Overview
On February 10, 2016, a draft of the Policing and Crime Bill 2015-16 (“the Bill”) was introduced to the UK House of Commons and given its First Reading. The Bill is a lengthy document covering a wide variety of issues, including financial sanctions, which are contained within Part 8.
Alongside the Bill, the UK government also published a factsheet on financial sanctions, which explains that as
[f]inancial sanctions are an important foreign policy and national security tool … new legislation is required in order to bring consistency to penalties across all the financial sanctions regimes, ensure that penalties for breached of financial sanctions have a sufficient deterrent effect, and provide the enforcement community with a broader and more flexible array of powers.This is because the enforcement measures currently available for a breach of financial sanctions are limited to criminal prosecution or an administrative warning letter. The Bill, as drafted, would introduce a new monetary penalty regime for breaches of financial sanctions. Furthermore, it is notable that under Sections 89 and 90 of the Bill, sentences for sanctions violations (including new offences), would be increased on summary conviction from six months to 12 months, and on conviction on indictment from two years to seven years. The Bill as currently drafted would also give the new Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (“OFSI”) – a new office of HM Treasury proposed in the Summer Budget 2015 by Chancellor George Osborne and set to become operational in April 2016 – the power to administer new civil penalties where prosecution is not in the public interest. Under Section 91 of the Bill, HM Treasury/OFSI would be granted the right to impose a monetary penalty of up to £1 million or 50% of the estimated value of funds or resources involved in a prohibited transaction, in cases where it was satisfied on the balance of probabilities that:
- the person has breached a prohibition, or failed to comply with an obligation, that is imposed by or under financial sanctions legislation; and
- the person knew, or had reasonable cause to suspect, that the person was in breach of the prohibition or (as the case may be) had failed to comply with the obligation.