Lawyers for OFAC Listings, SDN Designations, and US Sanctions
Overview of OFAC Listings, De-Listing, Secondary Sanctions, and European Response Options
By Dr. Julius Hagen, Attorney-at-Law
OFAC Listings and SDN Designations at a Glance
In practice, OFAC matters can rarely be reduced to a single legal issue. An OFAC- or SDN-related escalation may simultaneously raise questions of US sanctions law, ownership and control attribution, payments, internal compliance, contractual relationships, reputation, and possible European defenses. That is exactly why careful legal qualification at the outset is so important.
Not every OFAC-related matter is a de-listing case. Some situations concern the immediate consequences of an existing designation, some concern the preparation of an administrative removal request, some involve secondary US sanctions exposure for non-US persons, and others concern European follow-on disputes such as account closures, blocked payments, or contract terminations.
Typical Starting Points in OFAC Matters
Typical matters begin with an SDN designation, a compliance hit in screening databases, a blocked or rejected payment, an account restriction or closure, or the question whether ownership and control structures may trigger OFAC consequences even without express naming. Cases also arise where banks, investors, insurers, or international counterparties react because of perceived US sanctions exposure.
In other matters, the main issue is not the listing itself, but the pressure exerted on non-US persons and companies outside the United States. In those situations, the focus often shifts to secondary US sanctions, market exclusion driven by global compliance systems, or the question whether European legal responses may exist against specific market reactions.
The Four Core Topics in the OFAC Context
Anyone dealing with an OFAC-related problem should usually distinguish between four core areas.
First, the immediate listing or designation and its practical consequences.
Second, administrative de-listing before OFAC as a possible route back to economic operability.
Third, secondary US sanctions, which may place non-US persons and businesses under severe pressure outside the United States.
Fourth, European follow-on disputes, especially in matters involving account closures, refusals of performance, contract terminations, and the EU Blocking Regulation.
Why Early Classification Is So Important
In commercially sensitive situations, the sequence of steps is often just as important as the substance. Anyone who reacts too early with incomplete explanations may weaken the later defense. Anyone who reacts too late risks allowing account restrictions, reputational harm, database hits, and contract disruption to harden. Sound representation in OFAC matters therefore usually begins not with a standard move, but with structured analysis.
The key questions are whether immediate measures vis-à-vis banks and counterparties are required, whether a de-listing perspective should be developed, whether secondary sanctions risks are central, or whether European response options are becoming relevant against specific market conduct. Only once that structure is understood can the broader defense be built coherently.
Our Work in OFAC and US Sanctions Matters
We advise and represent companies, directors, beneficial owners, and other affected persons in complex OFAC matters. This includes the initial legal assessment of listings and screening hits, the strategic preparation of de-listing proceedings, the analysis of secondary US sanctions exposure, and the review of European follow-on disputes involving account closures, contract terminations, and market exclusion.

Dr. Julius Hagen
Dr. Julius Hagen advises and represents clients in criminal matters, white-collar investigations, extradition proceedings, INTERPOL matters and complex commercial disputes.
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