Electronics Smuggler Sentenced
07/11/16
For more than six years, a New Jersey man who owned four microelectronics export companies skirted U.S. export laws enacted under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). These laws are in place to help protect U.S. national security and make sure that items made in the U.S. dont help strengthen another countrys military without proper licensing and careful consideration.
Alexander Brazhnikov, Jr., a 36-year-old naturalized American citizen born in Russia, admitted that, between January 2008 and June 2014, he smuggled $65 million worth of sensitive electronics components from the U.S. to Russia, where much of it eventually ended up in the hands of Russias Ministry of Defense and Federal Security Service.
In June 2015, Brazhnikov plead guilty in federal courtafter a multiagency investigation by the FBI, the Department of Commerce, and Department of Homeland Security (DHS)to the smuggling charges and to a charge of conspiring to commit money laundering to hide the illegal proceeds of his criminal activities. According to then-Newark FBI Special Agent in Charge Richard Frankel, Brazhnikov significantly undermined the national security of the national security of the U.S. and enhanced the capabilities of both the Russian Military Service and the Russian Nuclear Weapons Program. Last month, he was sentenced to more than five years in prison.
Investigators believe that Brazhnikov conspired with his father, Alexander Brazhnikov, Sr., owner of a Moscow-based procurement firm who brokered the purchasing of electronics components from U.S. vendors and manufacturers for their clients, mostly Russian defense contractors licensed to procure parts for the Russian military, security service, and other entities involved in the design of nuclear weapons and tactical platforms.
more https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2016/july/electronics-smuggler-sentenced-for-illegal-exports-to-russia/electronics-smuggler-sentenced-for-illegal-exports-to-russia