Archive for August, 2013


Aug

28

Miracle on E Street


Posted by at 10:24 pm on August 28, 2013
Category: DDTCPart 129

M1200 Armored Knight source:http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:M1200ArmoredKnight.jpg [Public Domain]It seems like the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (“DDTC”) has been working on the amendments to the brokering rules in Part 129 of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations since sometime during the Taft Administration. So when the latest iteration of these rules, oxymoronically labelled as the “Final Interim” Rule, appeared early this week I wearily clicked through to the Federal Register notice, fully prepared to revisit the horror that I had experienced some many times before. But, but, I soon realized that the lengthy gestation of the rules and the numerous rounds of public comment had borne fruit. Although not perfect, this new version fixes a number of the problems that plagued the previous versions.

I will over the next several days review various parts of the new rules, but I want to start with the best news. Cue music for a happy dance: DDTC has finally gotten the jurisdictional scope of the rules right.  As many of you know far too painfully, DDTC had, starting with some improvident remarks made by at least one former staffer at the agency, argued that the brokering rules, even before any proposed amendment, covered foreign persons in foreign lands if a U.S. origin defense article was involved. The earlier versions of the proposed rules made this explicit, covering U.S. persons, all persons in the United States and

any foreign person located outside the United States involving a U.S.-origin defense article or defense service.

The Final Interim rule completely eliminates this last category and, at last, returns to the original intent of the Brokering Amendment to the Arms Export Control Act, the authority for the brokering rules in the first place. As DDTC says in its comments on the Final Interim rule:

In conformance with the statutory requirements for the brokering of defense articles and services, the Department has revised the proposed changes to these definitions to clarify their scope. In particular, the Department has clarified that foreign persons that are required to register as brokers are those that are in the United States and those foreign persons outside the United States that are owned/controlled by a U.S. person. And the Department has removed from the definition of ‘‘brokering activities’’ the activities of any foreign person located outside the United States acting on behalf of a U.S. person.

This is great news and eliminates an enormous headache for exporters that use foreign reps and agents to distribute their defense articles abroad.

The only downside is that this new language makes clear the foreign subsidiaries may have to register, something that had not been required by previous versions of the rule which covered activities “for others” and which some at DDTC had said informally did not cover companies under the same “corporate umbrella,” although some others at the agency have said informally that all foreign subsidiaries were covered if they were involved in the parent company’s sale of defense articles.

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Aug

27

Mugabe Lobbyists in U.S. Indicted


Posted by at 8:44 pm on August 27, 2013
Category: OFACZimbabwe Sanctions

U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Jesse B. Awalt/Released (DefenseImagery.mil, VIRIN 090202-N-0506A-310) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ARobert_Mugabe%2C_12th_AU_Summit%2C_090202-N-0506A-310.jpg
ABOVE: Robert Mugabe

One way to make sure someone is sentenced to life on the SDN list is to make it illegal for anyone to argue for removal of an SDN from the list. Of course, that would be blatantly unfair, you say, in a nation dedicated to due process and the rule of law. We would never do that. Well, think again.

Earlier this month, a federal district court in Illinois unsealed a criminal complaint filed against Prince Asiel Ben Israel and C. Gregory Turner. The two defendants are charged with violating U.S. sanctions by providing “lobbying services” to Mugabe and other Zimbabweans on the SDN list without a license from OFAC. The 55-page affidavit attached to the complaint describes a number of innocuous actions by the defendants who had been engaged to lobby of the removal of Mugabe and friends from the SDN list. These actions included speaking to U.S. legislators about the Zimbabwe-based sanctions and attempting to obtain a speaking engagement for a Zimbabwean official in the United States. Helping to arrange visas for Zimbabweans to travel to the United States was also singled out as one of the illegal activities by the defendants.

What is odd is that buried within the criminal complaint are activities that go far beyond lobbying and seem clearly to have stepped over the line, including efforts to set up a diamond mining joint venture with SDNs in the Zimbabwean government. It’s hard to understand why the prosecution would focus on and call out what most people would see as First Amendment activities when the government has a much more supportable, and much less controversial, case involving a proposed business venture with the officials in Zimbabwe.

The affidavit mentions that the defendants sought to obtain compensation for their services. However, there is no requirement under the sanctions regulations that services must be compensated to be illegal. Free services are still services and potentially covered by the sanctions.

To make sure that I don’t get indicted for writing this post, let me be clear: I think Mugabe is a terrible person who truly deserves his spot on the SDN list. Forever. And I think the same thing about his cronies on the list as well. Seriously. I’m not just saying this to stay out of trouble with the Feds. Still, if I thought otherwise, I should be able to say that without worrying about getting indicted.

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Aug

20

Do What We Mean, Not What We Say


Posted by at 9:13 pm on August 20, 2013
Category: DDTC

Source: Aeroflex http://www.aeroflex.com/AMS/pagesproduct/img/ACT4462D.jpg [fair use]The charging documents for the consent decree between Aeroflex and the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, which I wrote about last week, have now been released, and they tell an interesting, and somewhat alarming, story. It’s an alarming story because it suggests that DDTC thinks that Category XV of the USML means something other than what it actually says.

The bottom line of the story is that Aeroflex and the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”) classified certain microelectronic circuits as EAR99 which DDTC thought were appropriately classified as Category XV items on the USML. The problem started because Aeroflex assumed that subsection (d) of Article XV actually meant what it said. That article says that microelectronic circuits are covered by Article XV if they meet “all five” of the characteristics described in sections (d)(1) through (d)(5). Because the microelectronic circuits in question met only one of those characteristics, Aeroflex concluded that the items were not Category XV. The company then filed classification requests with BIS which, it appears, concluded that the items were EAR99. And the rest, as they say, is history — $8 million of history, to be precise.

