Konstantin Malofeyev,
Russian Oligarch Charged
with Violating U.S.
Sanctions
April 6, 2022
Defendant Hired
American Citizen Jack
Hanick to Work for His
Television Network in
Russia and Illegally
Transferred $10 Million
U.S. Investment to
Business Associate
A Russian national is
charged with violating
U.S. sanctions arising
from the 2014 Russian
undermining of
democratic processes and
institutions in Ukraine.
According to the
indictment, which was
unsealed today in the
Southern District of New
York, Konstantin
Malofeyev, 47, of
Russia, is charged with
conspiracy to violate
U.S. sanctions and
violations of U.S.
sanctions in connection
with his hiring of an
American citizen, Jack
Hanick, to work for him
in operating television
networks in Russia and
Greece and attempting to
acquire a television
network in Bulgaria. As
alleged, Malofeyev also
conspired with Hanick
and others to illegally
transfer a $10 million
investment that
Malofeyev made in a U.S.
bank to a business
associate in Greece, in
violation of the
sanctions blocking
Malofeyev’s assets from
being transferred. Along
with the indictment, the
United States issued a
seizure warrant for
Malofeyev’s U.S.
investment. Malofeyev
remains at large and is
believed to be in
Russia.
“The Justice Department
will work relentlessly
to counter Russian
aggression, including by
enforcing U.S. sanctions
law,” said Assistant
Attorney General Matthew
G. Olsen of the Justice
Department’s National
Security Division. “As
alleged in the
indictment, Konstantin
Malofeyev is a Russian
oligarch who has been
sanctioned since 2014
for threatening Ukraine
and providing financial
support to the Donetsk
separatist region.
Malofeyev knowingly
violated U.S. sanctions
by paying for services
of a U.S. person and by
seeking to transfer
money that had been
invested in the United
States.”
“Konstantin Malofeyev is
closely tied to Russian
aggression in Ukraine,
having been determined
by OFAC to have been one
of the main sources of
financing for the
promotion of
Russia-aligned
separatist groups
operating in the
sovereign nation of
Ukraine,” said U.S.
Attorney Damian Williams
for the Southern
District of New York.
“The United States
sanctions on Malofeyev
prohibit him from paying
or receiving services
from United States
citizens, or from
conducting transactions
with his property in the
United States. But as
alleged, he
systematically flouted
those restrictions for
years after being
sanctioned. The
indictment unsealed
today shows this
office’s commitment to
the enforcement of laws
intended to hamstring
those who would use
their wealth to
undermine fundamental
democratic processes.
This office will
continue to be a leader
in the Justice
Department’s work to
hold accountable actors
who would support
flagrant and unjustified
acts of war.”
“The allegations in this
case go back many years
showing just how much
effort the FBI and its
partners put into
investigating these
crimes,” said Assistant
Director Alan E. Kohler
Jr. of the FBI’s
Counterintelligence
Division. “According to
the indictment, the
defendant used shell
companies and other
means to hide his
deceptions and evade
important sanctions
meant to ensure the
territorial integrity of
Ukraine. While this case
is about violating
sanctions, it’s also
about bringing people to
justice who think they
can violate our laws
with impunity.”
“Kremlin-linked Russian
oligarch Konstantin
Malofeyev played a
leading role in
supporting Russia’s 2014
invasion of eastern
Ukraine, continues to
run a pro-Putin
propaganda network, and
recently described
Russia’s 2022 military
invasion of Ukraine as a
‘holy war,’” said
Assistant Director
Michael J. Driscoll of
the FBI’s New York Field
Office. “The FBI works
tirelessly to protect
our national interests,
and we will continue to
use all the resources at
our disposal to
aggressively counter
Russia’s malign activity
around the world.”
According to court
documents, in 2014, the
President issued
Executive Order 13660,
which declared a
national emergency with
respect to the situation
in Ukraine. To address
this national emergency,
the President blocked
all property and
interest in property
that came within the
United States or the
possession or control of
any U.S. person, of
individuals determined
by the Secretary of the
Treasury to be
responsible for or
complicit in actions or
policies that threatened
the peace, security,
stability, sovereignty
or territorial integrity
of Ukraine, or who
materially assist,
sponsor or provide
financial, material or
technological support
for, or goods and
services to, individuals
or entities engaging in
such activities.
Executive Order 13660,
along with certain
regulations issued
pursuant to it (the
Ukraine-Related
Sanctions Regulations)
prohibits, among other
things, making or
receiving any funds,
goods or services by,
to, from or for the
benefit of any person
whose property and
interests in property
are blocked.
