Late on the night of March 2nd, the Amore Vero, a two-hundred-and-ninety-foot-long yacht that French officials trace to Igor Sechin, the C.E.O. of the Russian oil giant Rosneft and a confidant of Vladimir Putin’s, was in the Mediterranean port of La Ciotat. As news spread of sweeping new sanctions on Russian élites, the crew of the Amore Vero tried to “sail off urgently,” according to the French government. But customs officers seized the yacht before it could depart. Observers of the luxury-yachting world have reported that several other vessels connected to Putin’s favored élite appear to be dashing toward friendlier ports in the Indian Ocean.
To a degree that has startled experts in the opaque byways of international finance, the invasion of Ukraine has engendered a systematic campaign to sever Russia from the global banking system, and to sunder the Russian élite from their estates, vessels, and fortunes from the […]
I am certain, absolutely certain, that when Trump and his colleagues are brought into the halls of Justice for judgement, that rooting out dark money and its hiding places will be next on the administration’s agenda.