly, any right, remedy,
power, privilege, or interest with respect
to any property. Without limitation on
the foregoing, it shall include the
making, execution, or delivery of any
assignment, power, conveyance, check,
declaration, deed, deed of trust, power
of attorney, power of appointment, bill
of sale, mortgage, receipt, agreement,
contract, certificate, gift, sale, affidavit,
or statement; the making of any
payment; the setting off of any
obligation or credit; the appointment of
any agent, trustee, or fiduciary; the
creation or transfer of any lien; the
issuance, docketing, filing, or levy of or
under any judgment, decree,
attachment, injunction, execution, or
other judicial or administrative process
or order, or the service of any
garnishment; the acquisition of any
interest of any nature whatsoever by
reason of a judgment or decree of any
foreign country; the fulfillment of any
condition; the exercise of any power of
appointment, power of attorney, or
other power; or the acquisition,
disposition, transportation, importation,
exportation, or withdrawal of any
security.
§ 583.313
United States.
The term United States means the
United States, its territories and
possessions, and all areas under the
jurisdiction or authority thereof.
§ 583.314
person.
United States person; U.S.
The term United States person or U.S.
person means any United States citizen,
lawful permanent resident, entity
organized under the laws of the United
States or any jurisdiction within the
United States (including foreign
branches), or any person in the United
States.
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§ 583.315
U.S. financial institution.
The term U.S. financial institution
means any U.S. entity (including its
foreign branches) that is engaged in the
business of accepting deposits, making,
granting, transferring, holding, or
brokering loans or credits, purchasing or
selling foreign exchange, securities,
futures or options, or procuring
purchasers and sellers thereof, as
principal or agent. It includes
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depository institutions, banks, savings
banks, money services businesses,
operators of credit card systems, trust
companies, insurance companies,
securities brokers and dealers, futures
and options brokers and dealers,
forward contract and foreign exchange
merchants, securities and commodities
exchanges, clearing corporations,
investment companies, employee
benefit plans, dealers in precious
metals, stones, or jewels, and U.S.
holding companies, U.S. affiliates, or
U.S. subsidiaries of any of the foregoing.
This term includes those branches,
offices, and agencies of foreign financial
institutions that are located in the
United States, but not such institutions’
foreign branches, offices, or agencies.
Subpart D—Interpretations
§ 583.401
Reference to amended sections.
(a) Reference to any section in this
part is a reference to the same as
currently amended, unless the reference
includes a specific date. See 44 U.S.C.
1510.
(b) Reference to any regulation, ruling,
instruction, order, directive, or license
issued pursuant to this part is a
reference to the same as currently
amended unless otherwise so specified.
§ 583.402
Effect of amendment.
Unless otherwise specifically
provided, any amendment,
modification, or revocation of any
provision in or appendix to this part or
chapter or of any regulation, ruling,
insruction, order, directive, or license
issued by OFAC does not affect any act
done or omitted, or any civil or criminal
proceeding commenced or pending,
prior to such amendment, modification,
or revocation. All penalties, forfeitures,
and liabilities under any such
regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, or license continue and may
be enforced as if such amendment,
modification, or revocation had not
been made.
§ 583.403 Termination and acquisition of
an interest in blocked property.
(a) Whenever a transaction licensed or
authorized by or pursuant to this part
results in the transfer of property
(including any property interest) away
from a person whose property and
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201, such property
shall no longer be deemed to be
property blocked pursuant to § 583.201,
unless there exists in the property
another interest that is blocked pursuant
to § 583.201, the transfer of which has
not been effected pursuant to license or
other authorization.
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(b) Unless otherwise specifically
provided in a license or authorization
issued pursuant to this part, if property
(including any property interest) is
transferred or attempted to be
transferred to a person whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201, such property
shall be deemed to be property in which
such person has an interest and
therefore blocked.
§ 583.404 Transactions ordinarily incident
to a licensed transaction.
(a) Any transaction ordinarily
incident to a licensed transaction and
necessary to give effect thereto is also
authorized, except:
(1) An ordinarily incident transaction,
not explicitly authorized within the
terms of the license, by or with a person
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201; or
(2) An ordinarily incident transaction,
not explicitly authorized within the
terms of the license, involving a debit to
a blocked account or a transfer of
blocked property.
(b) For example, a license authorizing
a person to complete a securities sale
involving Company A, whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201, also authorizes
other persons to engage in activities that
are ordinarily incident and necessary to
complete the sale, including
transactions by the buyer, broker,
transfer agents, and banks, provided that
such other persons are not themselves
persons whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201.
§ 583.405
services.
Provision and receipt of
(a) The prohibitions contained in
§ 583.201 apply to services performed in
the United States or by U.S. persons,
wherever located:
(1) On behalf of or for the benefit of
any person whose property and interests
in property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201; or
(2) With respect to property interests
of any person whose property and
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201.
(b) The prohibitions on transactions
contained in § 583.201 apply to services
received in the United States or by U.S.
persons, wherever located, where the
service is performed by, or at the
direction of, a person whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201.
(c) For example, U.S. persons may
not, except as authorized by or pursuant
to this part, provide legal, accounting,
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financial, brokering, freight forwarding,
transportation, public relations, or other
services to any person whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201, or negotiate with
or enter into contracts signed by a
person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201.
Note 1 to § 583.405. See §§ 583.507 and
583.509 for general licenses authorizing the
provision of certain legal and emergency
medical services.
§ 583.406 Offshore transactions involving
blocked property.
The prohibitions in § 583.201 on
transactions or dealings involving
blocked property, as defined in
§ 583.301, apply to transactions by any
U.S. person in a location outside the
United States.
§ 583.407 Payments from blocked
accounts to satisfy obligations prohibited.
Pursuant to § 583.201, no debits may
be made to a blocked account to pay
obligations to U.S. persons or other
persons, except as authorized by or
pursuant to this part.
Note 1 to § 583.407. See also § 583.502(e),
which provides that no license or other
authorization contained in or issued
pursuant to this part authorizes transfers of
or payments from blocked property or debits
to blocked accounts unless the license or
other authorization explicitly authorizes the
transfer of or payment from blocked property
or the debit to a blocked account.
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§ 583.408
Charitable contributions.
Unless specifically authorized by
OFAC pursuant to this part, no
charitable contribution of funds, goods,
services, or technology, including
contributions to relieve human
suffering, such as food, clothing, or
medicine, may be made by, to, or for the
benefit of, or received from, a person
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201. For the purposes of this part,
a contribution is made by, to, or for the
benefit of, or received from a person
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201 if made by, to, or in the name
of, or received from or in the name of,
such a person; if made by, to, or in the
name of, or received from or in the
name of, an entity or individual acting
for or on behalf of, or owned or
controlled by, such a person; or if made
in an attempt to violate, to evade, or to
avoid the bar on the provision of
contributions by, to, or for the benefit of
such a person, or the receipt of
contributions from such a person.
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§ 583.409 Credit extended and cards
issued by financial institutions to a person
whose property and interests in property
are blocked.
The prohibition in § 583.201 on
dealing in property subject to that
section prohibits U.S. financial
institutions from performing under any
existing credit agreements, including
charge cards, debit cards, or other credit
facilities issued by a financial
institution to a person whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201.
§ 583.410
Setoffs prohibited.
A setoff against blocked property
(including a blocked account), whether
by a U.S. financial institution or other
U.S. person, is a prohibited transfer
under § 583.201 if effected after the
effective date.
§ 583.411 Entities owned by one or more
persons whose property and interests in
property are blocked.
Persons whose property and interests
in property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201 have an interest in all
property and interests in property of an
entity in which such persons directly or
indirectly own, whether individually or
in the aggregate, a 50 percent or greater
interest. The property and interests in
property of such an entity, therefore, are
blocked, and such an entity is a person
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201, regardless of whether the
name of the entity is incorporated into
OFAC’s Specially Designated Nationals
and Blocked Persons List (SDN List).
§ 583.412 Entities of which one or more
blocked persons is a member, leader,
official, senior executive officer, or
otherwise exercises control.
(a) The property and interests in
property of an entity, including any
political subdivision, agency, or
instrumentality of a governmental
entity, are not blocked solely because
one or more persons whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201 is a member,
leader, official, senior executive officer,
or otherwise exercises control.
Note 1 to paragraph (a). See § 583.411
concerning the blocked status of property
and interests in property of an entity that is
directly or indirectly owned, whether
individually or in the aggregate, 50 percent
or more by one or more persons whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to § 583.201.
(b) For example, U.S. persons may not,
except as authorized or exempt pursuant to
this part, engage in the following transactions
with a person whose property and interests
in property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201: enter into contracts that are signed
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by a blocked person, enter into negotiations
with a blocked person, or process
transactions, directly or indirectly, on behalf
of a person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to § 583.201.
However, U.S. persons are not prohibited
from engaging in a routine interaction with
an agency in which a blocked person is an
official, but which does not involve the
blocked person directly or indirectly.
Note 2 to § 583.412. OFAC encourages U.S.
persons to be cautious in engaging in
transactions with any entity of which a
person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to § 583.201 is
a member, leader, official, senior executive
officer, or otherwise exercises control to
ensure that U.S. persons are not engaged in
transactions, directly or indirectly, with a
blocked person, except as authorized or
exempt pursuant to this part.
Subpart E—Licenses, Authorizations,
and Statements of Licensing Policy
§ 583.501 General and specific licensing
procedures.
For provisions relating to licensing
procedures, see part 501, subpart E, of
this chapter. Licensing actions taken
pursuant to part 501 of this chapter with
respect to the prohibitions contained in
this part are considered actions taken
pursuant to this part. General licenses
and statements of licensing policy
relating to this part also may be
available through the Global Magnitsky
sanctions page on OFAC’s website:
www.treas.gov/ofac.
§ 583.502 Effect of license or other
authorization.
(a) No license or other authorization
contained in this part, or otherwise
issued by OFAC, authorizes or validates
any transaction effected prior to the
issuance of such license or other
authorization, unless specifically
provided in such license or
authorization.
(b) No regulation, ruling, instruction,
order, directive, or license authorizes
any transaction prohibited under this
part unless the regulation, ruling,
instruction, order, directive, or license
is issued by OFAC and specifically
refers to this part. No regulation, ruling,
instruction, order, directive, or license
referring to this part shall be deemed to
authorize any transaction prohibited by
any other part of this chapter unless the
regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, or license specifically refers to
such part.
(c) Any regulation, ruling, instruction,
order, directive, or license authorizing
any transaction prohibited under this
part has the effect of removing a
prohibition contained in this part from
the transaction, but only to the extent
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specifically stated by its terms. Unless
the regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, or license otherwise specifies,
such an authorization does not create
any right, duty, obligation, claim, or
interest in, or with respect to, any
property that would not otherwise exist
under ordinary principles of law.
(d) Nothing contained in this part
shall be construed to supersede the
requirements established under any
other provision of law or to relieve a
person from any requirement to obtain
a license or other authorization from
another department or agency of the
U.S. government in compliance with
applicable laws and regulations subject
to the jurisdiction of that department or
agency. For example, exports of goods,
services, or technical data that are not
prohibited by this part or that do not
require a license by OFAC nevertheless
may require authorization by the U.S.
Department of Commerce, the U.S.
Department of State, or other agencies of
the U.S. government.
(e) No license or other authorization
contained in or issued pursuant to this
part authorizes transfers of or payments
from blocked property or debits to
blocked accounts unless the license or
other authorization explicitly authorizes
the transfer of or payment from blocked
property or the debit to a blocked
account.
(f) Any payment relating to a
transaction authorized in or pursuant to
this part that is routed through the U.S.
financial system should reference the
relevant OFAC general or specific
license authorizing the payment to
avoid the blocking or rejection of the
transfer.
§ 583.503
Exclusion from licenses.
OFAC reserves the right to exclude
any person, property, transaction, or
class thereof from the operation of any
license or from the privileges conferred
by any license. OFAC also reserves the
right to restrict the applicability of any
license to particular persons, property,
transactions, or classes thereof. Such
actions are binding upon actual or
constructive notice of the exclusions or
restrictions.
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§ 583.504 Payments and transfers to
blocked accounts in U.S. financial
institutions.
Any payment of funds or transfer of
credit in which a person whose property
and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to § 583.201 has any interest
that comes within the possession or
control of a U.S. financial institution
must be blocked in an account on the
books of that financial institution. A
transfer of funds or credit by a U.S.
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financial institution between blocked
accounts in its branches or offices is
authorized, provided that no transfer is
made from an account within the
United States to an account held outside
the United States, and further provided
that a transfer from a blocked account
may be made only to another blocked
account held in the same name.