On Dec. 19, 2014, the
Department of Treasury’s
Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC)
designated Konstantin
Malofeyev as a Specially
Designated National (SDN)
pursuant to Executive
Order 13660. OFAC’s
designation of Malofeyev
explained that he was
one of the main sources
of financing for
Russians promoting
separatism in Crimea,
and has materially
assisted, sponsored, and
provided financial,
material, or
technological support
for, or goods and
services to or in
support of the so-called
Donetsk People’s
Republic, a separatist
organization in the
Ukrainian region of
Donetsk.
As alleged in the
indictment, Malofeyev
hired a U.S. citizen
named Jack Hanick in
2013 to work on a new
Russian cable television
news network (the
Russian TV Network) that
Malofeyev was creating.
Malofeyev negotiated
directly with Hanick
regarding Hanick’s
salary, payment for
Hanick’s housing in
Moscow, and Hanick’s
Russian work visa, and
Malofeyev paid Hanick
through two separate
Russian entities through
the end of 2018.
After OFAC designated
Malofeyev as a SDN in
December 2014, Malofeyev
continued to employ
Hanick on the Russian TV
Network, in violation of
the Ukraine-Related
Sanctions Regulations.
Malofeyev also
dispatched Hanick to
work on a project to
establish and run a
Greek television network
and on efforts to
acquire a Bulgarian
television network. At
Malofeyev’s direction,
Hanick traveled to
Greece and to Bulgaria
on multiple occasions in
2015 and 2016 to work on
these initiatives and
reported directly back
to Malofeyev on his
work. For instance, in
November 2015, Hanick
wrote to Malofeyev that
the Greek television
network would be an
“opportunity to detail
Russia’s point of view
on Greek TV.” In
connection with
Malofeyev’s efforts to
acquire the Bulgarian
television network,
Malofeyev instructed
Hanick to take steps to
conceal Malofeyev’s role
in the acquisition by
conducting the
negotiations through a
Greek associate of
Malofeyev (the Greek
Business Associate), so
that it would appear the
buyer was a Greek
national rather than
Malofeyev.
Malofeyev also employed
Hanick to assist
Malofeyev in
transferring a $10
million investment in a
Texas-based bank holding
company (the Texas Bank)
to the Greek Business
Associate in violation
of the Ukraine-Related
Sanctions Regulations.
In 2014, Malofeyev used
a shell company to make
the investment, and
beginning in or about
March 2015, Malofeyev
began making plans to
transfer ownership of
the shell company to the
Greek Business Associate
as a means to transfer
the investment in the
Texas Bank. In or about
May 2015, Malofeyev’s
attorney drafted a Sale
and Purchase Agreement
that purported to
transfer the shell
company to the Greek
Business Associate in
exchange for one U.S.
dollar. In June 2015
Malofeyev had Hanick
physically transport a
copy of Malofeyev’s
certificate of shares in
the Texas Bank from
Moscow to Athens to be
given to the Greek
Business Associate.
Malofeyev signed the
Sale and Purchase
Agreement in June 2015,
but the agreement was
fraudulently backdated
to July 2014 to make it
appear that the transfer
had taken place prior to
the imposition of U.S.
sanctions. Malofeyev’s
attorney then falsely
represented to the Texas
Bank that the transfer
had taken place in July
2014, even though
Malofeyev and his
attorney well knew that
the transfer of the
shell company was
executed in June 2015.
Along
with the unsealed
indictment, a seizure
warrant was issued in
the Southern District of
New York for Malofeyev’s
Texas Bank investment,
which had been converted
by the Texas Bank in
2016 to cash held in a
blocked U.S. bank
account. The United
States recovered those
funds pursuant to the
warrant and will seek
forfeiture of those
funds as property that
constitutes or is
derived from proceeds
traceable to the
commission of the
offenses alleged in the
indictment.
Each of the two
sanctions charges in the
indictment carry a
maximum penalty of 20
years in prison. A
federal district court
judge will determine any
sentence after
considering the U.S.
Sentencing Guidelines
and other statutory
factors.
The FBI is investigating
the case, with valuable
assistance provided by
the Justice Department’s
National Security
Division and Office of
International Affairs.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Thane Rehn, Jessica
Greenwood, and Vladislav
Vainberg for the
Southern District of New
York are prosecuting the
case, with valuable
assistance provided by
Trial Attorney Nathan
Swinton of the National
Security Division’s
Counterintelligence and
Export Control Section.