Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 99— - NORTH KOREA SANCTIONS AND POLICY ENHANCEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - INVESTIGATIONS, PROHIBITED CONDUCT, AND PENALTIES › § 9214
The President must name people or groups for sanctions when they knowingly help North Korea with serious activities. That includes on-purpose trade or services tied to weapons of mass destruction or their delivery; training, advice, or big money transfers for making such weapons; shipping luxury goods; helping North Korea censor or commit serious human rights abuses; money laundering, counterfeiting, bulk cash smuggling, or drug trafficking that support the North Korean government or its leaders; harmful cyberattacks done for North Korea; selling important raw materials, metals, coal, or software used for weapons, the party, the military, prison camps, or forced labor; sending arms or defense items; buying large amounts of certain minerals; supplying rocket, aviation, or jet fuel (with narrow exceptions); fueling, supplying, or servicing vessels or aircraft tied to designated ships; insuring or registering vessels owned by North Korea; keeping correspondent bank accounts with North Korean banks; or trying to do any of these things. The President may also name people who help or fund designated persons, bribe or steal public funds for North Korean officials, buy coal, iron, textiles, seafood, or other banned goods above UN limits, move funds or valuables that help North Korea evade sanctions, sell large amounts of oil or gas, run North Korean online businesses (like gambling), buy fishing rights, sell food or workers in ways that raise money for North Korea, or do major business in North Korea’s transport, mining, energy, or finance sectors. Once someone is named, their property in the United States can be frozen or blocked under emergency economic powers, U.S. licenses can be denied or revoked, special banking measures and other listed sanctions can be applied, and U.S. financial transactions involving them can be banned. The rules also cover entities they own or control. Violating these prohibitions can bring penalties under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 9214
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73