Note 1 to § 583.504. See § 501.603 of this
chapter for mandatory reporting
requirements regarding financial transfers.
See also § 583.203 concerning the obligation
to hold blocked funds in interest-bearing
accounts.
§ 583.505 Entries in certain accounts for
normal service charges.
(a) A U.S. financial institution is
authorized to debit any blocked account
held at that financial institution in
payment or reimbursement for normal
service charges owed it by the owner of
that blocked account.
(b) As used in this section, the term
normal service charges shall include
charges in payment or reimbursement
for interest due; cable, telegraph,
internet, or telephone charges; postage
costs; custody fees; small adjustment
charges to correct bookkeeping errors;
and, but not by way of limitation,
minimum balance charges, notary and
protest fees, and charges for reference
books, photocopies, credit reports,
transcripts of statements, registered
mail, insurance, stationery and supplies,
and other similar items.
§ 583.506 Investment and reinvestment of
certain funds.
Subject to the requirements of
§ 583.203, U.S. financial institutions are
authorized to invest and reinvest assets
blocked pursuant to § 583.201, subject
to the following conditions:
(a) The assets representing such
investments and reinvestments are
credited to a blocked account or
subaccount that is held in the same
name at the same U.S. financial
institution, or within the possession or
control of a U.S. person, but funds shall
not be transferred outside the United
States for this purpose;
(b) The proceeds of such investments
and reinvestments shall not be credited
to a blocked account or subaccount
under any name or designation that
differs from the name or designation of
the specific blocked account or
subaccount in which such funds or
securities were held; and
(c) No immediate financial or
economic benefit accrues (e.g., through
pledging or other use) to a person whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to § 583.201.
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§ 583.507
services.
17737
Provision of certain legal
(a) The provision of the following
legal services to or on behalf of persons
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201, is authorized, provided that
any receipt of payment of professional
fees and reimbursement of incurred
expenses must be authorized pursuant
to § 583.508, which authorizes certain
payments for legal services from funds
originating outside the United States;
via specific license; or otherwise
pursuant to this part:
(1) Provision of legal advice and
counseling on the requirements of and
compliance with the laws of the United
States or any jurisdiction within the
United States, provided that such advice
and counseling are not provided to
facilitate transactions in violation of this
part;
(2) Representation of persons named
as defendants in or otherwise made
parties to legal, arbitration, or
administrative proceedings before any
U.S. federal, state, or local court or
agency;
(3) Initiation and conduct of legal,
arbitration, or administrative
proceedings before any U.S. federal,
state, or local court or agency;
(4) Representation of persons before
any U.S. federal, state, or local court or
agency with respect to the imposition,
administration, or enforcement of U.S.
sanctions against such persons; and
(5) Provision of legal services in any
other context in which prevailing U.S.
law requires access to legal counsel at
public expense.
(b) The provision of any other legal
services to or on behalf of persons
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201, not otherwise authorized in
this part, requires the issuance of a
specific license.
(c) U.S. persons do not need to obtain
specific authorization to provide related
services, such as making filings and
providing other administrative services,
that are ordinarily incident to the
provision of services authorized by
paragraph (a) of this section.
Additionally, U.S. persons who provide
services authorized by paragraph (a) of
this section do not need to obtain
specific authorization to contract for
related services that are ordinarily
incident to the provision of those legal
services, such as those provided by
private investigators or expert
witnesses, or to pay for such services.
See § 583.404.
(d) Entry into a settlement agreement
or the enforcement of any lien,
judgment, arbitral award, decree, or
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other order through execution,
garnishment, or other judicial process
purporting to transfer or otherwise alter
or affect property or interests in
property blocked pursuant to § 583.201
is prohibited unless licensed pursuant
to this part.
Note 1 to § 583.507. Pursuant to part 501,
subpart E, of this chapter, U.S. persons
seeking administrative reconsideration or
judicial review of their designation or the
blocking of their property and interests in
property may apply for a specific license
from OFAC to authorize the release of certain
blocked funds for the payment of
professional fees and reimbursement of
incurred expenses for the provision of such
legal services where alternative funding
sources are not available.
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§ 583.508 Payments for legal services from
funds originating outside the United States.
(a) Professional fees and incurred
expenses. (1) Receipt of payment of
professional fees and reimbursement of
incurred expenses for the provision of
legal services authorized pursuant to
§ 583.507(a) to or on behalf of any
person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201 is authorized from funds
originating outside the United States,
provided that the funds do not originate
from:
(i) A source within the United States;
(ii) Any source, wherever located,
within the possession or control of a
U.S. person; or
(iii) Any individual or entity, other
than the person on whose behalf the
legal services authorized pursuant to
§ 583.507(a) are to be provided, whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to any part of this
chapter or any Executive order or
statute.
(2) Nothing in this paragraph (a)
authorizes payments for legal services
using funds in which any other person
whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to
§ 583.201, any other part of this chapter,
or any Executive order or statute has an
interest.
(b) Records. Consistent with § 501.601
of this chapter, U.S. persons who
receive payments pursuant to paragraph
(a) of this section must retain for five
years from the date of the relevant
payment a record that specifies the
following for each payment:
(1) The individual or entity from
whom the funds originated and the
amount of funds received; and
(2) If applicable:
(i) The names of any individuals or
entities providing related services to the
U.S. person receiving payment in
connection with authorized legal
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services, such as private investigators or
expert witnesses;
(ii) A general description of the
services provided; and
(iii) The amount of funds paid in
connection with such services.
(3) These records must be furnished to
OFAC on demand consistent with
§ 501.602 of this chapter.
§ 583.509
Emergency medical services.
The provision and receipt of
nonscheduled emergency medical
services that are prohibited by this part
are authorized.
§ 583.510 Official business of the United
States government.
All transactions prohibited by this
part that are for the conduct of the
official business of the United States
government by employees, grantees, or
contractors thereof are authorized.
§ 583.511 Official business of certain
international organizations and entities.
All transactions prohibited by this
part that are for the conduct of the
official business of the following entities
by employees, grantees, or contractors
thereof are authorized:
(a) The United Nations, including its
Programmes, Funds, and Other Entities
and Bodies, as well as its Specialized
Agencies and Related Organizations;
(b) The International Centre for
Settlement of Investment Disputes
(ICSID) and the Multilateral Investment
Guarantee Agency (MIGA);
(c) The African Development Bank
Group, the Asian Development Bank,
the European Bank for Reconstruction
and Development, and the InterAmerican Development Bank Group
(IDB Group), including any fund entity
administered or established by any of
the foregoing;
(d) The International Committee of
the Red Cross and the International
Federation of Red Cross and Red
Crescent Societies; and
(e) The Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis, and Malaria, and Gavi, the
Vaccine Alliance.
§ 583.512 Certain transactions in support
of nongovernmental organizations’
activities.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(c) of this section, all transactions
prohibited by this part that are
ordinarily incident and necessary to the
activities described in paragraph (b) of
this section by a nongovernmental
organization are authorized, provided
that the nongovernmental organization
is not a person whose property or
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to this part.
(b) The activities referenced in
paragraph (a) of this section are non-
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commercial activities designed to
directly benefit the civilian population
that fall into one of the following
categories:
(1) Activities to support humanitarian
projects to meet basic human needs,
including disaster, drought, or flood
relief; food, nutrition, or medicine
distribution; the provision of health
services; assistance for vulnerable or
displaced populations, including
individuals with disabilities and the
elderly; and environmental programs;
(2) Activities to support democracy
building, including activities to support
rule of law, citizen participation,
government accountability and
transparency, human rights and
fundamental freedoms, access to
information, and civil society
development projects;
(3) Activities to support education,
including combating illiteracy,
increasing access to education,
international exchanges, and assisting
education reform projects;
(4) Activities to support noncommercial development projects
directly benefiting civilians, including
those related to health, food security,
and water and sanitation;
(5) Activities to support
environmental and natural resource
protection, including the preservation
and protection of threatened or
endangered species, responsible and
transparent management of natural
resources, and the remediation of
pollution or other environmental
damage; and
(6) Activities to support disarmament,
demobilization, and reintegration (DDR)
programs and peacebuilding, conflict
prevention, and conflict resolution
programs.
(c) This section does not authorize
funds transfers initiated or processed
with knowledge or reason to know that
the intended beneficiary of such
transfers is a person blocked pursuant to
this part, other than for the purpose of
effecting the payment of taxes, fees, or
import duties, or the purchase or receipt
of permits, licenses, or public utility
services.
(d) Specific licenses may be issued on
a case-by-case basis to authorize
nongovernmental or other entities to
engage in other activities designed to
directly benefit the civilian population,
including support for the removal of
landmines and economic development
projects directly benefiting the civilian
population.
Note 1 to § 583.512. This section does not
relieve any person authorized thereunder
from complying with any other applicable
laws or regulations.
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§ 583.513 Transactions related to the
provision of agricultural commodities,
medicine, medical devices, replacement
parts and components, or software updates
for personal, non-commercial use.
(a) All transactions prohibited by this
part that are related to the provision,
directly or indirectly, of agricultural
commodities, medicine, medical
devices, replacement parts and
components for medical devices, or
software updates for medical devices to
an individual whose property and
interests in property are blocked
pursuant to this part are authorized,
provided the items are in quantities
consistent with personal, noncommercial use.
(b) For the purposes of this section,
agricultural commodities, medicine, and
medical devices are defined as follows:
(1) Agricultural commodities. For the
purposes of this section, agricultural
commodities are:
(i) Products that fall within the term
‘‘agricultural commodity’’ as defined in
section 102 of the Agricultural Trade
Act of 1978 (7 U.S.C. 5602); and
(ii) That are intended for ultimate use
as:
(A) Food for humans (including raw,
processed, and packaged foods; live
animals; vitamins and minerals; food
additives or supplements; and bottled
drinking water) or animals (including
animal feeds);
(B) Seeds for food crops;
(C) Fertilizers or organic fertilizers; or
(D) Reproductive materials (such as
live animals, fertilized eggs, embryos,
and semen) for the production of food
animals.
(2) Medicine. For the purposes of this
section, medicine is an item that falls
within the definition of the term ‘‘drug’’
in section 201 of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 321).
(3) Medical devices. For the purposes
of this section, a medical device is an
item that falls within the definition of
‘‘device’’ in section 201 of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C.
321).
Note 1 to § 583.513. This section does not
relieve any person authorized thereunder
from complying with any other applicable
laws or regulations.
instruction, order, directive, or license
issued by or pursuant to the direction or
authorization of the Secretary of the
Treasury pursuant to this part or
otherwise under IEEPA.
(1) A civil penalty not to exceed the
amount set forth in section 206 of IEEPA
may be imposed on any person who
violates, attempts to violate, conspires
to violate, or causes a violation of any
regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, license, or prohibition issued
under IEEPA.
(2) IEEPA provides for a maximum
civil penalty not to exceed the greater of
$368,136 or an amount that is twice the
amount of the transaction that is the
basis of the violation with respect to
which the penalty is imposed.
(3) A person who willfully commits,
willfully attempts to commit, willfully
conspires to commit, or aids or abets in
the commission of a violation of any
regulation in this part, ruling,
instruction, order, directive, license, or
prohibition may, upon conviction, be
fined not more than $1,000,000, or if a
natural person, be imprisoned for not
more than 20 years, or both.
(b)(1) The civil penalties provided in
IEEPA are subject to adjustment
pursuant to the Federal Civil Penalties
Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 (Pub.
L. 101–410, as amended, 28 U.S.C. 2461
note).
(2) The criminal penalties provided in
IEEPA are subject to adjustment
pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3571.
(c) Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 1001,
whoever, in any matter within the
jurisdiction of the executive, legislative,
or judicial branch of the government of
the United States, knowingly and
willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up
by any trick, scheme, or device a
material fact; or makes any materially
false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement
or representation; or makes or uses any
false writing or document knowing the
same to contain any materially false,
fictitious, or fraudulent statement or
entry shall be fined under title 18,
United States Code, imprisoned, or
both.
(d) Violations of this part may also be
subject to other applicable laws.
§ 583.702
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Subpart F—[Reserved]
Subpart G—Penalties and Findings of
Violation
§ 583.701
Penalties.
(a) Section 206 of the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50
U.S.C. 1705) (IEEPA) is applicable to
violations of the provisions of any
regulation in this part, ruling,
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Pre-Penalty Notice; settlement.
