- Chief Compliance Officer and VP of Legal Affairs, Arrow Electronics
By Aaron Nicodemus2024-07-29T14:41:00
State Street Bank & Trust Co. will pay a $7.5 million fine to settle allegations by the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) that a subsidiary violated sanctions against Russia.
Charles River Systems, a Massachusetts-based software company that specializes in products that enable clients to communicate trading information, allegedly maintained business relationships with two Russian banks, Sberbank and VTB Bank, even after both were sanctioned in 2014 when Russia illegally annexed Crimea, according to OFAC’s enforcement release.
The agency said in a press release Friday that the apparent violations were egregious and not voluntary self-disclosed.
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2025-01-07T16:26:00Z By Aaron Nicodemus
Nearly three years after Russia invaded Ukraine, numerous U.S. sanctions imposed on Russia-based companies connected to the war effort have made doing business in the country fraught with unseen risks, as one U.S. airplane parts distributor learned recently.
2024-10-18T18:10:00Z By Adrianne Appel
A Vietnamese alcohol company has agreed to pay $860,000 to settle allegations by the Office of Foreign Assets Control that its business with North Korea involved U.S. financial institutions.
2024-07-24T15:50:00Z By Aaron Nicodemus
Financial institutions holding Russian sovereign assets that have not reported them to the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control are now required to do so by Aug. 2.
2025-05-13T13:18:00Z By Ian Sherr
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau continued advancing President Donald Trump’s pullback of corporate oversight last week, as it halted supervision of Alphabet’s Google Payment subsidiary. The move followed similar efforts by the Trump administration to weaken government enforcement efforts, particularly concerning digital currencies.
2025-05-08T21:43:00Z By Aaron Nicodemus
A decision by the Securities and Exchange Commission to close an investigation into the cash sweep program at Morgan Stanley may affect decision-making at other financial institutions under similar scrutiny.
2025-05-07T20:31:00Z By Oscar Gonzalez
The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) signaled a softer regulatory approach last month, easing its investigation of financial firms following the U.S. government’s broader efforts under President Donald Trump to scale back regulatory enforcement on businesses. The agency reaffirmed this pivot as it will ease scrutiny of “Buy Now, ...
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