Claude’s Summary:
Imposition of Monetary Penalty – Sabre Global Technologies Limited (SGTL)
HM Treasury Press Release: UK issues largest penalty for financial sanctions breaches since Russia’s 2022 illegal invasion of Ukraine
At a Glance
- Subject: Sabre Global Technologies Limited (SGTL)
- Sector: Travel technology; operates a Global Distribution System (GDS) giving travel-industry entities access to travel-supplier content
- Authority: OFSI (HM Treasury), under section 146 of the Policing and Crime Act 2017
- Date of Penalty: 26 May 2026
- Penalty Amount: £1,000,920.59 (reduced from a baseline of £1,251,150.73 by a 20% discount)
- Sanctions Regime: Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019
- Provisions Breached:
- Regulation 13 — making funds available for the benefit of a designated person
- Regulation 14 — making economic resources available to a designated person
- Regulation 19 — circumventing prohibitions
- Designated Person / Nexus: JSC Ural Airlines (Ural Airlines), designated under the Russia Regulations on 19 May 2022; unique ID RUS 1446
- Guidance Applied: November 2024 Financial Sanctions Enforcement and Monetary Penalties Guidance (the version in force at the decision to issue notice); resolved by settlement under the transitional arrangements of OFSI’s new settlement policy introduced February 2026
- Resolution: Settlement under transitional arrangements — the third penalty resolved this way, and OFSI’s first penalty for a circumvention offence
What Happened
SGTL had supplied services to Ural Airlines since 2007. The contract, signed on 14 September 2007, gave the airline access to SGTL’s GDS and was extended several times — most recently updated on 1 December 2021, with a later amendment on 1 September 2022.
On 19 May 2022, Ural Airlines was designated under the Russia Regulations and added to the UK consolidated list. SGTL’s legal representatives told it the same day. Access did not stop. The airline kept its GDS connection until 6 December 2022 — roughly seven months — and SGTL chose simply not to renew the contract rather than cut off access on designation.
The money moved in parallel. In April, May, and June 2022, SGTL invoiced Ural Airlines and instructed that funds be paid into its account, totalling $906,576.30 (£744,305.13). Three related payments followed between June and September 2022, and SGTL’s UK bank froze each of them.
The warnings were not subtle. SGTL’s UK bank held a 3 June payment on 6 June, declined to process it on 27 June, and held the 1 July payment on 5 July; on 21 September, SGTL’s US bank flagged the September payment for compliance review. Through July and August 2022, rather than stopping, SGTL looked for another way to be paid — engaging its US bank to test whether funds from Ural Airlines could land in a US account, and expressly citing the sanctions problems on its UK account. Internal emails in August and October 2022 show the plan: if a test payment cleared, SGTL expected Ural Airlines to settle the full outstanding GDS fees by that route. On 21 September 2022, Ural Airlines sent a $200 (£176.48) test payment to the US account. OFSI considered the object or effect of that payment to be circumvention of the Russia Regulations.
OFSI identified why the controls failed. The senior responsible officer misunderstood which Sabre-group entity held the Ural Airlines contract and, while transitioning out of the role, did not escalate what he knew. A wider restructuring left SGTL for a time without a permanent Chief Legal Officer or Chief Compliance Officer, and the legal team short-staffed. The firm’s sanctions documentation leaned on general procedures and US requirements rather than the UK regime — and its third-party screening software never automatically flagged the designation to compliance.
SGTL made a voluntary disclosure to OFSI on 31 October 2022, covering the three frozen payments, and cooperated with the investigation that followed. OFSI issued a Notice of Intention to impose a penalty on 16 January 2026; SGTL submitted formal representations on 24 February 2026; the parties agreed to enter settlement discussions under transitional arrangements on 16 March 2026; and on 26 May 2026 settlement was agreed and the penalty imposed. As a condition of settlement, SGTL agreed to pay the penalty as imposed and to waive its rights to ministerial review and to appeal OFSI’s decision to the Upper Tribunal on matters within the settlement’s scope.
The Breaches
- Regulation 13 — making funds available for the benefit of a designated person: SGTL’s contract created a debt obligation. By invoicing Ural Airlines and instructing payment into its account, SGTL made funds available to its bank for the airline’s benefit. Under reg. 13(4)(a), funds are made available “for the benefit of” a designated person where that person thereby obtains or is able to obtain a significant financial benefit — and OFSI assessed that Ural Airlines did, because the payments discharged its financial obligations to SGTL.
- Regulation 14 — making economic resources available to a designated person: SGTL provided an economic resource directly to Ural Airlines by allowing continued GDS access between 19 May and 6 December 2022.
