News
Print Article

SRA reported two law firms to OFSI for breaching sanctions on Russia.

24/07/2024

The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) has reported two law firms to the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI), part of the Treasury, for breaching sanctions on Russia.

The law firms in both cases were allegedly facilitating transactions worth more than £300,000.

In her sixth annual report as the SRA’s money laundering reporting officer, presented at this month’s meeting of its main board, Sara Gwilliam said.

  • She had assumed responsibility for reporting any known or suspected sanctions breaches to OFSI. However, no further details of the alleged breaches were given.

The sixth annual report as the SRA’s money laundering reporting officer is here.

The SRA wrote in January this year to over 1,000 law firms outside the scope of the money laundering regulations, which admitted not having basic controls in place to mitigate the risk of sanctions breaches. All law firms must comply with the sanctions regime.

City lawyers complained last summer that the latest tightening of the Russian sanctions’ regime for legal services, which came into force in June 2023, had gone too far and would “weaken, rather than strengthen” the UK’s sanctions regime.

Elsewhere in her report, Ms Gwilliam said

  • That conveyancing remained “by far the highest risk area for illicit finance and money laundering in our reports”.
  • As result of 36 internal reports, she submitted
    • 23 suspicious activity reports (SARs) to the National Crime Agency from April 2023 to April 2024,
    • Involving more than £75m in suspect transactions or arrangements involving the legal profession – similar to last year.
  • Three-quarters of the SARs submitted involved conveyancing work, primarily residential rather than commercial.
  • Nearly two-thirds of the SARs related to activities carried out at small firms (with no more than ten fee-earners), a little lower than last year.

Ms Gwilliam said:-

  • That other aspect featured in the reports concerned transactions where no underlying legal work was carried out, leaving firms vulnerable to facilitating money laundering through misuse of their client account.
  • Also, firms were seen transacting proceeds from insurance frauds, such as motor vehicle and personal injury fraud.
  • Additionally, this year also saw us make our first SAR linked to proliferation financing involving the trading of large quantities of high-value dual-use goods.” Proliferation financing refers to providing funds or services related to weapons of mass destruction.
  • Firms “not conducting any or sufficient due diligence and source of funding checks on their clients, or third parties, was a key theme in many of the cases we reported”.
  • In other cases, law firms did not “properly scrutinise the information they received, which should have triggered concerns about the legitimacy of the funds or instruction they were involved with”.
  • That, in a small number of cases, “firms did identify money laundering red flags and formed a suspicion but failed to make a SAR” themselves.
  • In addition to the SARs, she said that 410 cases involving potential money laundering, terrorist financing, or sanctions-related risks were flagged—a rise from 359 last year.
  • “This early warning system meant any cases assessed as posing a specific financial crime risk could be monitored to track follow-up investigations.”

Source

YOUTUBE-IMAGE SANCTIONS

The Team

Meet the team of industry experts behind Comsure

Find out more

Latest News

Keep up to date with the very latest news from Comsure

Find out more

Gallery

View our latest imagery from our news and work

Find out more

Contact

Think we can help you and your business? Chat to us today

Get In Touch

News Disclaimer

As well as owning and publishing Comsure's copyrighted works, Comsure wishes to use the copyright-protected works of others. To do so, Comsure is applying for exemptions in the UK copyright law. There are certain very specific situations where Comsure is permitted to do so without seeking permission from the owner. These exemptions are in the copyright sections of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (as amended)[www.gov.UK/government/publications/copyright-acts-and-related-laws]. Many situations allow for Comsure to apply for exemptions. These include 1] Non-commercial research and private study, 2] Criticism, review and reporting of current events, 3] the copying of works in any medium as long as the use is to illustrate a point. 4] no posting is for commercial purposes [payment]. (for a full list of exemptions, please read here www.gov.uk/guidance/exceptions-to-copyright]. Concerning the exceptions, Comsure will acknowledge the work of the source author by providing a link to the source material. Comsure claims no ownership of non-Comsure content. The non-Comsure articles posted on the Comsure website are deemed important, relevant, and newsworthy to a Comsure audience (e.g. regulated financial services and professional firms [DNFSBs]). Comsure does not wish to take any credit for the publication, and the publication can be read in full in its original form if you click the articles link that always accompanies the news item. Also, Comsure does not seek any payment for highlighting these important articles. If you want any article removed, Comsure will automatically do so on a reasonable request if you email info@comsuregroup.com.