The U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control
(OFAC) has sanctioned three Chinese nationals and their cryptocurrency
addresses, alleging they violated money laundering and drug smuggling
laws.
OFAC named Xiaobing Yan, Fujing Zheng and Guanghua Zheng
as narcotics traffickers under the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin
Designation Act, freezing any property they own within the U.S. and
listing a number of email aliases, citizen numbers and passport
information for the three.
The agency also listed a number of bitcoin addresses, as well as one litecoin address, that the agency claims belong to the Chinese citizens.
According to a press release,
Fujing Zheng is a “significant foreign narcotics trafficker,” who
received support from Guanghua Zheng. Yan has separately been designated
“as a significant narcotics trafficker.”
In addition to naming the three individuals, OFAC listed Qinsheng
Pharmaceutical Technology Co. Ltd. and the Zheng Drug Trafficking
Organization in Wednesday’s update.
OFAC coordinated with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network
(FinCEN) and local law enforcement agencies, said Treasury Under
Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Sigal Mandelkar in a
statement.
The group specifically coordinated Wednesday’s designations with the
U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio, the U.S.
Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi, the
Department of Justice’s Criminal Division, the Drug Enforcement
Administration’s (DEA) Cleveland and Gulfport offices and DEA’s Special
Operations Division, the release stated.
“The Chinese kingpins that OFAC designated today run an international
drug trafficking operation that manufactures and sells lethal
narcotics, directly contributing to the crisis of opioid addiction,
overdoses, and death in the United States,” Mandelkar said, adding:
“[Fujing] Zheng and Yan have shipped hundreds of packages
of synthetic opioids to the U.S., targeting customers through online
advertising and sales, and using commercial mail carriers to smuggle
their drugs into the United States.”
Second action
Wednesday’s action marks the second time OFAC has sanctioned digital
currency addresses specifically, having last done so in November 2018
when a pair of Iranian nationals were added to the Specially Designated
Nationals list.
At the time, Mandelker said the agency was “publishing digital
currency addresses to identify illicit actors operating in the digital
currency space.”
Individuals who violate the Kingpin Act
might face civil penalties of a $1.1 million fine per violation, in
addition to possible criminal penalties of a $5 million fine and up to
30 years in prison.
Drew Hinkes, general counsel at Athena Blockchain and an attorney
with Carlton Fields, told CoinDesk that any property or interests in
property that the three have in the U.S. must now be blocked and
reported to OFAC.
“U.S. entities need to comply with OFAC requirements and need to shut down any accounts that are listed,” he said.
According to the SDN list, the following addresses have been affiliated with the individuals.
Xiaobing Yan:
- 12QtD5BFwRsdNsAZY76UVE1xyCGNTojH9h
- 1Kuf2Rd8mDyAViwBozGTNYnvWL8uYFrkVo
- 13f59kUM5FU8MfTG7DCEugYarDhSD7XCoC
- 1P3ZfGFLezzYGg9k5SVzQmnjyh7nrUmF2y
- 1EpMiZkQVekM5ij12nMiEwttFPcDK9XhX6
- 1JREJdZupiFhE7ZzQPtASuMCvvpXC7wRsC
Fujing Zheng:
Guanghua Zheng:
- 33Kja69SQVc8kozpoP7Qw6HFtGxHkiWzTz
- 3MkUNScqf21EcfWq6T4x2MFgBeSTqhB5t6
- 18uKfaUjgG52rVeXEi3wxnveww7zZuECtE
- LaizKtS5DUhPuP1nTQcc83MS7HwK6vk85z
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