DDTC says correctly that an item meeting one of the five characteristics might still be Category XV if the item was otherwise “specifically designed or modified” for use with spacecraft. But, with only a few exceptions, it’s not clear that the exported items at issue were “specifically designed or modified” in that fashion.  In a number of instances in the Charging Letter, DDTC simply asserts that the items were in fact used on satellites, suggesting that as far as the agency is concerned, an item is Category XV if it meets one of the criteria in Category XV(d) and then is in fact used on a satellite. That, of course, doesn’t mean that something was “specifically designed or modified” for use in space.

In one instance, it does seem that the item was more than simply a radiation hardened item that was used on a satellite. In that instance, DDTC pointed to items that were radiation hardened and “specifically … programmed for use on the Spacebus 4000 satellite.” On those items, DDTC has a point, but on most of the others it is completely unclear what evidence there was that the items were designed for space use other than that they were in fact used on spacecraft.

Another thing that caught my attention in the initial press release on the settlement was that DDTC was charging Aeroflex with causing illegal exports by “causing” illegal exports by domestic purchasers. In the charging letter, it seems clear that DDTC is claiming that Aeroflex “caused” the illegal exports by affirmatively supplying domestic purchasers with the allegedly incorrect EAR99 classification for certain items. That certainly is a very broad notion of causation but it indicates that an incorrect classification might have a number of previously unforseen consequences.

Finally, I am quoting without further comment my favorite part of the Charging Letter:

[Aeroflex] incorrectly understood that exports of U.S. defense articles to Canada intended for end-use in Canada by Canadian or American citizens should be the subject of EAR license exception “no license required” or “NLR.” According to [Aeroflex], this misunderstanding was relied upon from 1999 through 2006.

The 51st State indeed.

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Aug

9

Voluntary Disclosure to DDTC Leads to $8 Million Fine


Posted by at 3:14 pm on August 9, 2013
Category: Arms ExportDDTC

Aeroflex HQ source: http://www.aeroflex.com/ams/img/content/Plainview_Facility_sm.jpg [fair use]A press release published today on the State Department website revealed that the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls exacted a consent decree from Aeroflex in Plainview, NY, under which, among other things, Aeroflex will pay $8 million in fines as a result of alleged violations of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations. Half of that amount will be suspended if DDTC approves various compliance expenditures by the company including the retaining of a special compliance official to conduct two internal audits.

The consent agreement and related documents have not yet been posted on the DDTC website so full details of what got Aeroflex into hot water are not immediately apparent. However, the press release indicates that “nearly all” of the violations were voluntarily disclosed by Aeroflex to DDTC, making this a drastic departure from the way DDTC normally treats voluntary disclosures. The press release also states that the exports at issue largely resulted “from the failure to properly establish jurisdiction over defense articles and technical data,” suggesting that Aeroflex did not have internal procedures to classify its products before exporting them.

One statement in the press release, however, is particularly interesting. The State Department accused Aeroflex of “causing unauthorized exports of ITAR-controlled microelectronics by domestic purchasers.” I am not at all sure what that means but my guess is that it may mean that Aeroflex “caused” unauthorized exports by domestic purchasers by selling them goods without identifying them as ITAR controlled, probably because Aeroflex had not classified the items itself and did not itself know that they were ITAR-controlled. If this is the case, domestic producers of defense articles best run for cover since a vast number of them sell ITAR-controlled products to domestic purchasers without making specific disclosures that the items are export controlled. Now companies should be concerned that the failure to make such a disclosure to domestic purchasers can lead to substantial fines.

We will have a better idea of what is involved here once the underlying documents are released, and I will post on them once that happens.

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Aug

8

Antiques Dealer Pleads to Rhino Charges


Posted by at 6:14 pm on August 8, 2013
Category: Plants and Wildlife

White Rhino in Lake Nakuru 2To blatantly plagiarize Ogden Nash, jail time for exporting rhinoceros is not something very prepocerous. Or, to put it in another less poetic way, exporting libation cups made from rhinoceros horns to China is not a smart idea.   This was a lesson learned the hard way by New York antiques dealer Qiang Wang who pleaded guilty yesterday in federal court to various charges arising from his exports of elephant ivory and the rhinoceros horns to his co-conspirators in China.

The criminal information that served as a basis for the plea reveals that, among other things, Wang purchased from a New York auction house three rhinoceros horn libation cups for $1,159,500. It is not clear whether these items made it to China, but it is alleged that other items containing elephant ivory and rhinoceros horn did. Wang apparently realized that his exports were problematic because, according to the information, he falsified the export documents to conceal the true nature of the shipments. This was not the case of some small time antiques dealer confused by a welter of confusing federal rules and regulations.

The exports were violations of the Lacey Act and the Endangered Species Act. Not surprisingly, the second count of the information charged a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 554, the “anti-smuggling” provision which is doubtlessly familiar to regular readers of this blog and which prohibits the export of any item “contrary to any law or regulation of the United States.” The reason for the smuggling charge, no doubt, is because 18 U.S.C. § 554 provides for a maximum imprisonment of 10 years. The Endangered Species Act and the Lacey Act only provide for prison terms, respectively, of one year and five years.

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Copyright © 2013 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
(No republication, syndication or use permitted without my consent.)