US charges five with conspiring to sell sanctioned Iran oil to China refinery
- Criminal complaint alleges plan make two shipments of oil per month with an expected profit of US$28 million
- If convicted, each of the men could be sentenced to up to 25 years
The US Justice Department said it had charged five people in Texas and New York with conspiring to violate a law on international commerce by arranging to purchase sanctioned Iranian oil and sell it to a refinery in China.
The defendants include Daniel Ray Lane, president of privately held STACK Royalties, a Texas-based company that sells oil and gas mineral rights to investment funds and private equity groups.
The Justice Department charged the defendants with one count of conspiracy, and another for violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, based on allegations that from July 2019 to February 2020 they conspired to arrange for the purchase of oil from Iran for sale to an unnamed Chinese refinery.
The complaint alleges that they planned to make two shipments of oil per month with an expected profit of US$28 million per month.
The charges also allege violations of US economic sanctions on Iran.
The five suspects, in addition to Lane, are Nicholas Haven of New York and Robert Thwaites, Nicholas Fuchs and Zhenyu Wang, also known as Bill Wang, of Texas.