Global Sanctions Screening

Sanctions & Watchlist Screening

In industries like healthcare, finance, government contracting, and international trade, employing someone on a sanctions or exclusion list can lead to serious consequences — including regulatory enforcement, civil penalties, and loss of program eligibility. Accudata’s sanctions and exclusion screening services help you identify flagged individuals or entities before issues arise.

What Are Sanctions Checks?

Sanctions screening reviews official government and international databases to determine whether a candidate, employee, contractor, or business entity is restricted from working in certain sectors or accessing specific programs. These restrictions are typically related to: financial crimes, regulatory violations, healthcare fraud, national security concerns, export control breaches.We search databases maintained by U.S. federal agencies, state authorities, and international regulatory bodies keeping your organization informed and compliant.

What’s Included in Accudata’s Sanctions & Watchlist Screening

Our Global Watchlist Screening provides broad coverage across U.S. and international regulatory databases — but compliance often requires deeper, industry-specific checks. That’s why Accudata offers a full suite of targeted sanctions and exclusion screenings to meet your specific obligations. Whether you’re navigating healthcare compliance, financial risk management, or export control requirements, we help you build a screening program that covers both general watchlist visibility and the detailed searches required by law.

Who Needs Sanctions Screening?

Healthcare Organizations

Required to screen employees, practitioners, contractors, and vendors against OIG, SAM, and state Medicaid exclusion lists to maintain participation in federally funded programs.

Financial Services & Banking

Meet BSA/AML compliance requirements by screening employees and customers against OFAC and other financial regulatory watchlists.

Government Contractors

Verify that employees and subcontractors are not debarred or excluded from participating in federal programs through SAM.gov and agency-specific lists.

International Trade & Export Companies

Screen against OFAC, Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), and international embargo lists to avoid export control violations and sanctions penalties.

Expanded Sanctions & Watchlist Screening Services

Accudata provides a variety of sanction screening options based on your industry and compliance needs:

Comprehensive scanning of domestic and international sanctions, embargo, and enforcement lists — including terrorist watchlists, foreign sanctions, and denied-party databases. Ideal for global hiring, government contracting, and regulated industries.

Screens the U.S. Treasury’s OFAC list for individuals or entities subject to economic sanctions tied to national security, narcotics trafficking, arms proliferation, or foreign policy threats. 

Bundled screening against OIG, SAM.gov, and applicable state Medicaid exclusion databases. Required for healthcare providers participating in federally funded programs (e.g., Medicare, Medicaid). 

Identifies individuals barred from U.S. healthcare programs due to fraud, abuse, licensing actions, or loan defaults. A critical safeguard for hospitals, clinics, and healthcare staffing firms.

Accesses state-level registries for substantiated cases of child or elder abuse (availability varies by jurisdiction). Where third-party access is allowed, Accudata provides this search directly; some states may require direct organizational submission.

U.S.-Based Global Watchlist Screening Includes:

OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control) Sanctions Lists
U.S. Department of the Treasury Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) 
FBI Most Wanted 
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Fugitives List 
System for Award Management (SAM) 
OIG-HHS Exclusion List 
U.S. Department of State Sanctions Lists 
Denied Persons Lists 
Interpol Red Notices (Most Wanted) 

These databases are maintained by various agencies and updated on independent schedules, so regular screening or monitoring may be necessary depending on your compliance obligation

International Global Watchlist Screening Covers:

Interpol’s Most Wanted 

Denied Party Lists from foreign trade authorities 

OFAC-equivalent Sanctions Lists from other jurisdictions 

Specially Designated Nationals (SDN)-type lists worldwide 

Foreign Ministry & Security Agency Watchlists where available 

Average turnaround time for international screening is typically 1–3 business days, depending on country and system access. 

Global Sanctions Screening FAQ:

A global watchlist search screens an individual or entity against government and regulatory watchlists maintained by U.S. federal agencies, international organizations, and industry-specific regulatory bodies. These lists identify individuals who may be subject to economic sanctions, trade restrictions, criminal fugitive status, or exclusions from participating in specific industries or government programs.

The most frequently searched watchlists are sanctions lists, particularly those maintained by the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). Compliance with OFAC sanctions is legally required for businesses operating in or with the United States, and failure to screen against these lists can result in significant legal and financial penalties. OFAC screening is a core component of anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorism financing compliance programs.