- Regulation 19 — circumventing prohibitions: During July–August 2022, SGTL explored alternative routes to receive funds from Ural Airlines via its US bank, expressly referencing the prior UK-account sanctions problems, and arranged a $200 (£176.48) test payment on 21 September 2022 with a view to routing the full outstanding amount the same way. OFSI assessed the object or effect of this as circumvention.
Valuation of the Breach
- Total Assessed Value: $3,222,379.89 (£2,634,001.54) — the combined value of funds and economic resources in breach of regs. 13, 14, and 19, calculated to avoid double-counting amounts already paid by Ural Airlines.
- Regulation 14 — economic resource: $2,576,550.57 (£2,107,876.02), OFSI’s assessment of the value of the economic resource provided between 19 May and 6 December 2022 (includes VAT).
- General Licence deduction: less $50 (£40.91) for booking fees paid by UK persons, in line with OFSI’s Russian Travel General Licence (INT/2022/1839676).
- Regulation 13 — frozen June 2022 payment: $312,129.65 (£248,143.07), for services provided in April 2022, separate from the 19 May–6 December period (includes VAT).
- Regulation 13 — pro rata July 2022 payment: $333,549.67 (£277,846.87), for services provided 1–18 May 2022 (includes VAT).
- Regulation 19 — test payment: $200 (£176.48), the 21 September 2022 test payment.
OFSI noted that the portion of the July payment for services 19–31 May 2022 and the September 2022 payment were not separately included in the reg. 13 value, being treated as captured within the economic-resource valuation.
OFSI’s Case Assessment
- Aggravating Factors:
- (case factor A) SGTL actively explored alternative means to receive payment, including requesting a test payment to a non-UK account and planning to route future settlements through it — circumvention of the Russia Regulations.
- (case factor B) The value of the breaches was high.
- (case factor C) Ural Airlines was designated for supporting the Russian government in the strategically significant transport sector; by enabling GDS access, SGTL undermined the regime’s objectives. That the payments ran from Ural Airlines to SGTL was not mitigating to harm, as they were for continued provision of services.
- (other relevant factors under severity) Sanctions against Russia are a strategic priority for the UK and its foreign policy.
- (case factor D) SGTL had reasonable cause to suspect its actions could breach UK sanctions; seeking alternative payment routes and continuing the relationship after designation amounted to circumvention.
- (case factor E) During the breach period SGTL lacked competent senior oversight of sanctions and could not properly assess or mitigate its exposure or understand its responsibilities. Although post-breach remediation was positive, knowledge and systems during the breach period were assessed overall as aggravating.
- (case factor G) SGTL did not seek advice or consider applying for a licence to permit receipt of payments or continued service despite multiple red flags.
- (case factor I) The provision of an economic resource ran over seven months (19 May–6 December 2022).
- Mitigating Factors:
- (case factor K) Although the initial report was incomplete, SGTL provided significant detail on the underlying causes throughout, conducted internal investigations, gave full and timely responses to voluntary questions, and demonstrated full co-operation with OFSI.
- Neutral Factors:
- (case factor J) SGTL’s disclosure was voluntary and unprompted but contained limited information; SGTL did not proactively submit further information before OFSI’s formal request in June 2023 and continued providing services after the initial report, yet cooperated fully and promptly with each subsequent request. On balance, neither aggravating nor mitigating.
- Overall Assessment: “Most serious” (as opposed to “serious”). OFSI cited particularly poor conduct through circumvention, negligent conduct including continued provision of services for months after identifying potential breaches, and the direct undermining of the regime by providing an economic resource directly to a designated person. OFSI viewed SGTL’s remediation as constructive but largely addressing deficiencies that should have been in place at the time.
How the Penalty Was Calculated
- Total Breach Value: £2,634,001.54
- Statutory Maximum: £1,317,000.77 (the greater of £1m or 50% of the breach value, under the framework applied)
- Baseline Penalty: £1,251,150.73 (OFSI’s assessed reasonable and proportionate baseline)
- Discount Applied:
- Voluntary disclosure and settlement under transitional arrangements: 20%
- Final Penalty: £1,000,920.59
OFSI applied the November 2024 Enforcement Guidance, under which it may reduce a “most serious” case by up to 30% for voluntary disclosure; here it applied a 20% discount.
Compliance Lessons
- Do not engineer alternative payment routes to evade sanctions: Firms must not test, reroute, restructure, or otherwise manipulate payment pathways — including staging payments through third countries — to avoid, evade, or defeat UK sanctions. Such conduct may itself be circumvention and will be treated as aggravating.
- Recognise intangible and digital services as “economic resources”: Economic resources are assets of every kind that are not funds but can be used to obtain funds, goods, or services. Software, data services, and digital tools are not assumed outside scope; a service that lets a designated person generate revenue, maintain operations, or gain an economic advantage may be an economic resource. Firms should assess all products and services and seek specialist legal advice where uncertain.
