Trade Compliance Brief - Export Control and Sanctions Insights

Sanctions Evasion via Turkey & Kyrgyzstan: German Brothers Jailed

15 min · 17. Juli 2026
Episode Sanctions Evasion via Turkey & Kyrgyzstan: German Brothers Jailed Cover

Beschreibung

How do export control authorities dismantle third-country circumvention networks? In this episode of the Trade Compliance Brief, we analyze the recent high-profile prosecution of two German managing directors who bypassed EU sanctions to supply Russian entities. We break down the anatomy of their scheme—which utilized shell companies in Turkey and Kyrgyzstan to ship 65 consignments of engineering equipment—and discuss the severe consequences of export control violations, including mid-trial guilty pleas and looming multi-year prison sentences. Key Takeaways in this Episode: * The mechanics of masking end-users through intermediary countries like Turkey and Kyrgyzstan. * Why standard due diligence is no longer enough when dealing with high-risk transshipment hubs. * The reality of personal liability for managing directors under the German Foreign Trade and Payments Act (AWG). * Tune in to understand how this case impacts corporate compliance programs and what steps you must take to secure your supply chain against sophisticated evasion tactics. Target Keywords: Export Control, EU Sanctions, Trade Compliance, Russia Embargo, Sanctions Evasion, Supply Chain Due Diligence, AWG, Foreign Trade and Payments Act, Circumvention.

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Episode Sanctions Evasion via Turkey & Kyrgyzstan: German Brothers Jailed Cover

Sanctions Evasion via Turkey & Kyrgyzstan: German Brothers Jailed

How do export control authorities dismantle third-country circumvention networks? In this episode of the Trade Compliance Brief, we analyze the recent high-profile prosecution of two German managing directors who bypassed EU sanctions to supply Russian entities. We break down the anatomy of their scheme—which utilized shell companies in Turkey and Kyrgyzstan to ship 65 consignments of engineering equipment—and discuss the severe consequences of export control violations, including mid-trial guilty pleas and looming multi-year prison sentences. Key Takeaways in this Episode: * The mechanics of masking end-users through intermediary countries like Turkey and Kyrgyzstan. * Why standard due diligence is no longer enough when dealing with high-risk transshipment hubs. * The reality of personal liability for managing directors under the German Foreign Trade and Payments Act (AWG). * Tune in to understand how this case impacts corporate compliance programs and what steps you must take to secure your supply chain against sophisticated evasion tactics. Target Keywords: Export Control, EU Sanctions, Trade Compliance, Russia Embargo, Sanctions Evasion, Supply Chain Due Diligence, AWG, Foreign Trade and Payments Act, Circumvention.

17. Juli 202615 min
Episode Anatomy of Evasion: The €6.6M Fake Transit Scheme and CEO Prison Sentence in Finland Cover

Anatomy of Evasion: The €6.6M Fake Transit Scheme and CEO Prison Sentence in Finland

How do 164 heavy trucks bound for Kazakhstan disappear into Russia? In this episode, we unpack the landmark Finnish sanctions evasion case involving Idän Liikenteenvälitys IL Oy and its CEO, Risto Riihimäki. Sentenced to nearly four years in prison, Riihimäki’s case serves as a stark warning to the logistics and transport sectors about the severe consequences of violating EU sanctions. We break down the mechanics of the "transit diversion" loophole, the aggressive asset forfeiture totaling over €6.6 million, and the critical red flags that trade compliance professionals must monitor when dealing with Central Asian trade corridors. Key Takeaways in this Episode: * Understanding the mechanics of fake transit routes to Kazakhstan and Turkey. * The reality of personal criminal liability for C-suite executives in export control. * Strategies for identifying supply chain anomalies and securing robust end-user verification. Target Keywords / Tags: Trade Compliance, Export Controls, EU Sanctions, Russia Sanctions, Supply Chain Risk, Customs Enforcement, Transit Diversion, Dual-Use Goods, Logistics Liability, Corporate Liability.

