US Department switches focus to border and drug cartels
7/2/2025 6:18
The U.S. Justice
Department under President Donald Trump is disbanding an effort
started after Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine to enforce
sanctions and target oligarchs close to the Kremlin.
A memo from Attorney General Pam Bondi, issued on Wednesday
during a wave of orders on her first day in office but not
previously reported, said the effort, known as Task Force
KleptoCapture, will end as part of a shift in focus and funding
to combating drug cartels and international gangs.
"This policy requires a fundamental change in mindset and
approach," Bondi wrote in the directive, adding that resources
now devoted to enforcing sanctions and seizing the assets of
oligarchs will be redirected to countering cartels.
The effort, launched during Democratic President Joe Biden's
administration, was designed to strain the finances of wealthy
associates of Russian President Vladimir Putin and punish those
facilitating sanctions and export control violations.
It was part of a broader push to freeze Russia out of global
markets and enforce wide-ranging sanctions imposed on Moscow
amid international condemnation of its war in Ukraine.
The task force brought indictments against aluminum
magnate Oleg Deripaska and TV tycoon Konstantin Malofeyev for
alleged sanctions busting, and seized yachts belonging to
sanctioned oligarchs Suleiman Kerimov and Viktor Vekselberg.
Cases investigated by the task force are likely to continue,
but the work will no longer be centralized at Justice Department
headquarters.
"Are we going to suddenly see a surge of sanctioned oligarch
wealth flood into the United States? I don’t think so," said
Andrew Adams, the first leader of the task force who is now at
law firm Steptoe. "What you will see is a sharp decline in the
pace of charges that target facilitators that are specific to
Russia."
Prosecutors assigned to the task force will return to their
previous posts. The changes will be in effect for at least 90
days and could be renewed or made permanent, according to the
directive.
Trump has spoken about improving relations with Moscow. He
has previously vowed to end the war in Ukraine, though he has
not released a detailed plan.
The emphasis on drug cartels comes after Trump designated
many such groups as terrorist organizations, part of a crackdown
on illegal immigration and fentanyl trafficking.
The shift also implicates enforcement of a U.S. foreign
bribery law that has led to some of the Justice Department's
largest corporate cases over the last decade. The unit enforcing
that law, known as the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, will now
prioritize bribery investigations related to cartels, according
to the memo.
A wide range of multinational firms has come under Justice
Department scrutiny over the law, including Goldman Sachs,
Glencore and Walmart.
"It is a radical move away from traditional FCPA cases and
toward a narrow subset of drug and violent crime related cases
that have never been the focus of FCPA enforcement," said
Stephen Frank, a lawyer at law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &
Sullivan who worked on FCPA cases as a federal prosecutor.
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