- Maintain UK-tailored policies, oversight, and screening: Sanctions policies for UK operations must be tailored to the UK regime, supported by competent senior oversight and clear accountability. Firms should test that screening systems work as intended, maintain robust escalation, and act on red flags such as blocked payments or notifications of sanctions concerns from financial institutions.
- Report breaches promptly, comprehensively, and in detail: Suspected breaches should be reported to OFSI as soon as reasonably practicable. Delay and incomplete submissions undermine mitigation. Where full disclosure is not yet possible, firms should make an early partial disclosure, provide a timeline for the full account, and follow up as indicated.
Supplemental Information: Per the HM Treasury press release, this is the UK’s largest penalty for a breach of Russian financial sanctions since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, and OFSI’s first penalty issued specifically for a circumvention offence. It is the third case resolved under the transitional arrangements of OFSI’s new settlement policy, introduced in February 2026. Ural Airlines — the designated nexus — is a Russian carrier sanctioned as part of the UK’s targeting of the Russian transport sector; the Russian Travel General Licence (INT/2022/1839676) referenced in the valuation permits certain UK-person travel-related payments to specified Russian carriers, which is why a small booking-fee amount was deducted from the breach value. More broadly, OFSI’s enforcement framework changed materially on 9 February 2026: for cases assessed under that newer framework, the voluntary-disclosure discount is capped at 30% and gated on a separate co-operation limb, settlement carries a discount of up to 20%, seriousness is assessed on a four-level matrix, and the statutory maximum is being raised toward the greater of £2m or 100% of the breach value. Those mechanics did not drive the calculation here, which OFSI made under the November 2024 guidance, but they are the standard the next comparable case will be measured against.
Sources
- November 2024 Financial Sanctions Enforcement and Monetary Penalties Guidance, OFSI / HM Treasury — https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/financial-sanctions-enforcement-and-monetary-penalties-guidance/financial-sanctions-enforcement-and-monetary-penalties-guidance
- “New and updated enforcement framework – a message from Giles Thomson, Director of OFSI” (9 Feb 2026 framework context) — https://ofsi.blog.gov.uk/2026/01/29/new-and-updated-enforcement-framework-a-message-from-giles-thomson-director-of-ofsi/
Validation Note
Checks performed against the SGTL penalty notice and the HM Treasury press release.
- Source-tracing: Every labelled value and narrative claim traces to the notice or the press release; supplemental context (largest-penalty / first-circumvention framing, settlement-policy context, General Licence purpose, Feb 2026 framework mechanics) is confined to the Supplemental block and Sources.
- No paragraph coupling: Extraction was by meaning; the SGTL notice’s own paragraph numbering is not relied on anywhere in the output.
- Figures: The breach-value components reconcile to the stated total once OFSI’s stated avoidance of double-counting is applied (reg. 14 economic resource £2,107,876.02 less £40.91 GL deduction, plus reg. 13 components £248,143.07 and £277,846.87, plus the £176.48 test payment ≈ £2,634,001.53, matching the stated £2,634,001.54 to within rounding). Statutory maximum £1,317,000.77 = 50% of the breach value, consistent with the framework applied. Baseline £1,251,150.73 less 20% = £1,000,920.58, matching the imposed £1,000,920.59 to within one penny of rounding. No figures were altered.
- Guidance regime: The notice states it applied the November 2024 Enforcement Guidance (the version in force at the decision date), under which a “most serious” case may receive up to a 30% voluntary-disclosure reduction; the 20% discount applied is consistent. The newer 9 February 2026 framework is noted as context only and was not used to recompute anything.
- Provisions: Regs. 13, 14, and 19 are mapped to the descriptors the notice itself uses.
- Subject/nexus: Facts about SGTL are kept distinct from those about Ural Airlines; Ural’s designation date and unique ID (RUS 1446) are drawn from the notice.
- Terminology: “Breach” used throughout; “violation” (the OFAC term) does not appear.
- One discrepancy flagged: The notice gives the Notice of Intention as 16 January 2026 and representations as 24 February 2026, while also stating the settlement-enabling framework took effect 9 February 2026 — i.e. the framework post-dates the Notice of Intention, which is why the case proceeded under transitional arrangements rather than the new settlement scheme proper. This is reproduced as stated, not corrected.
And the actual text of the penalty notice:
Mr. Sanctions’ Note: I had Claude create a master prompt for OFSI penalty notices with the OFAC format as a guide. Since the actual notices differ in vocabulary, format and style, it is somewhat different – although I had Claude make the sentence structures more OFAC-like (fewer longer sentences). What do you think?

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