7. Juli 202619 min
Episode SEC Fines Merrill Lynch $7.5M: The Danger of Automated Screening Engines Cover

SEC Fines Merrill Lynch $7.5M: The Danger of Automated Screening Engines

In this episode of the Trade Compliance Brief, we dive into the latest regulatory crackdown from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). On June 29, 2026, the SEC penalized Merrill Lynch $7.5 million for systemic failures in their Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) programs. Discover how a flawed, rigid threshold in an automated transaction monitoring system created a multi-year blind spot, allowing hundreds of millions of dollars in suspicious transactions—including large round-dollar wires and high-risk geographical transfers—to bypass federal disclosure. We break down the timeline from April 2020 to September 2024 and discuss why treating compliance software as a "set it and forget it" solution is a critical regulatory red flag. Key Takeaways in this Episode: * The specifics of the SEC's $7.5 million cease-and-desist order against Merrill Lynch. * How an arbitrary risk score threshold (of 20 or higher) led to massive reporting failures. * The crucial difference between automated tracking and active human governance in compliance programs. * Why recidivism (Merrill's third SAR-related failure since 2017) triggers severe regulatory scrutiny. Keywords: Trade Compliance, SEC Enforcement, Merrill Lynch, Anti-Money Laundering, AML, Suspicious Activity Reports, SARs, Bank Secrecy Act, BSA, FinCEN, Compliance Automation, Financial Crime, Regulatory Fines, Export Control.

2. Juli 202621 min
Episode China Retaliates: Analyzing the MOF Procurement Ban on 46 US Companies & The Localized Carve-Out Cover

China Retaliates: Analyzing the MOF Procurement Ban on 46 US Companies & The Localized Carve-Out

In this episode of the Trade Compliance Brief, we break down the June 22, 2026, regulatory action by China’s Ministry of Finance (MOF) targeting 46 US companies. Moving beyond the headlines, we analyze the critical compliance nuances of this government procurement ban—specifically the strategic exemption for US-funded enterprises operating within China. We explore what this means for global supply chain mapping, localized production, and the escalating tit-for-tat in international trade controls. Key Takeaways: * The Scope of the Action: Details of the MOF directive banning the procurement of products from 46 specific US entities in Chinese government tenders. * The "In-China" Exemption: Why the exclusion of localized US-funded enterprises is a game-changer for supply chain strategy and how it complicates origin determination. * Strategic Implications: How this move fits into the broader landscape of US-China trade tensions, MOFCOM actions, and reciprocal economic statecraft. * Actionable Advice: Steps global trade control teams must take to audit their supply chains and assess their exposure to Chinese government procurement markets. Tags / Keywords: Trade Compliance, Export Controls, China Sanctions, Ministry of Finance, MOFCOM, Supply Chain Risk, Government Procurement, Geopolitics, US-China Trade, EAR, OFAC. https://www.mofcom.gov.cn/zwgk/zcfb/art/2026/art_dfa9cc5c1e004d7fbb86f83d249e7986.html [https://www.mofcom.gov.cn/zwgk/zcfb/art/2026/art_dfa9cc5c1e004d7fbb86f83d249e7986.html] https://gks.mof.gov.cn/guizhangzhidu/202606/t20260622_3991936.htm?utm [https://gks.mof.gov.cn/guizhangzhidu/202606/t20260622_3991936.htm?utm=]

23. Juni 202617 min
Episode UK OFSI's Historic £1M Sanctions Fine: Analyzing the SGTL Circumvention Case & New Enforcement Framework Cover

UK OFSI's Historic £1M Sanctions Fine: Analyzing the SGTL Circumvention Case & New Enforcement Framework

In this episode of the Trade Compliance Brief, we break down the historic enforcement action taken by the UK Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI) against UK travel technology provider Sabre Global Technologies Limited (SGTL). Resulting in a record-setting civil monetary penalty of £1,000,920.59, this case marks a major turning point in UK sanctions enforcement strategy. We dive deep into the legal complexities of the case, exploring how SGTL continued to provide Global Distribution System (GDS) access to Russia’s Ural Airlines for seven months following its May 2022 designation. Crucially, we unpack the mechanics of OFSI's first-ever penalization of a "circumvention offence," highlighting the company's attempts to utilize alternative, non-UK banking rails to run test payments after standard UK payment routes were blocked.  Key Takeaways for Compliance Professionals: • The Reality of Circumvention: OFSI is actively policing and penalizing the intent to bypass financial systems, even at the "test payment" phase. • Governance is Critical: A lack of senior-level oversight and staffing deficiencies are treated as major aggravating factors. • The New Settlement Framework: How SGTL leveraged voluntary disclosure and cooperation under OFSI’s recently overhauled framework (February 2026 updates) to mitigate final penalty figures. • Extraterritorial Realities: The severe compliance risks present in ongoing SaaS, tech service delivery, and digital distribution networks to foreign entities. Source: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6a3162f63d2655c2bf5fa436/SGTL_-_Public_Penalty_Notice.pdf Keywords: Trade Compliance, Sanctions Enforcement, OFSI Penalty, Russia Sanctions Regulations, Sabre Global Technologies, SGTL, Circumvention Offence, Global Distribution System, Financial Sanctions, Corporate Governance, Voluntary Disclosure, UK Sanctions Framework, Russia Sanctions 2019, Ural Airlines.

19. Juni 202611 min