(a) When required. If OFAC has
reason to believe that there has occurred
a violation of any provision of this part
or a violation of the provisions of any
regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, or license issued by or
pursuant to the direction or
authorization of the Secretary of the
Treasury pursuant to this part or
otherwise under the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50
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17739
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.) and determines that
a civil monetary penalty is warranted,
OFAC will issue a Pre-Penalty Notice
informing the alleged violator of the
agency’s intent to impose a monetary
penalty. A Pre-Penalty Notice shall be in
writing. The Pre-Penalty Notice may be
issued whether or not another agency
has taken any action with respect to the
matter. For a description of the contents
of a Pre-Penalty Notice, see appendix A
to part 501 of this chapter.
(b) Response—(1) Right to respond.
An alleged violator has the right to
respond to a Pre-Penalty Notice by
making a written presentation to OFAC.
For a description of the information that
should be included in such a response,
see appendix A to part 501 of this
chapter.
(2) Deadline for response. A response
to a Pre-Penalty Notice must be made
within 30 days as set forth in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section. The
failure to submit a response within 30
days shall be deemed to be a waiver of
the right to respond.
(i) Computation of time for response.
A response to a Pre-Penalty Notice must
be postmarked or date-stamped by the
U.S. Postal Service (or foreign postal
service, if mailed abroad) or courier
service provider (if transmitted to OFAC
by courier), or dated if sent by email, on
or before the 30th day after the postmark
date on the envelope in which the PrePenalty Notice was mailed or date the
Pre-Penalty Notice was emailed. If the
Pre-Penalty Notice was personally
delivered by a non-U.S. Postal Service
agent authorized by OFAC, a response
must be postmarked or date-stamped on
or before the 30th day after the date of
delivery.
(ii) Extensions of time for response. If
a due date falls on a Federal holiday or
weekend, that due date is extended to
include the following business day. Any
other extensions of time will be granted,
at the discretion of OFAC, only upon
specific request to OFAC.
(3) Form and method of response. A
response to a Pre-Penalty Notice need
not be in any particular form, but it
must be typewritten and signed by the
alleged violator or a representative
thereof (electronic signature is
acceptable), contain information
sufficient to indicate that it is in
response to the Pre-Penalty Notice, and
include the OFAC identification number
listed on the Pre-Penalty Notice. The
response must be sent to OFAC’s
Enforcement Division by mail or courier
or email and must be postmarked or
date-stamped in accordance with
paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(c) Settlement. Settlement discussion
may be initiated by OFAC, the alleged
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 49 / Tuesday, March 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
violator, or the alleged violator’s
authorized representative. For a
description of practices with respect to
settlement, see appendix A to part 501
of this chapter.
(d) Guidelines. Guidelines for the
imposition or settlement of civil
penalties by OFAC are contained in
appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(e) Representation. A representative of
the alleged violator may act on behalf of
the alleged violator, but any oral
communication with OFAC prior to a
written submission regarding the
specific allegations contained in the PrePenalty Notice must be preceded by a
written letter of representation, unless
the Pre-Penalty Notice was served upon
the alleged violator in care of the
representative.
§ 583.703
Penalty imposition.
If, after considering any written
response to the Pre-Penalty Notice and
any relevant facts, OFAC determines
that there was a violation by the alleged
violator named in the Pre-Penalty
Notice and that a civil monetary penalty
is appropriate, OFAC may issue a
Penalty Notice to the violator containing
a determination of the violation and the
imposition of the monetary penalty. For
additional details concerning issuance
of a Penalty Notice, see appendix A to
part 501 of this chapter. The issuance of
the Penalty Notice shall constitute final
agency action. The violator has the right
to seek judicial review of that final
agency action in Federal district court.
§ 583.704 Administrative collection;
referral to United States Department of
Justice.
In the event that the violator does not
pay the penalty imposed pursuant to
this part or make payment arrangements
acceptable to OFAC, the matter may be
referred for administrative collection
measures by the Department of the
Treasury or to the United States
Department of Justice for appropriate
action to recover the penalty in a civil
suit in a Federal district court.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES
§ 583.705
Findings of Violation.
(a) When issued. (1) OFAC may issue
an initial Finding of Violation that
identifies a violation if OFAC:
(i) Determines that there has occurred
a violation of any provision of this part,
or a violation of the provisions of any
regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, or license issued by or
pursuant to the direction or
authorization of the Secretary of the
Treasury pursuant to this part or
otherwise under the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.);
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:07 Mar 11, 2024
Jkt 262001
(ii) Considers it important to
document the occurrence of a violation;
and
(iii) Based on the Guidelines
contained in appendix A to part 501 of
this chapter, concludes that an
administrative response is warranted
but that a civil monetary penalty is not
the most appropriate response.
(2) An initial Finding of Violation
shall be in writing and may be issued
whether or not another agency has taken
any action with respect to the matter.
For additional details concerning
issuance of a Finding of Violation, see
appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(b) Response—(1) Right to respond.
An alleged violator has the right to
contest an initial Finding of Violation
by providing a written response to
OFAC.
(2) Deadline for response; default
determination. A response to an initial
Finding of Violation must be made
within 30 days as set forth in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section. The
failure to submit a response within 30
days shall be deemed to be a waiver of
the right to respond, and the initial
Finding of Violation will become final
and will constitute final agency action.
The violator has the right to seek
judicial review of that final agency
action in Federal district court.
(i) Computation of time for response.
A response to an initial Finding of
Violation must be postmarked or datestamped by the U.S. Postal Service (or
foreign postal service, if mailed abroad)
or courier service provider (if
transmitted to OFAC by courier), or
dated if sent by email, on or before the
30th day after the postmark date on the
envelope in which the initial Finding of
Violation was served or date the Finding
of Violation was sent by email. If the
initial Finding of Violation was
personally delivered by a non-U.S.
Postal Service agent authorized by
OFAC, a response must be postmarked
or date-stamped on or before the 30th
day after the date of delivery.
(ii) Extensions of time for response. If
a due date falls on a federal holiday or
weekend, that due date is extended to
include the following business day. Any
other extensions of time will be granted,
at the discretion of OFAC, only upon
specific request to OFAC.
(3) Form and method of response. A
response to an initial Finding of
Violation need not be in any particular
form, but it must be typewritten and
signed by the alleged violator or a
representative thereof (electronic
signature is acceptable), contain
information sufficient to indicate that it
is in response to the initial Finding of
Violation, and include the OFAC
PO 00000
Frm 00048
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
identification number listed on the
initial Finding of Violation. The
response must be sent to OFAC’s
Enforcement Division by mail or courier
or email and must be postmarked or
date-stamped in accordance with
paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(4) Information that should be
included in response. Any response
should set forth in detail why the
alleged violator either believes that a
violation of the regulations in this part
did not occur and/or why a Finding of
Violation is otherwise unwarranted
under the circumstances, with reference
to the General Factors Affecting
Administrative Action set forth in the
Guidelines contained in appendix A to
part 501 of this chapter. The response
should include all documentary or other
evidence available to the alleged
violator that supports the arguments set
forth in the response. OFAC will
consider all relevant materials
submitted in the response.
(c) Determination—(1) Determination
that a Finding of Violation is warranted.
If, after considering the response, OFAC
determines that a final Finding of
Violation should be issued, OFAC will
issue a final Finding of Violation that
will inform the violator of its decision.
A final Finding of Violation shall
constitute final agency action. The
violator has the right to seek judicial
review of that final agency action in
Federal district court.
(2) Determination that a Finding of
Violation is not warranted. If, after
considering the response, OFAC
determines a Finding of Violation is not
warranted, then OFAC will inform the
alleged violator of its decision not to
issue a final Finding of Violation.
Note 1 to paragraph (c)(2). A
determination by OFAC that a final Finding
of Violation is not warranted does not
preclude OFAC from pursuing other
enforcement actions consistent with the
Guidelines contained in appendix A to part
501 of this chapter.
(d) Representation. A representative
of the alleged violator may act on behalf
of the alleged violator, but any oral
communication with OFAC prior to a
written submission regarding the
specific alleged violations contained in
the initial Finding of Violation must be
preceded by a written letter of
representation, unless the initial
Finding of Violation was served upon
the alleged violator in care of the
representative.
Bradley T. Smith,
Director, Office of Foreign Assets Control.
[FR Doc. 2024–05207 Filed 3–11–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AL–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 49 (Tuesday, March 12, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 17728-17740]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-05207]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Foreign Assets Control
31 CFR Part 583
Global Magnitsky Sanctions Regulations
AGENCY: Office of Foreign Assets Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC) is adopting a final rule amending the Global Magnitsky
Sanctions Regulations and reissuing them in their entirety to further
implement the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act and a
December 20, 2017 Executive Order related to human rights and
corruption. This final rule replaces the regulations that were
published in abbreviated form on June 29, 2018, with a more
comprehensive set of regulations that includes additional interpretive
guidance and definitions, general licenses, and other regulatory
provisions that will provide further guidance to the public. Due to the
number of regulatory sections being updated or added, OFAC is reissuing
the Global Magnitsky Sanctions Regulations in their entirety.
DATES: This rule is effective March 12, 2024.
[[Page 17729]]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: OFAC: Assistant Director for
Licensing, 202-622-2480; Assistant Director for Regulatory Affairs,
202-622-4855; or Assistant Director for Compliance, 202-622-2490.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Availability
This document and additional information concerning OFAC are
available on OFAC's website: www.treas.gov/ofac.
Background
On June 29, 2018, OFAC issued the Global Magnitsky Sanctions
Regulations, 31 CFR part 583 (83 FR 30541, June 29, 2018) (the
``Regulations''), to implement the Global Magnitsky Human Rights
Accountability Act (22 U.S.C. 10101-10103 (the ``Global Magnitsky
Act'')) and Executive Order (E.O.) 13818 of December 20, 2017,
``Blocking the Property of Persons Involved in Serious Human Rights
Abuse or Corruption'' (82 FR 60839, December 26, 2017), pursuant to
authorities delegated to the Secretary of the Treasury. The Regulations
were initially issued in abbreviated form for the purpose of providing
immediate guidance to the public. OFAC is revising the Regulations to
further implement the Global Magnitsky Act and E.O. 13818. OFAC is
amending and reissuing the Regulations as a more comprehensive set of
regulations that includes additional interpretive guidance and
definitions, general licenses, and other regulatory provisions that
will provide further guidance to the public. Finally, OFAC is adding
the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act of 2020, as amended, (22 U.S.C. 6901
note; Pub. L. 116-145, 134 Stat. 648) to the authority citation of 31
CFR part 583. Due to the number of regulatory sections being updated or
added, OFAC is reissuing the Regulations in their entirety.
Global Magnitsky Act
On December 23, 2016, the President signed the Global Magnitsky Act
into law. The Global Magnitsky Act, in section 1263 (22 U.S.C. 10102),
authorizes the President to impose targeted sanctions on any foreign
person the President determines, based on credible evidence: (1) is
responsible for extrajudicial killings, torture, or other gross
violations of internationally recognized human rights committed against
individuals in any foreign country who seek (A) to expose illegal
activity carried out by government officials; or (B) to obtain,
exercise, defend, or promote internationally recognized human rights
and freedoms, such as the freedoms of religion, expression,
association, and assembly, and the rights to a fair trial and
democratic elections; (2) acted as an agent of or on behalf of foreign
persons in a matter related to an activity described in (1); (3) is a
government official, or a senior associate of such an official, that is
responsible for, or complicit in, ordering, controlling, or otherwise
directing, acts of significant corruption including the expropriation
of private or public assets for personal gain, corruption related to
government contracts or the extraction of natural resources, bribery,
or the facilitation or transfer of the proceeds of corruption to
foreign jurisdictions; or (4) has materially assisted, sponsored, or
provided financial, material, or technological support for, or goods or
services in support of, an activity described in (3).
On September 8, 2017, the President delegated authority to the
Secretary of the Treasury, in coordination with the Secretary of State,
to administer the financial sanctions under section 1263 of the Global
Magnitsky Act (22 U.S.C. 10102), which provides for the blocking of all
property and interests in property of a foreign person described in
section 1263(a) of the Global Magnitsky Act if such property and
interests in property are in the United States, come within the United
States, or are or come within the possession of or control of a United
States person (82 FR 45411, September 28, 2017).
E.O. 13818
On December 20, 2017, the President, invoking the authority of,
inter alia, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C.
1701 et seq.) (IEEPA) and the Global Magnitsky Act, issued E.O. 13818,
effective at 12:01 a.m. eastern standard time on December 21, 2017, to
implement and build upon the Global Magnitsky Act. In E.O. 13818, the
President found that the prevalence and severity of human rights abuse
and corruption that have their source, in whole or in substantial part,
outside the United States, such as those committed or directed by
persons listed in the Annex to E.O. 13818, have reached such scope and
gravity that they threaten the stability of international political and
economic systems. The President determined that serious human rights
abuse and corruption around the world constitute an unusual and
extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and
economy of the United States and declared a national emergency to deal
with that threat.
