Archive for October, 2013


Oct

31

Lessons in Spycraft: Don’t Try This at Home


Posted by at 6:50 pm on October 31, 2013
Category: Arms ExportCriminal PenaltiesDDTC

Source http://www.defenseimagery.mil/imagery.html#a=search&s=f-15&chk=6cff0&t=0&p=2&guid=76a6c050743c287abd63255e111c2a6e7a281d91 [Public Domaiin; work of federal employee]A New Jersey woman, Hannah Robert, was arraigned on Monday on charges that she exported ITAR-controlled technical drawings without a DDTC license in violation of the Arms Export Control Act. The drawings allegedly involved parts for the F-15, the Chinook helicopter and other military aircraft as well as nuclear submarines.

According to the DOJ press release, Ms. Robert used an unusual method of exporting the technical drawings to her overseas contact:

Starting in October 2010, Robert transmitted the military drawings for these parts to India by posting the technical data to the password-protected website of a Camden County, N.J., church where she was a volunteer web administrator. This was done without the knowledge of the church staff. Robert e-mailed R.P. the username and password to the church website so that R.P. could download the files from India. Through the course of the scheme, Robert uploaded thousands of technical drawings to the church website for R.P. to download in India.

A key element in any export prosecution is scienter, that is, proof that the defendant knew that his or her conduct was illegal. If these allegations are true, the prosecution is not going to have a hard time in establishing that Ms. Robert knew that she should not have sent these drawings out of the country without a license.

For espionage aficionados, this technique is known as a dead drop and in the Internet era dead drops have been done on such places as draft folders of shared Gmail accounts (viz., the love letters of General Petraeus and Paula Broadwell). It’s probably safe to say that churches, whether brick and mortar or their virtual locations, are not the best location for a dead drop. The DOJ press release doesn’t reveal how Ms. Robert got nabbed but I have a pretty clear picture of some shocked vicar stumbling on these drawings late one night and calling the feds.

Permalink Comments (4)

Bookmark and Share


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

Oct

30

Good Luck Collecting That Fine


Posted by at 7:01 pm on October 30, 2013
Category: General

Source http://www.dfsa.ae/Documents/Alerts%202012/004P_Alma%20Investment%20LLC_False%20Document_Reference%20to%20DIFC.pdf [Fair Use]The Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”) recently announced a whopping $1.5 million fine against “Alma Investment LLC, a UAE-based investment and advising company” for violations of U.S. sanctions on Iran. Since the case involved six electronic funds transfers for $103,283, the $1.5 million fine represents the maximum available fine.

One of the reasons for the mega-fine cited by OFAC was that “Alma did not cooperate with OFAC during the course of its investigation.” Reading between the lines, Alma didn’t cooperate because it never responded to or acknowledged OFAC’s requests for information, nor did it consent to the imposition of this fine. That is likely because Alma doesn’t really exist but was an entirely fictional company created as a scheme to defraud investors. The Dubai Financial Services Authority released a warning on Alma indicating Alma was fraudulently soliciting funds from investors and representing that it was registered in Dubai even though, according to DFSA, it was neither registered in Dubai nor present at the address it represented in Dubai. The website for Alma cited by the DFSA is no longer operational. So, I hope OFAC hasn’t spent the $1.5 million yet.

However, I do suggest that the agency take a look at fining Oceanic Airlines to make up the shortfall. It’s rumored that Oceanic just sold a Boeing 777 to Iran Air. And fining Oceanic “will have a compliance/deterrence effect” just as strong, if not stronger, as the one cited by OFAC in levying the $1.5 million fine against Alma.

Permalink Comments Off on Good Luck Collecting That Fine

Bookmark and Share


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

Oct

29

Airline Mechanic Jailed for Two Years For Delusional Export Fantasies


Posted by at 6:03 pm on October 29, 2013
Category: General

Diocenyr Ribamar Barbosa-Santos
ABOVE: Diocenyr Ribamar
Barbosa-Santos


Back in December of 2012, we reported on Diocenyr Ribamar Barbosa-Santos, an airline mechanic, who fantasized to an undercover agent about his plans to buy seven airplanes from China to sell to Iran once he secured a $135 million letter of credit to finance the purchase of the aircraft. The likelihood that the Brazilian immigrant — whose sole qualification in the airplane brokering business was that he fixed airplanes — could get the financing and move the planes from China to Iran was about as likely, I said, as his convincing the U.S. Park Service to dismantle Mount Rushmore and ship it, rock by rock, to Tehran. Nevertheless, he was charged in a criminal complaint with brokering the sale of these aircraft to Iran, which is roughly equivalent to charging a guy with terrorism after he confesses to plans to explode a thermonuclear device made entirely of Lego bricks and Play-Do.

Mr. Barbosa-Santos has now tasted the sting of federal justice for his wild imagination and has been sentenced to two years in jail. Amazingly, this sentence was imposed even though the prosecutor recommended probation, apparently also agreeing that the defendant was mostly guilty of being stupid.

What’s interesting was why U.S. District Court Judge Daniel T.K. Hurley decided to ignore the prosecutor and throw the book at Barbosa-Santos:

Hurley called Barbosa-Santos “the salt of the earth” and regretted refuting both attorneys. But he said Americans live with a false sense of security about the dangers of the world.

Of the Iranian government, he said, “these are the people that regard the U.S. as the great Satan.”

And we certainly don’t want people who think we are the great Satan flying around imaginary planes financed with imaginary letters of credit. Who knows what catastrophic harm that could bring?

Permalink Comments (2)

Bookmark and Share


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

Oct

23

Berman Amendment? What Berman Amendment??


