In the 12-plus months he’s served as Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin has not once been accused of doing too thorough a job when it comes to his department’s output. Back in April, after claiming he had 100 people hard at work on the president’s big tax plan, the former Goldman Sachs banker released a one-page, double-spaced, bullet-pointed document that appeared to have been written on his phone on the ride over to Staples that morning. Last December, after weeks of promising that his team was “working around the clock” on a detailed report on the effects of the legislation, he unveiled another single-page document that a prior Treasury secretary dubbed “a pathetic excuse for a study.” And now, it appears that Mnuchin has taken his laziness to a whole new level.

After widespread media and internet speculation, a Treasury Department spokesperson confirmed to BuzzFeed News that its official “Russian oligarchs” list was compiled with heavy input from a Forbes ranking. Specifically, the official said that “The names of and net worth of oligarchs in the unclassified version of the report were selected based on objective criteria drawn from publicly available sources.”

Under a 2017 sanctions law, the White House was reportedly required to name 96 individuals and to consider whether to sanction them for Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election, as well as for human-rights violations and aggressive actions toward Ukraine. In the lead-up to its release, Russian businessmen and officials worried the list could set off fresh tensions and deter business from U.S. and European banks. But those fears were put to rest when the list was unveiled late Monday, and appeared to have been borrowed wholesale from a previous list of wealthy Russians that ran in the president’s favorite magazine.

“The fact the list of oligarchs released resembles Forbes’ rich list, more than it does a public airing of organized corruption centered on the Kremlin, could mitigate slightly some of the concerns of those named regarding potential fallout,” Max Hess, a senior political risk analyst at AKE group, told CNBC. Michael McFaul, a former ambassador to Moscow, called the report “much ado about nothing,” and even Vladimir Putin mocked the thing, joking that he was “insulted” at being left off.

Further assuaging any Russians’ concerns: the fact that the administration took pains to clarify that this is not a sanctions list. According to a State Department spokeswoman, prior sanctions are working so well that the Trump administration considers new anti-Russian measures totally unnecessary.

This story has been updated throughout.