Archive for the ‘BIS’ Category


Nov

5

Be Careful What You Say on LinkedIn


Posted by at 6:08 pm on November 5, 2013
Category: BISCriminal PenaltiesIran Sanctions

Nicholas Kaiga http://www.linkedin.com/in/nkaiga [Fair Use]
ABOVE: Nicholas Kaiga


According to a recently unsealed criminal complaint, a Belgian citizen, Nicholas Kaiga, has been charged with attempted unlicensed exports of export controlled aluminum tubing to Malaysia. The story recounted by the complaint begins with an order placed with a U.S. company for 7075 aluminum to be exported to a company in the UAE. Because 7075 aluminum is covered by ECCN 1C202, an export license application was filed with the Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”). When BIS sent an employee to the company address in the UAE, it discovered that the address actually belonged to a different company. Worse, it belonged to a different Iranian company, so BIS denied the license.

Undeterred, the UAE company instructed that the aluminum be shipped to Belgium instead given that a license is not required to send 7075 aluminum to Belgium. Enter Mr. Kaiga and his company Industrial Metals and Commodities, which he apparently was running from his house in a residential area of Brussels. Mr. Kaiga went so far as to fill out a BIS Form 711 stating that the aluminum was destined to be resold in Belgium In cahoots with federal investigators, the U.S. company then shipped what purported to be 7075 aluminum (but was in fact a lower grade EAR99 aluminum)  to Kaiga, who then promptly shipped it to a company in Malaysia related to the Iranian company that ordered the 7075 aluminum in the first place. The shipment would have required a license both for export to Malaysia and, obviously, Iran, neither of which had been obtained.

Some time later, Mr. Kaiga made an improvident trip to New York and met with an undercover agent, whom he allegedly told that the aluminum was always intended to go to Malaysia. For good measure, Kaiga allegedly bragged to the agent about his ability to get around export controls. Then they arrested him.

An interesting footnote to all this is Mr. Kaiga’s expansive LinkedIn biography where he explains:

My overall experiences have taught me to become very flexible and adaptable to different manners of … working.

Maybe flexibility is not always such a good thing.  He also claims that one of his “specialties” is “managing high risk operations.” Not so much given the outcome of his trip to New York. He might want to change that when he gets access to a computer again in several years.

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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.]

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

Oct

2

Fun Furlough Facts


Posted by at 11:07 am on October 2, 2013
Category: BISCuba SanctionsDDTCOFAC

Based on photograph By Daderot (Own work) [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3APatent_quote_-_United_States_Department_of_Commerce_-_DSC05103.JPGSo, you may be wondering which export agencies are up and which are down now that the Federal Government is shutdown. The answer isn’t altogether clear at this point (still!) but here is what appears to be the current rundown of things.

Treasury. The license application page is down with a note saying that licenses won’t even be accepted during the shutdown. If you need to file a TSRA or other license, you’re just going to have to wait until the government is open even to file the license.

State. Normal operations at least through Friday, October 4. After that, licenses will be accepted and acted on only in emergency situations.

Commerce. Crickets, as they say. Nothing but the sound of crickets from that corner. The BIS website makes no mention of the shutdown which means either it’s business at usual over at BIS (not very likely) or that they are so shut down they can’t even post something on the front page of their website.

USITC. Looking for the correct HTUS code to put on an AES form? Too bad. The online version of the Harmonized Tariff is down for the duration. Now aren’t you sorry you didn’t print out all 3,456,732.12 pages of it?

Radio Marti. Well, you can’t get a license to send food to Cuba during the shutdown, but the federal government has decided that propaganda is an essential service, and Radio Marti broadcasts to Cuba will continue unabated, shutdown or not. Apparently, the Cubans need to hear about our shutdown which proves that we’re a free country or something like that. Of course, Cuba’s jamming operations are also unaffected by the shutdown, so mostly the broadcasts to Cuba will be about as effective as they always have been.

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

Aug

1

No, You Aren’t Imagining Things


Posted by at 5:04 pm on August 1, 2013
Category: BISDDTC

Tim Hoffman via DTSA website http://www.dtsa.mil/sys_art/Hoffman_Hugh.jpg [Public Domain]
ABOVE: Tim Hoffman, DTSA

If you thought it was taking longer to get export licenses from the Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”) and from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (“DDTC”), you’re right. And the reason? Furloughs at the Defense Technology Security Administration (“DTSA”) are the culprit.

Speaking at the BIS Update Conference last week, Tim Hoffman, Deputy Director of DTSA, pointed his finger at the furloughs at DTSA caused by the budget sequester. Hoffman said that DTSA has taken some steps with BIS and DDTC to give them some “slippage” in their required response times on BIS and DDTC applications. And even when the sequester is theoretically over in October (and assuming that there are no more budget shenanigans on the Hill), Hoffman predicted that processing delays would persist for a while as ripple effects from the current furloughs.

Get more information from this in the July 29 issue (subscription required) of the Washington Trade and Tariff Letter.

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

Jul

30

That’s Why It’s Called Dirt


Posted by at 9:24 pm on July 30, 2013
Category: BISNorth Korea SanctionsOFAC

Kim Jong Un Official Photo Source: Korean Central News Agency [fair use]As the result of an FOIA request, the Office of Foreign Asset Controls (“OFAC”) released a pile of requests by U.S. citizens to import all kinds of things from North Korea, including beer, printer cartridges, children’s shoes, blue jeans (!!), columbite, and collectible postage stamps. You can’t help but being intrigued by the concept of importing blue jeans from Pyongyang, that international capital of haute couture best exemplified by the pudgy fashion plate who is the titular ruler of the country.

But more entertaining than picturing what exactly Nork jeans would look like is a singularly clueless article  on the license requests that ran on the aptly named website TechDirt, which apparently dispenses its “dirt” on the tech scene without actually knowing anything or doing any research. The author of the TechDirt post, one Mike Masnick, is all befuddled over requests by several law firms for permission to take steps to register trademarks in North Korea. Masnick sees these requests as just an example of law firms trying to gouge their clients for performing pointless services.

Case in point, he says, was the request by the lawyers by Intel to register its trademarks in North Korea

[W]hy does Intel care about protecting its trademarks in North Korea when it can’t sell its chips into North Korea in the first place?

Hello, Mike, does Google still work on your computer? Obviously not, or you would have easily found this. Exports to North Korea aren’t banned but merely require licenses from the Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”). In the case of consumer grade computer chips, license requests are considered on a case-by-case basis. Also, Intel products with less than 10 percent U.S.-origin content could be sold in North Korea without licenses under BIS’s de minimis rules. But, let’s suppose, for the sake of argument, that Intel couldn’t sell anything at all in North Korea, it still might want trademark protection there to prevent other people from outside the United States from selling products in North Korea under that name.

As a bit of background, the real reason for the requests by law firms to help register trademarks in North Korea stems from a curious inconsistency in OFAC’s sanctions regulations. In most if not all of the other sanctions regimes, including those for Cuba and Iran, there are specific provisions permitting registration and protection of trademarks in the sanctioned countries. For reasons that are not clear, the North Korea regulations do not include this exception, hence the request. Whether OFAC granted these requests or not is not revealed by the FOIA documents but I’m fairly certain that the requests would have been granted.

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