On December 1, 2016, the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI), which is a part of HM Treasury, published the UK Government's proposed approach to imposing financial penalties for breach of financial sanctions. OFSI was established earlier in 2016 and has responsibility for ensuring that sanctions are "properly understood, implemented and enforced in the UK." Financial sanctions may include prohibitions on the transfer of funds to a sanctioned country, freezing of the assets of a government, corporate entities or citizens of a particular country or targeted freezing of assets of individuals or legal entities.

Provisions in the Policing and Crime Bill, currently going through Parliament, outline new administrative penalties, civil monetary penalties and an increase in the maximum custodial sentence for breaching financial sanctions to seven years on conviction on indictment (or six months' imprisonment on summary conviction) for breach of financial sanctions. OFSI is seeking feedback on its proposed Guidance on the circumstances in which it may consider that a monetary penalty is suitable and how it will set the penalty amount as well as the process for imposing a penalty and the circumstances in which details of any penalty may be published. The consultation closes on January 26, 2017. OFSI has stated that either interim or final Guidance will be published before the power to impose penalties comes into effect in April 2017. The proposed Guidance is based on the current version of the Bill and may need to be amended as appropriate once the final legislation is published.

The consultation paper is available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/574669/Monetary_sanctions_consultation_final.pdf.

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