NEWARK, N.J. – A federal grand jury has charged four Chinese
nationals and a Chinese company with violating the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), conspiracy to violate IEEPA and to defraud the
United States; conspiracy to violate, evade and avoid restrictions of the
Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferators Regulations (WMDPR); and conspiracy
to launder monetary instruments, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito for the District
of New Jersey, Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, and Assistant Attorney General John C. Demers
of the Justice Department’s National Security Division announced.
The indictment returned yesterday by a federal grand jury in
Newark charges Ma Xiaohong (Ma); her company, Dandong Hongxiang Industrial
Development Co. Ltd. (DHID); and three of DHID’s top executives – general
manager Zhou Jianshu (Zhou), deputy general manager Hong Jinhua (Hong) and
financial manager Luo Chuanxu (Luo) – with violating IEEPA, conspiracy to
violate IEEPA and to defraud the United States; and conspiracy to launder
monetary instruments.
“Ma, her company, and her employees tried to defraud the
United States by evading sanctions restrictions and doing business with
proliferators of weapons of mass destruction,” said U.S. Attorney Carpenito,
“We will continue to work closely with our partners in the National Security
and Criminal Divisions in order to identify and prosecute defendants like
these, in order to preserve a safer and more fair environment for all.”
“Through the use of more than 20 front companies, the
defendants are alleged to have sought to obscure illicit financial dealings on
behalf of sanctioned North Korean entities that were involved in the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction,” said Assistant Attorney General
John Demers. “But through the tireless efforts of federal law enforcement, we
were able to shine a light on their lawless conduct and take the first step in
bringing them to justice.”
“Any Chinese company conspiring to do business with
sanctioned WMD proliferators through the U.S. banking system should think
twice,” said Assistant Attorney General Benczkowski. “This indictment shows the
Department’s resolve to use every tool of criminal prosecution to detect
illicit financial transactions and enforce U.S. sanctions.”
According to the indictment in this case, DHID is primarily
owned by Ma and is located near the North Korean border. DHID allegedly openly
worked with North Korea-based Korea Kwangson Banking Corporation (KKBC) prior
to Aug. 11, 2009, when the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated
KKBC as a Specially Designated National (SDN) for providing U.S. dollar
financial services for two other North Korean entities, Tanchon Commercial Bank
(Tanchon) and Korea Hyoksin Trading Corporation (Hyoksin). President Bush
identified Tanchon as a weapons of mass destruction proliferator in June 2005,
and OFAC designated Hyoksin as an SDN under the WMDPSR in July 2009. Tanchon
and Hyoksin were so identified and designated because of their ties to Korea
Mining Development Trading Company (KOMID), which OFAC has described as North
Korea’s premier arms dealer and main exporter of goods and equipment related to
ballistic missiles and conventional weapons.
Beginning after the designation of KKBC as an SDN in August
2009, Ma allegedly conspired with Zhou, Hong and Luo to create or acquire
numerous front companies to conduct U.S. dollar transactions designed to evade
U.S. sanctions. The indictment alleges that from December 2009 to September
2015, DHID used these front companies, established in offshore jurisdictions
such as the British Virgin Islands, the Seychelles, Hong Kong, Wales, England,
and Anguilla, and opened Chinese bank accounts to conduct U.S. dollar financial
transactions through the U.S. banking system when completing sales to North
Korea. These sales transactions were allegedly financed or guaranteed by KKBC.
These front companies facilitated the financial transactions to hide KKBC’s
presence from correspondent banks in the United States, including a bank
processing center in Newark, New Jersey, according to the allegations in the
indictment. As a result of the defendants’ alleged scheme, KKBC was able to
cause financial transactions in U.S. dollars to transit through the U.S.
correspondent banks without being detected by the banks and, thus, were not
blocked under the WMDPSR program.
Ma, Zhou, Hong and Luo face a maximum of 20 years’
imprisonment and a $1 million fine on the charge of violating IEEPA, a maximum
of 5 years’ imprisonment and a $250,000 fine on conspiracy to violate IEEPA and
to defraud the United States, and a maximum of 20 years’ imprisonment and a
$500,000 fine on the charge of conspiracy to launder monetary instruments.
U.S. Attorney Carpenito, Assistant Attorney General
Benczkowski, and Assistant Attorney General Demers credited special agents of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, under the direction of Special Agent in
Charge Gregory W. Ehrie in Newark and Special Agent in Charge Sean Kaul in
Phoenix, Arizona, for the investigation leading to the indictment.
The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Joyce M. Malliet of the National Security Unit, Sarah Devlin, Chief of the
Asset Recovery and Money Laundering Unit (ARMLU), and Assistant U.S. Attorney
Barbara Ward of ARMLU in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New
Jersey; Trial Attorney Jennifer Wallis of the Criminal Division’s Money
Laundering and Asset Recovery Section; and Trial Attorney Christian E. Ford of
the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control
Section.
The charges and allegations contained in the indictment are
merely accusations and the defendants are considered innocent unless and until
proven guilty.
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