EU Can Freeze Russian Assets Held by Trusts, Court Rules

AMSTERDAM, May 21 (Reuters) – The European ⁠Union ⁠can freeze assets linked ⁠to Russians sanctioned over the war in ​Ukraine, even if those assets are held by a trust and ‌there is no direct ‌legal link to the persons involved, the EU’s ⁠Court of ⁠Justice ruled on Thursday.

• The court said assets can ​also be frozen if they are only indirectly linked to the person on the sanctions list.

• Concepts of ownership and ​control should encompass “all forms of power or influence exercised over ⁠assets”, ⁠it said, even if ⁠there ​was no legal link between them and the person concerned.

• ​It said this ⁠served the purpose of the freezing of funds, meant to limit “as much as possible” any transactions that may be carried out with them.

• Any circumvention of sanctions should ⁠also be prevented, it added.

• The EU court ruling related ⁠to three cases brought by an Italian court.

• These dealt with the seizure by Italian authorities of companies and a yacht held through complex ownership structures by trusts, but seen to be owned by Russians on the EU’s sanctions list.

• The companies had challenged the freezing of those assets, as they ⁠said the sanctioned persons had no power over them.

• The EU court dismissed their claim, and said indications of ownership or control could also be inferred ​from circumstances or from “needlessly complex legal structures”.

(Reporting by ​Bart MeijerEditing by Gareth Jones)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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