The results depend on the specific lists searched, but may include: Criminal activity: Individuals suspected or known to be involved in terrorism, narcotics trafficking, money laundering, major international crimes, or fraud. Results may include suspected offenses, last known locations, and known aliases. Sanctions and exclusions: Individuals or entities subject to economic sanctions, debarments, travel bans, or exclusions from working in the U.S. or in regulated industries such as finance and healthcare. Disciplinary and regulatory actions: Individuals who have faced formal disciplinary actions from regulatory bodies, such as healthcare sanctions, securities violations, or licensing board actions.

Watchlist screening helps employers identify individuals who may pose a risk to the organization or who face legal restrictions on working in certain industries, programs, or countries. In regulated sectors like healthcare and financial services, screening against specific watchlists is often required by law. For example, healthcare organizations that hire an individual excluded from federal programs risk losing federal funding and may face civil monetary penalties. Even in industries where watchlist screening isn’t mandated, it’s considered a best practice for managing regulatory and reputational risk. 

A criminal background check searches court records and criminal databases for arrest and conviction history. A sanctions check searches government and regulatory watchlists for individuals or entities that have been excluded, debarred, or flagged by federal agencies, state regulators, or international bodies. The two searches look at entirely different data sources and serve different compliance purposes — many organizations need both as part of a comprehensive screening program. 

Federal sanctions listsincluding OFAC, OIG, and SAM.gov — are updated regularly, some as frequently as daily or weekly. Because changes can occur at any time, many regulated industries require not just pre-employment sanctions checks but also ongoing monitoring. Accudata offers both one-time searches and continuous sanctions monitoring depending on your compliance requirements. 

For many industries, yes. Healthcare organizations participating in federal programs are required to check the OIG exclusion list and SAM.gov before hiring and on an ongoing basis. Financial institutions must screen against OFAC lists as part of their BSA/AML compliance programs. Government contractors must verify that employees and subcontractors are not debarred through SAM.gov. Even where not legally mandated, watchlist screening is widely adopted as a risk management best practice.

If a match is identified, Accudata reports the finding with full context — including which list the individual appeared on, the nature of the restriction, and any relevant dates or details. Your organization then determines the appropriate course of action based on the type of restriction, the role being filled, and your compliance obligations. For healthcare organizations, employing an excluded individual can result in civil monetary penalties and loss of federal program eligibility. 

Both. Many regulations require ongoing screening of current employees — not just pre-employment checks. For example, OIG guidance recommends that healthcare organizations screen their entire workforce against exclusion lists monthly. Accudata offers both one-time searches and recurring monitoring programs to meet these requirements. 

When conducted as part of an employment background check through a consumer reporting agency like Accudata, yes — FCRA requirements for disclosure and written authorization apply. However, some sanctions searches, particularly OFAC screening, may also be conducted outside the FCRA framework for non-employment purposes such as customer due diligence or vendor screening. The consent requirements depend on the purpose and context of the search. Accudata can help you determine the appropriate process for your situation. 

SAM.gov (System for Award Management) is the federal government’s database of entities that have been debarred, suspended, or otherwise excluded from receiving federal contracts or participating in federal programs. If your organization receives federal funding or holds government contracts, screening against SAM.gov is essential — hiring or subcontracting with an excluded entity can jeopardize your eligibility and result in penalties. 

Employers should be aware of the following: 

  • FCRA compliance: When sanctions screening is conducted through a CRA like Accudata as part of an employment background check, you must provide written disclosure and obtain the candidate’s written authorization before the search. If results influence an adverse hiring decision, the FCRA’s adverse action process must be followed. 
  • State and local laws: Some jurisdictions have Ban the Box or fair hiring laws that regulate when and how employers can consider certain background information during the hiring process. These laws vary and may affect the timing of your screening. 
  • Industry-specific regulations: Healthcare, financial services, and government contracting each have specific screening mandates. Consult with legal counsel to confirm which requirements apply to your organization. 

Disclaimer: The content and resources provided on this website are intended for informational and educational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice. We recommend consulting qualified legal counsel regarding questions related to your specific operations or compliance with applicable laws.

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