Dec

19

DDTC Releases New Proposed Brokering Rules


Posted by at 11:58 pm on December 19, 2011
Category: DDTCPart 129

Sea Dragon HelicopterThe Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (“DDTC”) finally released its much anticipated (or dreaded, depending on your point of view) new proposed rules on brokering of defense articles and defense services. Although I intend to look at these proposed rules in more detail in subsequent posts, I wanted to talk first about one issue of particular concern to me.

Naturally I first looked at how the new rules handled export lawyers who provide advice to defense manufacturers. The language of the old rules was broad enough that arguably all export lawyers were brokers and needed to register under part 129 of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (the “ITAR”) because brokering was defined to include any action that facilitated the manufacture or export of defense articles. Notwithstanding the breadth of that language, lawyers and law firms have not been registering under Part 129, using the well-accepted principal of statutory construction: hic lex non comprehendo mihi. And DDTC had not been rattling any sabers about their not registering.

The proposed rule now specifically exempts “activities by an attorney that do not extend beyond providing legal advice to a broker.” This exemption would seem to require the conclusion that all export lawyers need to register unless they are only providing advice to brokers, although it’s hard to imagine this is what DDTC actually intends.

But it gets worse. Not only will law firms with export lawyers have to file a registration application and pay the annual registration fee, but they also will have to obtain prior approval from DDTC prior to providing many legal services to defense manufacturers. The new rules require prior approval for all brokering activities unless they are specifically exempted from that requirement in the new section 129.7, which exempts brokering (a) conducted for a government agency, (b) brokering of certain defense articles (excluding, for example, night vision) wholly within NATO countries, Japan, New Zealand, Australia or South Korea, or (c) brokering of defense articles that are not “Significant Military Equipment” (“SME”) for end use by foreign governments or international organizations. So, if a law firm provides advice to a defense manufacturer about exporting night vision to France, the law firm will need DDTC approval before providing that advice.

This, of course, is either pernicious policy or unbelievable sloppy drafting by DDTC. The agency takes great pains to exclude banks, insurance companies and freight forwarders from the scope of the new brokering rules but leaves them fully applicable to law firms and requires law firms to obtain agency permission to provide legal services. I cannot think of another instance (other than cases involving blocked parties) where federal agency permission is needed as a precondition to the provision of legal services to clients.

Comments are due on February 17, 2012.

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Copyright © 2011 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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4 Comments:


I understand your point, but have difficulty imagining that DDTC intended this outcome – especially if one considers the impact of that interpretation upon the attorney-client privilege.

Comment by John Liebman on December 20th, 2011 @ 1:09 pm

    I agree that DDTC probably didn’t intend that result, even given the agency’s well-known antipathy to lawyers. Still the proposed rule says what it says. I am hoping that this issue will be revisited in the next iteration of the rules.

    Comment by Clif Burns on December 20th, 2011 @ 2:07 pm

We have our work cut out for us…. I think a wholesale adoption of the 2009 DTAG working group comments would have gone a long way toward imposing clarity (and sanity) on this perennially incomprehensible rule.

Comment by John Pisa-Relli on December 20th, 2011 @ 3:48 pm

DDTC is not alone in its antipathy to lawyers: There are a bunch of “consultants” – including a bunch of former DDTC, ODTC, OMC staff – who routinely render opinions about the meaning of the ITAR, i.e., engage in the unlicensed practice of law without rules governing out of professional responsibility and the oversight of a bar or courts, who are buddy-buddy with the future consultants now working at DDTC, all of whom would be happy to hamstring the bar.

Comment by Hillbilly on December 21st, 2011 @ 11:14 am