Jul

31

BIS Has Some Moore Fun


Posted by at 6:17 pm on July 31, 2007
Category: BISCuba Sanctions

Promo Still for SickoApparently feeling that Michael Moore’s new movie wasn’t getting enough publicity, the Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”) served its own subpoena on Moore, giving Moore yet another opportunity to talk about persecution on the late night talk show circuit. Additionally, the BIS subpoena sent a sly message to Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”), which is also investigating Moore, that the enforcement folks at BIS are just as rough and tough as those at OFAC.

I can’t find a copy of the subpoena, but it’s pretty easy to guess what’s going on here. BIS can penalize exports to Cuba under EAR section 746.2, which requires a license from BIS for all exports to Cuba not subject to certain narrow exceptions set forth in the rule. (OFAC on the other hand penalizes financial transactions with Cubans or the Cuban government.)

So BIS is clearly looking for something exported by Moore to Cuba. One possibility is the horse boat he road in on. We’ve seen that before when BIS nailed a sport fishing boat that chased a fish into Cuban waters. Outside of that it’s hard to see what Moore would have exported. Maybe he spit out some gum he brought with him from the United States. This would be problematic because section 746.2 doesn’t contain the LVS exception for limited value shipments that might otherwise cover the export of a stick of chewed-up chewing gum to Cuba.

Back to the boat theory, however, there may be an applicable exemption, because section 746.2(a)(1)(i) permits temporary exports to Cuba “by the news media,” which puts us back to pretty much where things are over in the OFAC proceeding. There the question is whether Moore is a “journalist” and therefore entitled to the general license for journalists to travel to Cuba. In BIS-land, the issue will be whether Moore is a member of the “news media” or not.

Unless, of course, they can nail Moore for that piece of gum he spit out on El Malecón.

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Copyright © 2007 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
(No republication, syndication or use permitted without my consent.)


4 Comments:


So what happens to him if he’s charged and indicted and convicted (or whatever the process is) of all the worst possible things about going to Cuba?

Does he get waterboarded at Gitmo? Or just pay a fine?

Comment by blunderdog on July 31st, 2007 @ 7:38 pm

Usually people get fined, but criminal convictions and jail time are possible.

Comment by Clif Burns on July 31st, 2007 @ 7:40 pm

Clif,

The example of the chewing gum (amongst other items he probably left) left me laughing at my desk today.
Thx.

Comment by Shawn Wheatfill on August 1st, 2007 @ 1:37 pm

Perhaps Moore was exporting his own books and videos. As a Canadian who has travelled several times to Cuba, I can confirm that his works are so well thought of in the Workers’ Paradise that they get as much shelf space as those of The Divine Leader himself. Of course, the works of Cuban writers who do not adhere to The Party Line are not available in Cuba.

Comment by Cuban Pete on August 15th, 2007 @ 8:25 am