Section 1(a) of E.O. 13818 blocks, with certain exceptions, all
property and interests in property that are in the United States, that
come within the United States, or that are or come within the
possession or control of any U.S. person of: (i) the persons listed in
the Annex to E.O. 13818; (ii) any foreign person determined by the
Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State
and the Attorney General: (A) to be responsible for or complicit in, or
to have directly or indirectly engaged in, serious human rights abuse;
(B) to be a current or former government official, or a person acting
for or on behalf of such an official, who is responsible for or
complicit in, or has directly or indirectly engaged in: (1) corruption,
including the misappropriation of state assets, the expropriation of
private assets for personal gain, corruption related to government
contracts or the extraction of natural resources, or bribery; or (2)
the transfer or the facilitation of the transfer of the proceeds of
corruption; (C) to be or have been a leader or official of: (1) an
entity, including any government entity, that has engaged in, or whose
members have engaged in, any of the activities described in subsection
1(ii)(A), (B)(1), or (B)(2) of E.O. 13818 relating to the leader's or
official's tenure; or (2) an entity whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to this order as a result of activities
related to the leader's or official's tenure; (D) to have attempted to
engage in any of the activities described in subsection 1(ii)(A),
(B)(1), or (B)(2) of E.O. 13818; and (iii) any person determined by the
Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State
and the Attorney General: (A) to have materially assisted, sponsored,
or provided financial, material, or technological support for, or goods
or services to or in support of: (1) any activity described in
subsection 1(ii)(A), (B)(1), or (B)(2) of E.O. 13818 that is conducted
by a foreign person; (2) any person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to E.O. 13818; or (3) any entity,
including any government entity, that has engaged in, or whose members
have engaged in, any of the activities described in subsection
1(ii)(A), (B)(1), or (B)(2) of E.O. 13818, where the activity is
conducted by a foreign person; (B) to be owned or controlled by, or to
have acted or purported to act for or on behalf of, directly or
indirectly, any person whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to this order; or (C) to have attempted to engage in
any of the
[[Page 17730]]
activities described in subsection 1(iii)(A) or (B) of E.O. 13818. The
property and interests in property that are in the United States, that
come within the United States, or that are or come within the
possession or control of any United States person, of the persons
described above may not be transferred, paid, exported, withdrawn, or
otherwise dealt in.
Section 1(b) of E.O. 13818 provides that the prohibitions in
Section 1(a) of E.O. 13818 apply except to the extent provided by
statutes, or in regulations, orders, directives, or licenses that may
be issued pursuant to E.O. 13818, and notwithstanding any contract
entered into or any license or permit granted before the effective date
of E.O. 13818.
In Section 3 of E.O. 13818, the President determined that the
making of donations of the types of articles specified in section
203(b)(2) of IEEPA (50 U.S.C. 1702(b)(2)), by, to, or for the benefit
of any person whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to E.O. 13818 would seriously impair the President's ability
to deal with the national emergency declared in E.O. 13818. The
President therefore prohibited the donation of such items except to the
extent provided by statutes, or in regulations, rulings, instructions,
orders, directives, or licenses that may be issued pursuant to E.O.
13818.
Section 4 of E.O. 13818 provides that the prohibition on any
transaction or dealing in blocked property or interests in property
includes the making of any contribution or provision of funds, goods,
or services by, to, or for the benefit of any person whose property and
interests in property are blocked pursuant to E.O. 13818, and the
receipt of any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or services
from any such person.
Section 5 of E.O. 13818 prohibits any transaction that evades or
avoids, has the purpose of evading or avoiding, causes a violation of,
or attempts to violate any of the prohibitions set forth in E.O. 13818,
as well as any conspiracy formed to violate such prohibitions.
Section 8 of E.O. 13818 authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury,
in consultation with the Secretary of State, to take such actions,
including adopting rules and regulations, and to employ all powers
granted to the President by IEEPA and the Global Magnitsky Act, as may
be necessary to implement E.O. 13818 and section 1263(a) of the Global
Magnitsky Act (22 U.S.C. 10102(a)). Section 8 of E.O. 13818 also
provides that the Secretary of the Treasury may redelegate any of these
functions to other officers and agencies of the United States.
Current Regulatory Action
To further implement the Global Magnitsky Act and E.O. 13818, OFAC
is amending and reissuing the Regulations. The Regulations implement
targeted sanctions that are directed at persons determined to meet the
criteria set forth in Sec. 583.201(a) of the Regulations, as well as
sanctions that may be set forth in any further Executive orders issued
pursuant to the national emergency declared in E.O. 13818. The
sanctions in E.O. 13818 do not generally prohibit trade or the
provision of banking or other financial services to a certain country.
Instead, the sanctions in E.O. 13818 apply where the transaction or
service in question involves property or interests in property that are
blocked pursuant to these authorities.
Subpart A of the Regulations clarifies the relation of this part to
other laws and regulations. Subpart B of the Regulations implements the
prohibitions contained in sections 1, 3, 4, and 5 of E.O. 13818, which
implement and build upon the prohibitions set forth in the Global
Magnitsky Act, the prohibitions contained in any further Executive
orders issued pursuant to the national emergency declared in E.O.
13818. Persons identified in the Annex to E.O. 13818, designated by or
under the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to E.O.
13818, or otherwise blocked pursuant to E.O. 13818, as well as persons
who are blocked pursuant to any further Executive orders issued
pursuant to the national emergency declared in E.O. 13818, are referred
to throughout the Regulations as ``persons whose property and interests
in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.'' The names of
persons designated or identified as blocked pursuant to E.O. 13818, or
any further Executive orders issued pursuant to the national emergency
declared therein, are published on OFAC's SDN List, which is accessible
via OFAC's website. Those names also are published in the Federal
Register as they are added to the SDN List.
Sections 583.202 and 583.203 of subpart B detail the effect of
transfers of blocked property in violation of the Regulations and set
forth the requirement to hold blocked funds, such as currency, bank
deposits, or liquidated financial obligations, in interest-bearing
blocked accounts. Section 583.204 of subpart B provides that all
expenses incident to the maintenance of blocked tangible property shall
be the responsibility of the owners and operators of such property, and
that such expenses shall not be met from blocked funds, unless
otherwise authorized. The section further provides that blocked
property may, in OFAC's discretion, be sold or liquidated and the net
proceeds placed in a blocked interest-bearing account in the name of
the owner of the property.
Section 583.205 of subpart B prohibits any transaction that evades
or avoids, has the purpose of evading or avoiding, causes a violation
of, or attempts to violate any of the prohibitions set forth in section
583.201 of the Regulations, and any conspiracy formed to violate such
prohibitions.
Section 583.206 of subpart B details transactions that are exempt
from the prohibitions of the Regulations pursuant to section 203(b) of
IEEPA (50 U.S.C. 1702(b)).
In subpart D, which contains interpretive sections regarding the
Regulations, certain provisions have been renumbered and others added
to those in the prior abbreviated set of regulations. Section 583.411
of subpart D explains that the property and interests in property of an
entity are blocked if the entity is directly or indirectly owned,
whether individually or in the aggregate, 50 percent or more by one or
more persons whose property and interests in property are blocked,
whether or not the entity itself is incorporated into OFAC's SDN List.
Transactions otherwise prohibited by the Regulations but found to
be consistent with U.S. policy may be authorized by one of the general
licenses contained in or issued pursuant to subpart E of the
Regulations or by a specific license issued pursuant to the procedures
described in subpart E of 31 CFR part 501. General licenses and
statements of licensing policy relating to this part also may be
available through the Global Magnitsky sanctions page on OFAC's
website: www.treas.gov/ofac.
Subpart F of the Regulations refers to subpart C of part 501 for
recordkeeping and reporting requirements. Subpart G of the Regulations
describes the civil and criminal penalties applicable to violations of
the Regulations, as well as the procedures governing the potential
imposition of a civil monetary penalty or issuance of a Finding of
Violation. Subpart G also refers to appendix A of part 501 for a more
complete description of these procedures.
Subpart H of the Regulations refers to subpart E of part 501 for
applicable provisions relating to administrative procedures and
contains a delegation of certain authorities of the Secretary of the
Treasury. Subpart I of the
[[Page 17731]]
Regulations sets forth a Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
Public Participation
Because the Regulations involve a foreign affairs function, the
provisions of E.O. 12866 of September 30, 1993, ``Regulatory Planning
and Review'' (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), as amended, and the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) requiring notice of
proposed rulemaking, opportunity for public participation, and delay in
effective date are inapplicable. Because no notice of proposed
rulemaking is required for this rule, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601-612) does not apply.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collections of information related to the Regulations are
contained in 31 CFR part 501 (the ``Reporting, Procedures and Penalties
Regulations''). Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3507), those collections of information have been approved by
the Office of Management and Budget under control number 1505-0164. An
agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information unless the collection of
information displays a valid control number.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 583
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, Banking, Blocking of
assets, Corruption, Credit, Foreign trade, Global Magnitsky, Human
rights, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Sanctions,
Securities, Services.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, OFAC revises 31 CFR part
583 to read as follows:
PART 583--GLOBAL MAGNITSKY SANCTIONS REGULATIONS
Subpart A--Relation of This Part to Other Laws and Regulations
Sec.
583.101 Relation of this part to other laws and regulations.
583.102 Records and Reports.
583.103 Procedures.
583.104 Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
583.105 [Reserved]
583.106 Delegation of certain authorities of the Secretary of the
Treasury.
Subpart B--Prohibitions
583.201 Prohibited transactions.
583.202 Effect of transfers violating the provisions of this part.
583.203 Holding of funds in interest-bearing accounts; investment
and reinvestment.
583.204 Expenses of maintaining blocked tangible property;
liquidation of blocked property.
583.205 Evasions; attempts; causing violations; conspiracies.
583.206 Exempt transactions.
Subpart C--General Definitions
583.300 Applicability of definitions.
583.301 Blocked account; blocked property.
583.302 Effective date.
583.303 Entity.
583.304 Financial, material, or technological support.
583.305 Foreign person.
583.306 [Reserved]
583.307 Interest.
583.308 Licenses; general and specific.
583.309 OFAC.
583.310 Person.
583.311 Property; property interest.
583.312 Transfer.
583.313 United States.
583.314 United States person; U.S. person.
583.315 U.S. financial institution.
Subpart D--Interpretations
583.401 Reference to amended sections.
583.402 Effect of amendment.
583.403 Termination and acquisition of an interest in blocked
property.
583.404 Transactions ordinarily incident to a licensed transaction.
583.405 Provision and receipt of services.
583.406 Offshore transactions involving blocked property.
583.407 Payments from blocked accounts to satisfy obligations
prohibited.
583.408 Charitable contributions.
583.409 Credit extended and cards issued by financial institutions
to a person whose property and interests in property are blocked.
583.410 Setoffs prohibited.
583.411 Entities owned by one or more persons whose property and
interests in property are blocked.
583.412 Entities of which one or more blocked persons is a member,
leader, official, senior executive officer, or otherwise exercises
control.
Subpart E--Licenses, Authorizations, and Statements of Licensing Policy
583.501 General and specific licensing procedures.
583.502 Effect of license or other authorization.
583.503 Exclusion from licenses.
583.504 Payments and transfers to blocked accounts in U.S. financial
institutions.
583.505 Entries in certain accounts for normal service charges.
583.506 Investment and reinvestment of certain funds.
583.507 Provision of certain legal services.
583.508 Payments for legal services from funds originating outside
the United States.
583.509 Emergency medical services.
583.510 Official business of the United States government.
583.511 Official business of certain international organizations and
entities.
583.512 Certain transactions in support of nongovernmental
organizations' activities.
583.513 Transactions related to the provision of agricultural
commodities, medicine, medical devices, replacement parts and
components, or software updates for personal, non-commercial use.
Subpart F--[Reserved]
Subpart G--Penalties and Findings of Violation
583.701 Penalties.
583.702 Pre-Penalty Notice; settlement.
583.703 Penalty imposition.
583.704 Administrative collection; referral to United States
Department of Justice.
583.705 Findings of Violation.
Authority: 3 U.S.C. 301; 22 U.S.C. 10101-10103; 31 U.S.C.
321(b); 50 U.S.C. 1601-1651, 1701-1706; Pub. L. 101-410, 104 Stat.
890, as amended (28 U.S.C. 2461 note); Pub. L. 116-145, 134 Stat.
651, as amended (22 U.S.C. 6901 note); Pub. L. 117-78, 135 Stat.