Posted by at 10:42 pm on October 23, 2013
Category: BISCuba SanctionsOFAC

By Marrovi (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-2.5-mx (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/mx/deed.en)], via Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AAntiguo_Centro_Asturiano%2C_hoy_Museo_Nacional_de_Bellas_Artes.JPGBack in August, the Bureau of Industry and Security issued an advisory opinion relating to a request from a number of U.S. art museums regarding temporary export of artworks from the United States to Cuba, presumably to be displayed in the 2014 Havana Biennial. A simple question, one would think, easily answered by the Berman Amendment which prohibits BIS from regulating “directly or indirectly” the export of “informational materials” to Cuba. But never, ever underestimate the inventiveness of BIS in figuring out ways to prevent the Commies in Cuba from being propped up by American paintings hanging on museum walls in Havana.

The BIS advisory opinion starts promisingly by conceding that BIS would be “prohibited from  regulating ‘information or informational material’ such as artwork.” But don’t start packing up your Rembrandts yet:

You stated in your request that the artwork would be transported to Cuba using a vessel. Please note that, pursuant to Section 746.2 of the EAR, an export license is required for the temporary sojourn of vessels to Cuba. The vessel may not travel to Cuba unless the exporter of the vessel first obtains a temporary sojourn license from BIS.

So, if you can have Scotty and the Starship Enterprise beam the artwork up to Havana, you don’t need an export license from BIS to send a painting to Cuba. Otherwise, so sad, too bad, but you’d better get permission from BIS first, Berman amendment or not. This rather defeats the part of the Berman amendment which says that BIS can’t regulate “directly or indirectly” the export of informational materials to Cuba or other sanctioned countries. Even OFAC, not a hotbed of pro-Cuba sympathy or Berman amendment enthusiasm, gets this. Section 515.550 of OFAC’s Cuban Assets Control Regulations makes clear that a vessel engaging in exempt transactions does not require a license to go to Cuba.

To add insult to injury, the advisory opinion says this:

[A]rtwork is considered “informational materials” exempt from the EAR’s jurisdiction when exported to Cuba if it is classified under Chapter subheadings 9701, 9702, or 9703 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS). If the material at issue is exempt from the EAR, a BIS license is not required for its export to Cuba. Please contact the U.S. International Trade Commission if you need assistance with classifying the artwork in accordance with HTSUS.

Seriously, the person who wrote this opinion thinks that you get HTSUS classification decisions from the USITC. The USITC itself, as a quick to Google would have revealed to the author of the opinion, doesn’t think it can provide classification assistance:

Although, in principle, articles can be classified in only one place, classification often requires interpretation and judgment. U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has authority to make classification decisions and may disagree with a reasonable classification offered by the importer. Published Customs rulings (http://rulings.cbp.gov) are often useful to see how Customs looks at the issues. USITC does not issue classification decisions.

Even more bizarre, why does BIS suggest that the exporter needs to make some difficult decision to determine whether an artwork fits in a specific HTSUS tariff heading and then misdirect the exporter to the wrong agency to resolve that thorny issue? Evidently to make the museums think twice before they send paintings to Havana. It’s a slippery slope after all that starts with oil paintings and ends up with weapons of mass destruction.

[Note:  even though the advisory opinion suggests that all vessels need a license to go to Cuba, the museums could put the artwork on a boat, send it to a foreign port, and have a foreign boat transport the artwork to Cuba — an unnecessary, pointless and possibly hazardous solution.]

Permalink Comments Off on Berman Amendment? What Berman Amendment??

Bookmark and Share


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

Oct

22

Iran’s Newest Diplomacy Tool with the West: PowerPoint


Posted by at 11:51 pm on October 22, 2013
Category: Economic SanctionsIran SanctionsSanctions

By Max Talbot-Minkin (Flickr: Iran's Ambassador to the UN) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AMohammad_Javad_Zarif.jpg
ABOVE: Mohammad Javad Zarif

According to press reports last week, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif used a Microsoft PowerPoint presentation last week in Geneva to explain to U.S. and EU diplomats what Iran may do to address their concerns with Iran’s nuclear activities. Putting aside the permissibility under U.S. law of how Mr. Zarif obtained PowerPoint, the bigger story is that Iran’s amicable overtures may be working. The New York Times reported on Friday that the Obama Administration is considering a plan that would unfreeze some portion of blocked Iranian assets in exchange for Iranian government commitments with respect to its nuclear program.

While even such a proposed plan is significant given U.S. foreign relations with Iran over the past few decades, there may be some obstacles to loosening sanctions on Iran. Members of Congress quickly responded to news of the Geneva talks with proposals for tighter sanctions on Iran

The United States is not, however, the only one on Iran’s dance card. How the EU responds, for example, to actions by a new Iranian government is a critical component to how effective U.S. sanctions are. Although some U.S. politicians would like to believe Iran’s current pains from sanctions are felt exclusively because of increased U.S. sanctions, the success of sanctions is not properly evaluated without considering the increase of other sanctions, principally those of the EU and Switzerland, within the last few years.

Using PowerPoint should not be underestimated as a calculated gesture by Iran even if it may have required a U.S. export license. Gestures are important aspects of diplomacy and can lead to significant developments in foreign relations. Just ask Reagan and Gorbachev about their walk along Lake Geneva almost thirty years ago. Congress and the Obama Administration need to find some common ground before talks with Iran resume in Geneva next month in order for the United States to take part in meaningful discussions. If not, the United States may not be part of any lakeside strolls, which can be especially cold when alone in Geneva this time of year.

Permalink Comments (1)

Bookmark and Share


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