By Luc Cohen and Sarah N. Lynch
NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. Department of Justice task force targeting assets of Russian oligarchs has seen evidence of attempts to evade those sanctions or move assets in anticipation of possible sanctions, the unit’s chief said on Friday.
Andrew Adams, a veteran prosecutor tapped to lead the department’s new “KleptoCapture” force last month, told Reuters in an interview that the level of cooperation between countries on probes into oligarchs’ ill-gotten gains had reached an “all-time high” in the wake of Russia’s assault on Ukraine – potentially helping prosecutors track down their efforts to hide wealth.
“There are efforts afoot – some of them publicly reported – to move, for example, moveable property in the forms of yachts, airplanes … into jurisdictions where, I think, people have the perception that it would be more difficult to investigate and more difficult to freeze,” Adams said.
The task force’s goal is to put the finances of Russian oligarchs under strain in a bid to pressure President Vladimir Putin to cease attacking Ukraine.
The unit’s name is a play on the word “kleptocracy,” a reference to corrupted officials who misuse power to accumulate wealth. The includes prosecutors, investigators and analysts from a multitude of federal agencies.
The United States and its allies have imposed several rounds of sanctions in recent weeks targeting Putin, many of his wealthy friends, and dozens of Russian businesses and government agencies, some of which are accused of spreading disinformation designed to destabilize the Ukrainian government.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Scott Malone and Grant McCool)