1531 (22 U.S.C. 6901 note); E.O. 13818, 82 FR 60839, 3 CFR, 2017
Comp. p. 399.
Subpart A--Relation of This Part to Other Laws and Regulations
Sec. 583.101 Relation of this part to other laws and regulations.
This part is separate from, and independent of, the other parts of
this chapter, with the exception of part 501 of this chapter, the
recordkeeping and reporting requirements and license application and
other procedures of which apply to this part. Actions taken pursuant to
part 501 of this chapter with respect to the prohibitions contained in
this part are considered actions taken pursuant to this part. Differing
foreign policy and national security circumstances may result in
differing interpretations of similar language among the parts of this
chapter. No license or authorization contained in or issued pursuant to
those other parts authorizes any transaction prohibited by this part.
No license or authorization contained in or issued pursuant to any
other provision of law or regulation authorizes any transaction
prohibited by this part. No license or authorization contained in or
issued pursuant to this part relieves the involved parties from
complying with any other applicable laws or regulations.
Sec. 583.102 Records and reports.
For provisions relating to required records and reports, see part
501, subpart C, of this chapter. Recordkeeping and reporting
requirements imposed by part 501 of this chapter with respect to the
prohibitions contained in this part are considered requirements arising
pursuant to this part.
[[Page 17732]]
Sec. 583.103 Procedures.
For license application procedures and procedures relating to
amendments, modifications, or revocations of licenses; administrative
decisions; rulemaking; and requests for documents pursuant to the
Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts (5 U.S.C. 552 and 552a), see
part 501, subpart E, of this chapter.
Sec. 583.104 Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
For approval by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507) of information
collections relating to recordkeeping and reporting requirements,
licensing procedures, and other procedures, see Sec. 501.901 of this
chapter. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays
a valid control number assigned by OMB.
Sec. 583.105 [Reserved]
Sec. 583.106 Delegation of certain authorities of the Secretary of
the Treasury.
Any action that the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to take
pursuant to E.O. 13818, any further Executive orders relating to the
national emergency declared therein, or Presidential Memorandum of
December 7, 2023: Delegation of Certain Functions and Authorities Under
the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act of 2020 and Public Law 117-78, may
be taken by the Director of OFAC or by any other person to whom the
Secretary of the Treasury has delegated authority to so act.
Subpart B--Prohibitions
Sec. 583.201 Prohibited transactions.
(a) All property and interests in property that are in the United
States, that come within the United States, or that are or come within
the possession or control of any U.S. person of the following persons
are blocked and may not be transferred, paid, exported, withdrawn, or
otherwise dealt in:
(1) Executive Order (E.O.) 13818 Annex. The persons listed in the
Annex to E.O. 13818 of December 20, 2017.
(2) E.O. 13818. Any foreign person determined by the Secretary of
the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State and the
Attorney General:
(i) To be responsible for or complicit in, or to have directly or
indirectly engaged in, serious human rights abuse;
(ii) To be a current or former government official, or a person
acting for or on behalf of such an official, who is responsible for or
complicit in, or has directly or indirectly engaged in:
(A) Corruption, including the misappropriation of state assets, the
expropriation of private assets for personal gain, corruption related
to government contracts or the extraction of natural resources, or
bribery; or
(B) The transfer or the facilitation of the transfer of the
proceeds of corruption;
(iii) To be or have been a leader or official of:
(A) An entity, including any government entity, that has engaged
in, or whose members have engaged in, any of the activities described
in paragraph (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), or (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section
relating to the leader's or official's tenure; or
(B) An entity whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to this order as a result of activities related to the
leader's or official's tenure;
(iv) To have attempted to engage in any of the activities described
in paragraph (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), or (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this
section; and
(v) To have materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial,
material, or technological support for, or goods or services to or in
support of:
(A) Any activity described in paragraph (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A),
or (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section that is conducted by a foreign person;
(B) Any person whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section; or
(C) Any entity, including any government entity, that has engaged
in, or whose members have engaged in, any of the activities described
in paragraph (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii)(A), or (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this
section, where the activity is conducted by a foreign person;
(vi) To be owned or controlled by, or to have acted or purported to
act for or on behalf of, directly or indirectly, any person whose
property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to paragraph
(a) of this section; or
(vii) To have attempted to engage in any of the activities
described in paragraph (a)(2)(v) or (a)(2)(vi) of this section.
(b) The prohibitions in paragraph (a) of this section include
prohibitions on the following transactions:
(1) The making of any contribution or provision of funds, goods, or
services by, to, or for the benefit of any person whose property and
interests in property are blocked pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section; and
(2) The receipt of any contribution or provision of funds, goods,
or services from any person whose property and interests in property
are blocked pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Unless authorized by this part or by a specific license
expressly referring to this part, any dealing in securities (or
evidence thereof) held within the possession or control of a U.S.
person and either registered or inscribed in the name of, or known to
be held for the benefit of, or issued by, any person whose property and
interests in property are blocked pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section is prohibited. This prohibition includes the transfer
(including the transfer on the books of any issuer or agent thereof),
disposition, transportation, importation, exportation, or withdrawal
of, or the endorsement or guaranty of signatures on, any securities on
or after the effective date. This prohibition applies irrespective of
the fact that at any time (whether prior to, on, or subsequent to the
effective date) the registered or inscribed owner of any such
securities may have or might appear to have assigned, transferred, or
otherwise disposed of the securities.
(d) The prohibitions in paragraph (a) of this section apply except
to the extent provided by statutes, or in regulations, rulings,
instructions, orders, directives, or licenses that may be issued
pursuant to this part, and notwithstanding any contract entered into or
any license or permit granted prior to the effective date.
(e) All transactions prohibited pursuant to any Executive order
issued after December 20, 2017 pursuant to the national emergency
declared in E.O. 13818 of December 20, 2017 are prohibited pursuant to
this part.
Note 1 to Sec. 583.201. The names of persons designated or
identified as blocked pursuant to E.O. 13818, or any further
Executive orders issued pursuant to the national emergency declared
therein, whose property and interests in property therefore are
blocked pursuant to this section, are published in the Federal
Register and incorporated into OFAC's Specially Designated Nationals
and Blocked Persons List (SDN List) using the following identifiers:
for E.O. 13818: ``[GLOMAG]''; and for any further Executive orders
issued pursuant to the national emergency declared in E.O. 13818:
using the identifier formulation ``[GLOMAG-E.O. [E.O. number
pursuant to which the person's property and interests in property
are blocked]]''. The SDN List is accessible through the following
page on OFAC's website: www.treas.gov/sdn. Additional information
pertaining to the SDN List can be found in appendix A to this
chapter. See Sec. 583.411 concerning entities that may not be
listed on the SDN List but whose property and interests in property
are nevertheless blocked pursuant to this section.
[[Page 17733]]
Note 2 to Sec. 583.201. The International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.), in section 203 (50 U.S.C. 1702)
authorizes the blocking of property and interests in property of a
person during the pendency of an investigation. The names of persons
whose property and interests in property are blocked pending
investigation pursuant to this section also are published in the
Federal Register and incorporated into the SDN List using the
following identifiers: for E.O. 13818: ``[BPI-GLOMAG]''; for any
further Executive orders issued pursuant to the national emergency
declared in E.O. 13818: using the identifier formulation ``[BPI-
GLOMAG-E.O. [E.O. number pursuant to which the person's property and
interests in property are blocked pending investigation]].''
Note 3 to Sec. 583.201. Sections 501.806 and 501.807 of this
chapter describe the procedures to be followed by persons seeking,
respectively, the unblocking of funds that they believe were blocked
due to mistaken identity, or administrative reconsideration of their
status as persons whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to this section.
Sec. 583.202 Effect of transfers violating the provisions of this
part.
(a) Any transfer after the effective date that is in violation of
any provision of this part or of any regulation, ruling, instruction,
order, directive, or license issued pursuant to this part, and that
involves any property or interest in property blocked pursuant to Sec.
583.201, is null and void and shall not be the basis for the assertion
or recognition of any interest in or right, remedy, power, or privilege
with respect to such property or interest in property.
(b) No transfer before the effective date shall be the basis for
the assertion or recognition of any right, remedy, power, or privilege
with respect to, or any interest in, any property or interest in
property blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201, unless the person who holds
or maintains such property, prior to that date, had written notice of
the transfer or by any written evidence had recognized such transfer.
(c) Unless otherwise provided, a license or other authorization
issued by OFAC before, during, or after a transfer shall validate such
transfer or make it enforceable to the same extent that it would be
valid or enforceable but for the provisions of this part and any
regulation, ruling, instruction, order, directive, or license issued
pursuant to this part.
(d) Transfers of property that otherwise would be null and void or
unenforceable by virtue of the provisions of this section shall not be
deemed to be null and void or unenforceable as to any person with whom
such property is or was held or maintained (and as to such person only)
in cases in which such person is able to establish to the satisfaction
of OFAC each of the following:
(1) Such transfer did not represent a willful violation of the
provisions of this part by the person with whom such property is or was
held or maintained (and as to such person only);
(2) The person with whom such property is or was held or maintained
did not have reasonable cause to know or suspect, in view of all the
facts and circumstances known or available to such person, that such
transfer required a license or authorization issued pursuant to this
part and was not so licensed or authorized, or, if a license or
authorization did purport to cover the transfer, that such license or
authorization had been obtained by misrepresentation of a third party
or withholding of material facts or was otherwise fraudulently
obtained; and
(3) The person with whom such property is or was held or maintained
filed with OFAC a report setting forth in full the circumstances
relating to such transfer promptly upon discovery that:
(i) Such transfer was in violation of the provisions of this part
or any regulation, ruling, instruction, order, directive, license, or
other authorization issued pursuant to this part;
(ii) Such transfer was not licensed or authorized by OFAC; or
(iii) If a license did purport to cover the transfer, such license
had been obtained by misrepresentation of a third party or withholding
of material facts or was otherwise fraudulently obtained.
(e) The filing of a report in accordance with the provisions of
paragraph (d)(3) of this section shall not be deemed evidence that the
terms of paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this section have been satisfied.
(f) Unless licensed pursuant to this part, any attachment,
judgment, decree, lien, execution, garnishment, or other judicial
process is null and void with respect to any property or interest in
property blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.
Sec. 583.203 Holding of funds in interest-bearing accounts;
investment and reinvestment.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (e) or (f) of this section, or
as otherwise directed or authorized by OFAC, any U.S. person holding
funds, such as currency, bank deposits, or liquidated financial
obligations, subject to Sec. 583.201 shall hold or place such funds in
a blocked interest-bearing account located in the United States.
(b)(1) For the purposes of this section, the term blocked interest-
bearing account means a blocked account:
(i) In a federally insured U.S. bank, thrift institution, or credit
union, provided the funds are earning interest at rates that are
commercially reasonable; or
(ii) With a broker or dealer registered with the Securities and
Exchange Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78a et seq.), provided the funds are invested in a money market
fund or in U.S. Treasury bills.
(2) Funds held or placed in a blocked account pursuant to paragraph
(a) of this section may not be invested in instruments the maturity of
which exceeds 180 days.
(c) For the purposes of this section, a rate is commercially
reasonable if it is the rate currently offered to other depositors on
deposits or instruments of comparable size and maturity.
(d) For the purposes of this section, if interest is credited to a
separate blocked account or subaccount, the name of the account party
on each account must be the same.
(e) Blocked funds held in instruments the maturity of which exceeds
180 days at the time the funds become subject to Sec. 583.201 may
continue to be held until maturity in the original instrument, provided
any interest, earnings, or other proceeds derived therefrom are paid
into a blocked interest-bearing account in accordance with paragraph
(a) or (f) of this section.
(f) Blocked funds held in accounts or instruments outside the
United States at the time the funds become subject to Sec. 583.201 may
continue to be held in the same type of accounts or instruments,
provided the funds earn interest at rates that are commercially
reasonable.
(g) This section does not create an affirmative obligation for the
holder of blocked tangible property, such as real or personal property,
or of other blocked property, such as debt or equity securities, to
sell or liquidate such property. However, OFAC may issue licenses
permitting or directing such sales or liquidation in appropriate cases.
(h) Funds blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201 may not be held,
invested, or reinvested in a manner that provides financial or economic
benefit or access to any person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201, nor may their holder
cooperate in or facilitate the pledging or other attempted use as
collateral of blocked funds or other assets.
[[Page 17734]]
Sec. 583.204 Expenses of maintaining blocked tangible property;
liquidation of blocked property.
(a) Except as otherwise authorized, and notwithstanding the
existence of any rights or obligations conferred or imposed by any
international agreement or contract entered into or any license or
permit granted prior to the effective date, all expenses incident to
the maintenance of tangible property blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201
shall be the responsibility of the owners or operators of such
property, which expenses shall not be met from blocked funds.
