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The U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control () has intensified its scrutiny of cross-border real estate and private equity transactions in 2025, imposing record penalties on firms and individuals found to have violated sanctions targeting Russia, Iran, and other sanctioned jurisdictions. Recent enforcement actions underscore a clear trend: OFAC is prioritizing strict liability for sanctions violations, with no leniency for claims of ignorance or reliance on external legal advice. For investors and gatekeepers in high-value, cross-border transactions, the stakes have never been higher.
In early 2025, OFAC
for facilitating the transfer of luxury condominiums from sanctioned to their non-sanctioned family members and shell companies. The case highlights how real estate transactions can be weaponized to evade sanctions, with OFAC emphasizing that "gatekeepers" like real estate agents and private equity managers bear responsibility for due diligence failures . Similarly, IPI Partners, LLC, a Chicago-based private equity firm, for managing a $50 million investment linked to Russian oligarch , who was designated under U.S. sanctions in 2018. OFAC noted the firm's "egregious" failure to conduct adequate due diligence, despite repeated public warnings about Kerimov's blocked status .
Cross-border real estate and private equity investments are particularly vulnerable to sanctions risks due to their complexity and the opacity of ownership structures. OFAC's 2025 enforcement actions reveal recurring compliance gaps:
1. Overreliance on External Legal Advice: In the IPI Partners case, the firm claimed it relied on external counsel for sanctions compliance, but OFAC rejected this defense, stating that "due diligence cannot be outsourced"
To mitigate risks, industry experts and regulators recommend a multi-layered compliance strategy:
- : OFAC has stressed that compliance must be embedded in transaction planning, not an afterthought. This includes screening all parties against the SDN List, assessing indirect ownership, and evaluating the risk profile of target jurisdictions
As geopolitical tensions persist, OFAC's enforcement agenda is likely to expand. The SEC's proposed reforms to foreign private issuer rules and the EU's Travel Rule mandates further complicate compliance for cross-border investors
. For real estate and private equity firms, the message is clear: robust due diligence is not just a regulatory requirement but a strategic imperative.In this environment, firms that proactively adapt to evolving sanctions frameworks-by investing in compliance technology, training gatekeepers, and fostering a culture of accountability-will gain a competitive edge. Conversely, those that treat compliance as a checkbox risk facing the same penalties as IPI Partners or GVA Capital: financial ruin and reputational damage in an era where OFAC's scrutiny shows no signs of abating.
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