OFAC adds Francesca Paola Albanese to SDN List under EO 14203 (ICC-related)

US persons must block property of and refuse all transactions with the listed individual; US-jurisdiction service providers must screen before engaging or paying her

Change
On 27 May 2026, OFAC added Francesca Paola Albanese (DOB 30 Mar 1977; Italian passport YA4652441) to the Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) List under the International Criminal Court-related sanctions program (listing tag ICC-EO14203, Executive Order 14203).
Why it matters
The SDN listing blocks the individual's property and interests in property under US jurisdiction and prohibits US persons from any dealings with her, including providing funds, goods, or services. Screening teams must treat matches to her name, date of birth, or Italian passport YA4652441 as blocked. Because the designation is under the ICC-related program (EO 14203), the secondary authority to designate persons who materially support sanctioned ICC-related activity creates collateral exposure beyond direct dealings. The obligation reaches not only financial institutions but US-jurisdiction service providers — universities, NGOs, publishers, law firms, and event organisers — who must screen before contracting with or paying the individual.
Implications
  • Bank sanctions-screening teams at US-jurisdiction financial institutions must add Francesca Paola Albanese (DOB 30 Mar 1977; Italian passport YA4652441) to SDN screening rules before the next funds-transfer cycle — her property under US jurisdiction is blocked and US persons are prohibited from transacting with her; processing a match constitutes a prohibited transaction under OFAC's blocking authorities.
  • Payments compliance and correspondent-bank operations clearing US-dollar or US-jurisdiction transactions must escalate and block any payment identified as linked to the listed individual — including honoraria, speaking fees, and service payments routed through US-jurisdiction rails.
  • US-jurisdiction service providers — universities, NGOs, publishers, law firms, conference and event organisers — must screen before contracting with, paying, or providing services to the individual, as such transactions are prohibited absent OFAC authorisation; existing engagements require wind-down or a licence.

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