(b) Property blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201 may, in the
discretion of OFAC, be sold or liquidated and the net proceeds placed
in a blocked interest-bearing account in the name of the owner of the
property.
Sec. 583.205 Evasions; attempts; causing violations; conspiracies.
(a) Any transaction on or after the effective date that evades or
avoids, has the purpose of evading or avoiding, causes a violation of,
or attempts to violate any of the prohibitions set forth in this part
is prohibited.
(b) Any conspiracy formed to violate the prohibitions set forth in
this part is prohibited.
Sec. 583.206 Exempt transactions.
The prohibitions contained in this part do not apply to any
transactions that are exempt pursuant to section 203(b) of the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1702(b)).
Subpart C--General Definitions
Sec. 583.300 Applicability of definitions.
The definitions in this subpart apply throughout the entire part.
Sec. 583.301 Blocked account; blocked property.
The terms blocked account and blocked property mean any account or
property subject to the prohibitions in Sec. 583.201 held in the name
of a person whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to Sec. 583.201, or in which such person has an interest, and
with respect to which payments, transfers, exportations, withdrawals,
or other dealings may not be made or effected except pursuant to a
license or other authorization from OFAC expressly authorizing such
action.
Note 1 to Sec. 583.301. See Sec. 583.411 concerning the
blocked status of property and interests in property of an entity
that is directly or indirectly owned, whether individually or in the
aggregate, 50 percent or more by one or more persons whose property
and interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.
Sec. 583.302 Effective date.
(a) The term effective date refers to the effective date of the
applicable prohibitions and directives contained in this part as
follows:
(1) With respect to a person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201(a)(1), 12:01 a.m.
eastern standard time on December 21, 2017; and
(2) With respect to a person whose property and interests in
property are otherwise blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201, the earlier
of the date of actual or constructive notice that such person's
property and interests in property are blocked.
(b) For the purposes of this section, constructive notice is the
date that a notice of the blocking of the relevant person's property
and interests in property is published in the Federal Register.
Sec. 583.303 Entity.
The term entity means a partnership, association, trust, joint
venture, corporation, group, subgroup, or other organization.
Sec. 583.304 Financial, material, or technological support.
The term financial, material, or technological support means any
property, tangible or intangible, including currency, financial
instruments, securities, or any other transmission of value; weapons or
related materiel; chemical or biological agents; explosives; false
documentation or identification; communications equipment; computers;
electronic or other devices or equipment; technologies; lodging; safe
houses; facilities; vehicles or other means of transportation; or
goods. ``Technologies'' as used in this section means specific
information necessary for the development, production, or use of a
product, including related technical data such as blueprints, plans,
diagrams, models, formulae, tables, engineering designs and
specifications, manuals, or other recorded instructions.
Sec. 583.305 Foreign person.
The term foreign person means any citizen or national of a foreign
state (including any such individual who is also a citizen or national
of the United States), or any entity not organized solely under the
laws of the United States or existing solely in the United States, but
does not include a foreign state.
Sec. 583.306 [Reserved]
Sec. 583.307 Interest.
Except as otherwise provided in this part, the term interest, when
used with respect to property (e.g., ``an interest in property''),
means an interest of any nature whatsoever, direct or indirect.
Sec. 583.308 Licenses; general and specific.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this part, the term license
means any license or authorization contained in or issued pursuant to
this part.
(b) The term general license means any license or authorization the
terms of which are set forth in subpart E of this part or made
available on OFAC's website: https://ofac.treasury.gov.
(c) The term specific license means any license or authorization
issued pursuant to this part but not set forth in subpart E of this
part or made available on OFAC's website: https://ofac.treasury.gov.
Note 1 to Sec. 583.308. See Sec. 501.801 of this chapter on
licensing procedures.
Sec. 583.309 OFAC.
The term OFAC means the Department of the Treasury's Office of
Foreign Assets Control.
Sec. 583.310 Person.
The term person means an individual or entity.
Sec. 583.311 Property; property interest.
The terms property and property interest include money, checks,
drafts, bullion, bank deposits, savings accounts, debts, indebtedness,
obligations, notes, guarantees, debentures, stocks, bonds, coupons, any
other financial instruments, bankers acceptances, mortgages, pledges,
liens or other rights in the nature of security, warehouse receipts,
bills of lading, trust receipts, bills of sale, any other evidences of
title, ownership, or indebtedness, letters of credit and any documents
relating to any rights or obligations thereunder, powers of attorney,
goods, wares, merchandise, chattels, stocks on hand, ships, goods on
ships, real estate mortgages, deeds of trust, vendors' sales
agreements, land contracts, leaseholds, ground rents, real estate and
any other interest therein, options, negotiable instruments, trade
acceptances, royalties, book accounts, accounts payable, judgments,
patents, trademarks or copyrights, insurance policies, safe deposit
boxes and their contents, annuities, pooling agreements, services of
any nature whatsoever, contracts of any nature whatsoever, and any
other property, real, personal, or mixed, tangible or intangible, or
interest
[[Page 17735]]
or interests therein, present, future, or contingent.
Sec. 583.312 Transfer.
The term transfer means any actual or purported act or transaction,
whether or not evidenced by writing, and whether or not done or
performed within the United States, the purpose, intent, or effect of
which is to create, surrender, release, convey, transfer, or alter,
directly or indirectly, any right, remedy, power, privilege, or
interest with respect to any property. Without limitation on the
foregoing, it shall include the making, execution, or delivery of any
assignment, power, conveyance, check, declaration, deed, deed of trust,
power of attorney, power of appointment, bill of sale, mortgage,
receipt, agreement, contract, certificate, gift, sale, affidavit, or
statement; the making of any payment; the setting off of any obligation
or credit; the appointment of any agent, trustee, or fiduciary; the
creation or transfer of any lien; the issuance, docketing, filing, or
levy of or under any judgment, decree, attachment, injunction,
execution, or other judicial or administrative process or order, or the
service of any garnishment; the acquisition of any interest of any
nature whatsoever by reason of a judgment or decree of any foreign
country; the fulfillment of any condition; the exercise of any power of
appointment, power of attorney, or other power; or the acquisition,
disposition, transportation, importation, exportation, or withdrawal of
any security.
Sec. 583.313 United States.
The term United States means the United States, its territories and
possessions, and all areas under the jurisdiction or authority thereof.
Sec. 583.314 United States person; U.S. person.
The term United States person or U.S. person means any United
States citizen, lawful permanent resident, entity organized under the
laws of the United States or any jurisdiction within the United States
(including foreign branches), or any person in the United States.
Sec. 583.315 U.S. financial institution.
The term U.S. financial institution means any U.S. entity
(including its foreign branches) that is engaged in the business of
accepting deposits, making, granting, transferring, holding, or
brokering loans or credits, purchasing or selling foreign exchange,
securities, futures or options, or procuring purchasers and sellers
thereof, as principal or agent. It includes depository institutions,
banks, savings banks, money services businesses, operators of credit
card systems, trust companies, insurance companies, securities brokers
and dealers, futures and options brokers and dealers, forward contract
and foreign exchange merchants, securities and commodities exchanges,
clearing corporations, investment companies, employee benefit plans,
dealers in precious metals, stones, or jewels, and U.S. holding
companies, U.S. affiliates, or U.S. subsidiaries of any of the
foregoing. This term includes those branches, offices, and agencies of
foreign financial institutions that are located in the United States,
but not such institutions' foreign branches, offices, or agencies.
Subpart D--Interpretations
Sec. 583.401 Reference to amended sections.
(a) Reference to any section in this part is a reference to the
same as currently amended, unless the reference includes a specific
date. See 44 U.S.C. 1510.
(b) Reference to any regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, or license issued pursuant to this part is a reference to
the same as currently amended unless otherwise so specified.
Sec. 583.402 Effect of amendment.
Unless otherwise specifically provided, any amendment,
modification, or revocation of any provision in or appendix to this
part or chapter or of any regulation, ruling, insruction, order,
directive, or license issued by OFAC does not affect any act done or
omitted, or any civil or criminal proceeding commenced or pending,
prior to such amendment, modification, or revocation. All penalties,
forfeitures, and liabilities under any such regulation, ruling,
instruction, order, directive, or license continue and may be enforced
as if such amendment, modification, or revocation had not been made.
Sec. 583.403 Termination and acquisition of an interest in blocked
property.
(a) Whenever a transaction licensed or authorized by or pursuant to
this part results in the transfer of property (including any property
interest) away from a person whose property and interests in property
are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201, such property shall no longer be
deemed to be property blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201, unless there
exists in the property another interest that is blocked pursuant to
Sec. 583.201, the transfer of which has not been effected pursuant to
license or other authorization.
(b) Unless otherwise specifically provided in a license or
authorization issued pursuant to this part, if property (including any
property interest) is transferred or attempted to be transferred to a
person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to
Sec. 583.201, such property shall be deemed to be property in which
such person has an interest and therefore blocked.
Sec. 583.404 Transactions ordinarily incident to a licensed
transaction.
(a) Any transaction ordinarily incident to a licensed transaction
and necessary to give effect thereto is also authorized, except:
(1) An ordinarily incident transaction, not explicitly authorized
within the terms of the license, by or with a person whose property and
interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201; or
(2) An ordinarily incident transaction, not explicitly authorized
within the terms of the license, involving a debit to a blocked account
or a transfer of blocked property.
(b) For example, a license authorizing a person to complete a
securities sale involving Company A, whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201, also authorizes other
persons to engage in activities that are ordinarily incident and
necessary to complete the sale, including transactions by the buyer,
broker, transfer agents, and banks, provided that such other persons
are not themselves persons whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.
Sec. 583.405 Provision and receipt of services.
(a) The prohibitions contained in Sec. 583.201 apply to services
performed in the United States or by U.S. persons, wherever located:
(1) On behalf of or for the benefit of any person whose property
and interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201; or
(2) With respect to property interests of any person whose property
and interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.
(b) The prohibitions on transactions contained in Sec. 583.201
apply to services received in the United States or by U.S. persons,
wherever located, where the service is performed by, or at the
direction of, a person whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.
(c) For example, U.S. persons may not, except as authorized by or
pursuant to this part, provide legal, accounting,
[[Page 17736]]
financial, brokering, freight forwarding, transportation, public
relations, or other services to any person whose property and interests
in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201, or negotiate with or
enter into contracts signed by a person whose property and interests in
property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.
Note 1 to Sec. 583.405. See Sec. Sec. 583.507 and 583.509 for
general licenses authorizing the provision of certain legal and
emergency medical services.
Sec. 583.406 Offshore transactions involving blocked property.
The prohibitions in Sec. 583.201 on transactions or dealings
involving blocked property, as defined in Sec. 583.301, apply to
transactions by any U.S. person in a location outside the United
States.
Sec. 583.407 Payments from blocked accounts to satisfy obligations
prohibited.
Pursuant to Sec. 583.201, no debits may be made to a blocked
account to pay obligations to U.S. persons or other persons, except as
authorized by or pursuant to this part.
Note 1 to Sec. 583.407. See also Sec. 583.502(e), which
provides that no license or other authorization contained in or
issued pursuant to this part authorizes transfers of or payments
from blocked property or debits to blocked accounts unless the
license or other authorization explicitly authorizes the transfer of
or payment from blocked property or the debit to a blocked account.
Sec. 583.408 Charitable contributions.
Unless specifically authorized by OFAC pursuant to this part, no
charitable contribution of funds, goods, services, or technology,
including contributions to relieve human suffering, such as food,
clothing, or medicine, may be made by, to, or for the benefit of, or
received from, a person whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201. For the purposes of this part, a
contribution is made by, to, or for the benefit of, or received from a
person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to
Sec. 583.201 if made by, to, or in the name of, or received from or in
the name of, such a person; if made by, to, or in the name of, or
received from or in the name of, an entity or individual acting for or
on behalf of, or owned or controlled by, such a person; or if made in
an attempt to violate, to evade, or to avoid the bar on the provision
of contributions by, to, or for the benefit of such a person, or the
receipt of contributions from such a person.
Sec. 583.409 Credit extended and cards issued by financial
institutions to a person whose property and interests in property are
blocked.
The prohibition in Sec. 583.201 on dealing in property subject to
that section prohibits U.S. financial institutions from performing
under any existing credit agreements, including charge cards, debit
cards, or other credit facilities issued by a financial institution to
a person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant
to Sec. 583.201.
Sec. 583.410 Setoffs prohibited.
A setoff against blocked property (including a blocked account),
whether by a U.S. financial institution or other U.S. person, is a
prohibited transfer under Sec. 583.201 if effected after the effective
date.
Sec. 583.411 Entities owned by one or more persons whose property and
interests in property are blocked.
Persons whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to Sec. 583.201 have an interest in all property and
interests in property of an entity in which such persons directly or
indirectly own, whether individually or in the aggregate, a 50 percent
or greater interest. The property and interests in property of such an
entity, therefore, are blocked, and such an entity is a person whose
property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec.
583.201, regardless of whether the name of the entity is incorporated
into OFAC's Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List
(SDN List).
Sec. 583.412 Entities of which one or more blocked persons is a
member, leader, official, senior executive officer, or otherwise
exercises control.
(a) The property and interests in property of an entity, including
any political subdivision, agency, or instrumentality of a governmental
entity, are not blocked solely because one or more persons whose
property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec.
583.201 is a member, leader, official, senior executive officer, or
otherwise exercises control.
Note 1 to paragraph (a). See Sec. 583.411 concerning the
blocked status of property and interests in property of an entity
that is directly or indirectly owned, whether individually or in the
aggregate, 50 percent or more by one or more persons whose property
and interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.
(b) For example, U.S. persons may not, except as authorized or
exempt pursuant to this part, engage in the following transactions
with a person whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to Sec. 583.201: enter into contracts that are signed by a
blocked person, enter into negotiations with a blocked person, or
process transactions, directly or indirectly, on behalf of a person
whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to
Sec. 583.201. However, U.S. persons are not prohibited from
engaging in a routine interaction with an agency in which a blocked
person is an official, but which does not involve the blocked person
directly or indirectly.
Note 2 to Sec. 583.412. OFAC encourages U.S. persons to be
cautious in engaging in transactions with any entity of which a
person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant
to Sec. 583.201 is a member, leader, official, senior executive
officer, or otherwise exercises control to ensure that U.S. persons
are not engaged in transactions, directly or indirectly, with a
blocked person, except as authorized or exempt pursuant to this
part.
Subpart E--Licenses, Authorizations, and Statements of Licensing
Policy
Sec. 583.501 General and specific licensing procedures.
For provisions relating to licensing procedures, see part 501,
subpart E, of this chapter. Licensing actions taken pursuant to part
501 of this chapter with respect to the prohibitions contained in this
part are considered actions taken pursuant to this part. General
licenses and statements of licensing policy relating to this part also
may be available through the Global Magnitsky sanctions page on OFAC's
website: www.treas.gov/ofac.
Sec. 583.502 Effect of license or other authorization.
(a) No license or other authorization contained in this part, or
otherwise issued by OFAC, authorizes or validates any transaction
effected prior to the issuance of such license or other authorization,
unless specifically provided in such license or authorization.
(b) No regulation, ruling, instruction, order, directive, or
license authorizes any transaction prohibited under this part unless
the regulation, ruling, instruction, order, directive, or license is
issued by OFAC and specifically refers to this part. No regulation,
ruling, instruction, order, directive, or license referring to this
part shall be deemed to authorize any transaction prohibited by any
other part of this chapter unless the regulation, ruling, instruction,
order, directive, or license specifically refers to such part.
(c) Any regulation, ruling, instruction, order, directive, or
license authorizing any transaction prohibited under this part has the
effect of removing a prohibition contained in this part from the
transaction, but only to the extent
[[Page 17737]]
specifically stated by its terms. Unless the regulation, ruling,
instruction, order, directive, or license otherwise specifies, such an
authorization does not create any right, duty, obligation, claim, or
interest in, or with respect to, any property that would not otherwise
exist under ordinary principles of law.
(d) Nothing contained in this part shall be construed to supersede
the requirements established under any other provision of law or to
relieve a person from any requirement to obtain a license or other
authorization from another department or agency of the U.S. government
in compliance with applicable laws and regulations subject to the
jurisdiction of that department or agency. For example, exports of
goods, services, or technical data that are not prohibited by this part
or that do not require a license by OFAC nevertheless may require
authorization by the U.S. Department of Commerce, the U.S. Department
of State, or other agencies of the U.S. government.
(e) No license or other authorization contained in or issued
pursuant to this part authorizes transfers of or payments from blocked
property or debits to blocked accounts unless the license or other
authorization explicitly authorizes the transfer of or payment from
blocked property or the debit to a blocked account.
(f) Any payment relating to a transaction authorized in or pursuant
to this part that is routed through the U.S. financial system should
reference the relevant OFAC general or specific license authorizing the
payment to avoid the blocking or rejection of the transfer.
Sec. 583.503 Exclusion from licenses.
OFAC reserves the right to exclude any person, property,
transaction, or class thereof from the operation of any license or from
the privileges conferred by any license. OFAC also reserves the right
to restrict the applicability of any license to particular persons,
property, transactions, or classes thereof. Such actions are binding
upon actual or constructive notice of the exclusions or restrictions.
Sec. 583.504 Payments and transfers to blocked accounts in U.S.
financial institutions.
Any payment of funds or transfer of credit in which a person whose
property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec.
583.201 has any interest that comes within the possession or control of
a U.S. financial institution must be blocked in an account on the books
of that financial institution. A transfer of funds or credit by a U.S.
financial institution between blocked accounts in its branches or
offices is authorized, provided that no transfer is made from an
account within the United States to an account held outside the United
States, and further provided that a transfer from a blocked account may
be made only to another blocked account held in the same name.
Note 1 to Sec. 583.504. See Sec. 501.603 of this chapter for
mandatory reporting requirements regarding financial transfers. See
also Sec. 583.203 concerning the obligation to hold blocked funds
in interest-bearing accounts.
Sec. 583.505 Entries in certain accounts for normal service charges.
(a) A U.S. financial institution is authorized to debit any blocked
account held at that financial institution in payment or reimbursement
for normal service charges owed it by the owner of that blocked
account.
(b) As used in this section, the term normal service charges shall
include charges in payment or reimbursement for interest due; cable,
telegraph, internet, or telephone charges; postage costs; custody fees;
small adjustment charges to correct bookkeeping errors; and, but not by
way of limitation, minimum balance charges, notary and protest fees,
and charges for reference books, photocopies, credit reports,
transcripts of statements, registered mail, insurance, stationery and
supplies, and other similar items.
Sec. 583.506 Investment and reinvestment of certain funds.
Subject to the requirements of Sec. 583.203, U.S. financial
institutions are authorized to invest and reinvest assets blocked
pursuant to Sec. 583.201, subject to the following conditions:
(a) The assets representing such investments and reinvestments are
credited to a blocked account or subaccount that is held in the same
name at the same U.S. financial institution, or within the possession
or control of a U.S. person, but funds shall not be transferred outside
the United States for this purpose;
(b) The proceeds of such investments and reinvestments shall not be
credited to a blocked account or subaccount under any name or
designation that differs from the name or designation of the specific
blocked account or subaccount in which such funds or securities were
held; and
(c) No immediate financial or economic benefit accrues (e.g.,
through pledging or other use) to a person whose property and interests
in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201.
Sec. 583.507 Provision of certain legal services.
(a) The provision of the following legal services to or on behalf
of persons whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to Sec. 583.201, is authorized, provided that any receipt of
payment of professional fees and reimbursement of incurred expenses
must be authorized pursuant to Sec. 583.508, which authorizes certain
payments for legal services from funds originating outside the United
States; via specific license; or otherwise pursuant to this part:
(1) Provision of legal advice and counseling on the requirements of
and compliance with the laws of the United States or any jurisdiction
within the United States, provided that such advice and counseling are
not provided to facilitate transactions in violation of this part;
(2) Representation of persons named as defendants in or otherwise
made parties to legal, arbitration, or administrative proceedings
before any U.S. federal, state, or local court or agency;
(3) Initiation and conduct of legal, arbitration, or administrative
proceedings before any U.S. federal, state, or local court or agency;
(4) Representation of persons before any U.S. federal, state, or
local court or agency with respect to the imposition, administration,
or enforcement of U.S. sanctions against such persons; and
(5) Provision of legal services in any other context in which
prevailing U.S. law requires access to legal counsel at public expense.
(b) The provision of any other legal services to or on behalf of
persons whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant
to Sec. 583.201, not otherwise authorized in this part, requires the
issuance of a specific license.
(c) U.S. persons do not need to obtain specific authorization to
provide related services, such as making filings and providing other
administrative services, that are ordinarily incident to the provision
of services authorized by paragraph (a) of this section. Additionally,
U.S. persons who provide services authorized by paragraph (a) of this
section do not need to obtain specific authorization to contract for
related services that are ordinarily incident to the provision of those
legal services, such as those provided by private investigators or
expert witnesses, or to pay for such services. See Sec. 583.404.
(d) Entry into a settlement agreement or the enforcement of any
lien, judgment, arbitral award, decree, or
[[Page 17738]]
other order through execution, garnishment, or other judicial process
purporting to transfer or otherwise alter or affect property or
interests in property blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201 is prohibited
unless licensed pursuant to this part.
Note 1 to Sec. 583.507. Pursuant to part 501, subpart E, of
this chapter, U.S. persons seeking administrative reconsideration or
judicial review of their designation or the blocking of their
property and interests in property may apply for a specific license
from OFAC to authorize the release of certain blocked funds for the
payment of professional fees and reimbursement of incurred expenses
for the provision of such legal services where alternative funding
sources are not available.
Sec. 583.508 Payments for legal services from funds originating
outside the United States.
(a) Professional fees and incurred expenses. (1) Receipt of payment
of professional fees and reimbursement of incurred expenses for the
provision of legal services authorized pursuant to Sec. 583.507(a) to
or on behalf of any person whose property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201 is authorized from funds originating
outside the United States, provided that the funds do not originate
from:
(i) A source within the United States;
(ii) Any source, wherever located, within the possession or control
of a U.S. person; or
(iii) Any individual or entity, other than the person on whose
behalf the legal services authorized pursuant to Sec. 583.507(a) are
to be provided, whose property and interests in property are blocked
pursuant to any part of this chapter or any Executive order or statute.
(2) Nothing in this paragraph (a) authorizes payments for legal
services using funds in which any other person whose property and
interests in property are blocked pursuant to Sec. 583.201, any other
part of this chapter, or any Executive order or statute has an
interest.
(b) Records. Consistent with Sec. 501.601 of this chapter, U.S.
persons who receive payments pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
must retain for five years from the date of the relevant payment a
record that specifies the following for each payment:
(1) The individual or entity from whom the funds originated and the
amount of funds received; and
(2) If applicable:
(i) The names of any individuals or entities providing related
services to the U.S. person receiving payment in connection with
authorized legal services, such as private investigators or expert
witnesses;
(ii) A general description of the services provided; and
(iii) The amount of funds paid in connection with such services.
(3) These records must be furnished to OFAC on demand consistent
with Sec. 501.602 of this chapter.
Sec. 583.509 Emergency medical services.
The provision and receipt of nonscheduled emergency medical
services that are prohibited by this part are authorized.
Sec. 583.510 Official business of the United States government.
All transactions prohibited by this part that are for the conduct
of the official business of the United States government by employees,
grantees, or contractors thereof are authorized.
Sec. 583.511 Official business of certain international organizations
and entities.
All transactions prohibited by this part that are for the conduct
of the official business of the following entities by employees,
grantees, or contractors thereof are authorized:
(a) The United Nations, including its Programmes, Funds, and Other
Entities and Bodies, as well as its Specialized Agencies and Related
Organizations;
(b) The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes
(ICSID) and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA);
(c) The African Development Bank Group, the Asian Development Bank,
the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and the Inter-
American Development Bank Group (IDB Group), including any fund entity
administered or established by any of the foregoing;
(d) The International Committee of the Red Cross and the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies; and
(e) The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, and
Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
Sec. 583.512 Certain transactions in support of nongovernmental
organizations' activities.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, all
transactions prohibited by this part that are ordinarily incident and
necessary to the activities described in paragraph (b) of this section
by a nongovernmental organization are authorized, provided that the
nongovernmental organization is not a person whose property or
interests in property are blocked pursuant to this part.
(b) The activities referenced in paragraph (a) of this section are
non-commercial activities designed to directly benefit the civilian
population that fall into one of the following categories:
(1) Activities to support humanitarian projects to meet basic human
needs, including disaster, drought, or flood relief; food, nutrition,
or medicine distribution; the provision of health services; assistance
for vulnerable or displaced populations, including individuals with
disabilities and the elderly; and environmental programs;
(2) Activities to support democracy building, including activities
to support rule of law, citizen participation, government
accountability and transparency, human rights and fundamental freedoms,
access to information, and civil society development projects;
(3) Activities to support education, including combating
illiteracy, increasing access to education, international exchanges,
and assisting education reform projects;
(4) Activities to support non-commercial development projects
directly benefiting civilians, including those related to health, food
security, and water and sanitation;
(5) Activities to support environmental and natural resource
protection, including the preservation and protection of threatened or
endangered species, responsible and transparent management of natural
resources, and the remediation of pollution or other environmental
damage; and
(6) Activities to support disarmament, demobilization, and
reintegration (DDR) programs and peacebuilding, conflict prevention,
and conflict resolution programs.
(c) This section does not authorize funds transfers initiated or
processed with knowledge or reason to know that the intended
beneficiary of such transfers is a person blocked pursuant to this
part, other than for the purpose of effecting the payment of taxes,
fees, or import duties, or the purchase or receipt of permits,
licenses, or public utility services.
(d) Specific licenses may be issued on a case-by-case basis to
authorize nongovernmental or other entities to engage in other
activities designed to directly benefit the civilian population,
including support for the removal of landmines and economic development
projects directly benefiting the civilian population.
Note 1 to Sec. 583.512. This section does not relieve any
person authorized thereunder from complying with any other
applicable laws or regulations.
[[Page 17739]]
Sec. 583.513 Transactions related to the provision of agricultural
commodities, medicine, medical devices, replacement parts and
components, or software updates for personal, non-commercial use.
(a) All transactions prohibited by this part that are related to
the provision, directly or indirectly, of agricultural commodities,
medicine, medical devices, replacement parts and components for medical
devices, or software updates for medical devices to an individual whose
property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this part
are authorized, provided the items are in quantities consistent with
personal, non-commercial use.
(b) For the purposes of this section, agricultural commodities,
medicine, and medical devices are defined as follows:
(1) Agricultural commodities. For the purposes of this section,
agricultural commodities are:
(i) Products that fall within the term ``agricultural commodity''
as defined in section 102 of the Agricultural Trade Act of 1978 (7
U.S.C. 5602); and
(ii) That are intended for ultimate use as:
(A) Food for humans (including raw, processed, and packaged foods;
live animals; vitamins and minerals; food additives or supplements; and
bottled drinking water) or animals (including animal feeds);
(B) Seeds for food crops;
(C) Fertilizers or organic fertilizers; or
(D) Reproductive materials (such as live animals, fertilized eggs,
embryos, and semen) for the production of food animals.
(2) Medicine. For the purposes of this section, medicine is an item
that falls within the definition of the term ``drug'' in section 201 of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 321).
(3) Medical devices. For the purposes of this section, a medical
device is an item that falls within the definition of ``device'' in
section 201 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C.
321).
Note 1 to Sec. 583.513. This section does not relieve any
person authorized thereunder from complying with any other
applicable laws or regulations.
Subpart F--[Reserved]
Subpart G--Penalties and Findings of Violation
Sec. 583.701 Penalties.
(a) Section 206 of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act
(50 U.S.C. 1705) (IEEPA) is applicable to violations of the provisions
of any regulation in this part, ruling, instruction, order, directive,
or license issued by or pursuant to the direction or authorization of
the Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to this part or otherwise under
IEEPA.
(1) A civil penalty not to exceed the amount set forth in section
206 of IEEPA may be imposed on any person who violates, attempts to
violate, conspires to violate, or causes a violation of any regulation,
ruling, instruction, order, directive, license, or prohibition issued
under IEEPA.
(2) IEEPA provides for a maximum civil penalty not to exceed the
greater of $368,136 or an amount that is twice the amount of the
transaction that is the basis of the violation with respect to which
the penalty is imposed.
(3) A person who willfully commits, willfully attempts to commit,
willfully conspires to commit, or aids or abets in the commission of a
violation of any regulation in this part, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, license, or prohibition may, upon conviction, be fined not
more than $1,000,000, or if a natural person, be imprisoned for not
more than 20 years, or both.
(b)(1) The civil penalties provided in IEEPA are subject to
adjustment pursuant to the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment
Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-410, as amended, 28 U.S.C. 2461 note).
(2) The criminal penalties provided in IEEPA are subject to
adjustment pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3571.
(c) Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 1001, whoever, in any matter within the
jurisdiction of the executive, legislative, or judicial branch of the
government of the United States, knowingly and willfully falsifies,
conceals, or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact;
or makes any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or
representation; or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing
the same to contain any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent
statement or entry shall be fined under title 18, United States Code,
imprisoned, or both.
(d) Violations of this part may also be subject to other applicable
laws.
Sec. 583.702 Pre-Penalty Notice; settlement.
(a) When required. If OFAC has reason to believe that there has
occurred a violation of any provision of this part or a violation of
the provisions of any regulation, ruling, instruction, order,
directive, or license issued by or pursuant to the direction or
authorization of the Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to this part or
otherwise under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50
U.S.C. 1701 et seq.) and determines that a civil monetary penalty is
warranted, OFAC will issue a Pre-Penalty Notice informing the alleged
violator of the agency's intent to impose a monetary penalty. A Pre-
Penalty Notice shall be in writing. The Pre-Penalty Notice may be
issued whether or not another agency has taken any action with respect
to the matter. For a description of the contents of a Pre-Penalty
Notice, see appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(b) Response--(1) Right to respond. An alleged violator has the
right to respond to a Pre-Penalty Notice by making a written
presentation to OFAC. For a description of the information that should
be included in such a response, see appendix A to part 501 of this
chapter.
(2) Deadline for response. A response to a Pre-Penalty Notice must
be made within 30 days as set forth in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (ii) of
this section. The failure to submit a response within 30 days shall be
deemed to be a waiver of the right to respond.
(i) Computation of time for response. A response to a Pre-Penalty
Notice must be postmarked or date-stamped by the U.S. Postal Service
(or foreign postal service, if mailed abroad) or courier service
provider (if transmitted to OFAC by courier), or dated if sent by
email, on or before the 30th day after the postmark date on the
envelope in which the Pre-Penalty Notice was mailed or date the Pre-
Penalty Notice was emailed. If the Pre-Penalty Notice was personally
delivered by a non-U.S. Postal Service agent authorized by OFAC, a
response must be postmarked or date-stamped on or before the 30th day
after the date of delivery.
(ii) Extensions of time for response. If a due date falls on a
Federal holiday or weekend, that due date is extended to include the
following business day. Any other extensions of time will be granted,
at the discretion of OFAC, only upon specific request to OFAC.
(3) Form and method of response. A response to a Pre-Penalty Notice
need not be in any particular form, but it must be typewritten and
signed by the alleged violator or a representative thereof (electronic
signature is acceptable), contain information sufficient to indicate
that it is in response to the Pre-Penalty Notice, and include the OFAC
identification number listed on the Pre-Penalty Notice. The response
must be sent to OFAC's Enforcement Division by mail or courier or email
and must be postmarked or date-stamped in accordance with paragraph
(b)(2) of this section.
(c) Settlement. Settlement discussion may be initiated by OFAC, the
alleged
[[Page 17740]]
violator, or the alleged violator's authorized representative. For a
description of practices with respect to settlement, see appendix A to
part 501 of this chapter.
(d) Guidelines. Guidelines for the imposition or settlement of
civil penalties by OFAC are contained in appendix A to part 501 of this
chapter.
(e) Representation. A representative of the alleged violator may
act on behalf of the alleged violator, but any oral communication with
OFAC prior to a written submission regarding the specific allegations
contained in the Pre-Penalty Notice must be preceded by a written
letter of representation, unless the Pre-Penalty Notice was served upon
the alleged violator in care of the representative.
Sec. 583.703 Penalty imposition.
If, after considering any written response to the Pre-Penalty
Notice and any relevant facts, OFAC determines that there was a
violation by the alleged violator named in the Pre-Penalty Notice and
that a civil monetary penalty is appropriate, OFAC may issue a Penalty
Notice to the violator containing a determination of the violation and
the imposition of the monetary penalty. For additional details
concerning issuance of a Penalty Notice, see appendix A to part 501 of
this chapter. The issuance of the Penalty Notice shall constitute final
agency action. The violator has the right to seek judicial review of
that final agency action in Federal district court.
Sec. 583.704 Administrative collection; referral to United States
Department of Justice.
In the event that the violator does not pay the penalty imposed
pursuant to this part or make payment arrangements acceptable to OFAC,
the matter may be referred for administrative collection measures by
the Department of the Treasury or to the United States Department of
Justice for appropriate action to recover the penalty in a civil suit
in a Federal district court.
Sec. 583.705 Findings of Violation.
(a) When issued. (1) OFAC may issue an initial Finding of Violation
that identifies a violation if OFAC:
(i) Determines that there has occurred a violation of any provision
of this part, or a violation of the provisions of any regulation,
ruling, instruction, order, directive, or license issued by or pursuant
to the direction or authorization of the Secretary of the Treasury
pursuant to this part or otherwise under the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.);
(ii) Considers it important to document the occurrence of a
violation; and
(iii) Based on the Guidelines contained in appendix A to part 501
of this chapter, concludes that an administrative response is warranted
but that a civil monetary penalty is not the most appropriate response.
(2) An initial Finding of Violation shall be in writing and may be
issued whether or not another agency has taken any action with respect
to the matter. For additional details concerning issuance of a Finding
of Violation, see appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(b) Response--(1) Right to respond. An alleged violator has the
right to contest an initial Finding of Violation by providing a written
response to OFAC.
(2) Deadline for response; default determination. A response to an
initial Finding of Violation must be made within 30 days as set forth
in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section. The failure to submit
a response within 30 days shall be deemed to be a waiver of the right
to respond, and the initial Finding of Violation will become final and
will constitute final agency action. The violator has the right to seek
judicial review of that final agency action in Federal district court.
(i) Computation of time for response. A response to an initial
Finding of Violation must be postmarked or date-stamped by the U.S.
Postal Service (or foreign postal service, if mailed abroad) or courier
service provider (if transmitted to OFAC by courier), or dated if sent
by email, on or before the 30th day after the postmark date on the
envelope in which the initial Finding of Violation was served or date
the Finding of Violation was sent by email. If the initial Finding of
Violation was personally delivered by a non-U.S. Postal Service agent
authorized by OFAC, a response must be postmarked or date-stamped on or
before the 30th day after the date of delivery.
(ii) Extensions of time for response. If a due date falls on a
federal holiday or weekend, that due date is extended to include the
following business day. Any other extensions of time will be granted,
at the discretion of OFAC, only upon specific request to OFAC.
(3) Form and method of response. A response to an initial Finding
of Violation need not be in any particular form, but it must be
typewritten and signed by the alleged violator or a representative
thereof (electronic signature is acceptable), contain information
sufficient to indicate that it is in response to the initial Finding of
Violation, and include the OFAC identification number listed on the
initial Finding of Violation. The response must be sent to OFAC's
Enforcement Division by mail or courier or email and must be postmarked
or date-stamped in accordance with paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(4) Information that should be included in response. Any response
should set forth in detail why the alleged violator either believes
that a violation of the regulations in this part did not occur and/or
why a Finding of Violation is otherwise unwarranted under the
circumstances, with reference to the General Factors Affecting
Administrative Action set forth in the Guidelines contained in appendix
A to part 501 of this chapter. The response should include all
documentary or other evidence available to the alleged violator that
supports the arguments set forth in the response. OFAC will consider
all relevant materials submitted in the response.
(c) Determination--(1) Determination that a Finding of Violation is
warranted. If, after considering the response, OFAC determines that a
final Finding of Violation should be issued, OFAC will issue a final
Finding of Violation that will inform the violator of its decision. A
final Finding of Violation shall constitute final agency action. The
violator has the right to seek judicial review of that final agency
action in Federal district court.
(2) Determination that a Finding of Violation is not warranted. If,
after considering the response, OFAC determines a Finding of Violation
is not warranted, then OFAC will inform the alleged violator of its
decision not to issue a final Finding of Violation.
Note 1 to paragraph (c)(2). A determination by OFAC that a
final Finding of Violation is not warranted does not preclude OFAC
from pursuing other enforcement actions consistent with the
Guidelines contained in appendix A to part 501 of this chapter.
(d) Representation. A representative of the alleged violator may
act on behalf of the alleged violator, but any oral communication with
OFAC prior to a written submission regarding the specific alleged
violations contained in the initial Finding of Violation must be
preceded by a written letter of representation, unless the initial
Finding of Violation was served upon the alleged violator in care of
the representative.
Bradley T. Smith,
Director, Office of Foreign Assets Control.
[FR Doc. 2024-05207 Filed 3-11-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-AL-P