Archive for August, 2012


Aug

15

Another Way Cigars Are Bad for You


Posted by at 6:22 pm on August 15, 2012
Category: Cuba Sanctions

Cuban cigarsIf for some reason or other you were thinking that perhaps the next time you were in Dunhill’s in Paris or London you might just slip a few Cubans into your briefcase and bring them back to the U.S., think again, particularly if you’re a lawyer and want to stay that way. The Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Committee just recommended the disbarment of an Illinois attorney because, among other things, he was convicted of violating the Trading with the Enemy Act in connection with boxes of Cuban cigars that he brought with him into the United States.

Now, admittedly, Richard S. Connors, the attorney in question, did just a teensy bit more than stuff a few Cohibas in his blazer jacket and try to slip them past Customs. According to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld his criminal conviction, Connors was caught with 46 boxes of cigars in four suitcases in his automobile’s trunk while crossing the Canadian border and apparently more were carried back when returning from approximately 30 other trips to Cuba. Connors was also convicted of filing a false passport when, after Customs yanked his passport in connection with the cigar smuggling, he applied for a new one, stating only that his previous passport was missing. The Illinois Committee also noted that Connors had been previously suspended for misappropriation of client funds and had still not reimbursed those funds.

But the story gets better (or worse, I suppose, if you are Mr. Connors). The feds were tipped off to his Cuban cigar shenanigans by his wife during a messy divorce proceeding. In fact, according to Connors in his unsuccessful appeal, she “reconciled” with him only to get into his house to get information to turn over to federal investigators, something Connors claimed, without success, violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Oh, and about that house, the feds seized it because he kept the cigars there and used the proceeds from the sales of his cigars to pay his mortgage.

One other interesting tidbit: the Communist regime in Cuba was not toppled upon the end of Mr. Connor’s cigar business. Fidel and Raúl are doing fine; Mr. Connors, not so much.

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Copyright © 2012 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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Aug

14

Another Exporter Trips over the Entity List


Posted by at 6:10 pm on August 14, 2012
Category: BIS

Global Metcorp, LondonTwo weeks ago I reported on a settlement agreement between two shipping companies and the Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”) with respect to unlicensed exports of scrap steel to People Steel Mill, a company in Pakistan on BIS’s Entity List. I noted at that time that the identity of the exporter had not been revealed. Now it has: the exporter was the New Jersey office of London-based Global Metcorp.

The settlement documents for Global Metcorp list a July 2010 attempted export worth $212,613.10 that served as the basis for the previously mentioned settlement with the two shipping companies. In addition, it lists an unlicensed export of $77,718.55 worth of scrap steel in May 2010 which was presumably handled by other shipping companies, about whom we may hear further from BIS in future settlement papers.

Under the settlement agreement with Global Metcorp, the company agreed to pay $50,000 of which $40,000 was suspended, with the remaining $10,000 being paid in four equal monthly installments. And (surprise, surprise!) the company agreed that its president would go to drunk exporting school, er, would complete an export compliance training program within twelve months.

As with the related case against the shipping companies, this is a case of stupidity rather than malfeasance. Many exporters think that as long as they are exporting something innocuous like scrap steel or Kewpie dolls, they don’t need to worry about silly things like licenses and lists and all that. And frankly part of the problem here is that BIS spends more time fining exporters than educating them. Perhaps with all the money that BIS collects in these enforcement actions it might run a public service announcement on cable every now and then. Just a thought.

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Copyright © 2012 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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Aug

10

New Law Eliminates Foreign Sub Loophole in Iran Sanctions


Posted by at 5:54 pm on August 10, 2012
Category: Iran Sanctions

Iranian proliferationThe just-passed Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Human Rights Act of 2012 for the most part merely decorates the Iran sanctions cake with a few more sprinkles and cherries, but one provision is likely to have a significant impact, namely the provision of section 218 which holds U.S. companies liable for dealings with Iran by their foreign subsidiaries. This effectively eliminates a loophole in the current regulations which exempted foreign incorporated subsidiaries of U.S. companies from the Iran sanctions as long as no U.S. persons facilitated the subsidiaries activities with Iran. In order to avoid liability under the new act, companies with overseas subsidiaries doing business with Iran must divest those subsidiaries by 180 days after the bill’s enactment.

Section 218 is not self-enacting but requires the White House within sixty days of enactment to promulgate regulations prohibiting U.S. owned foreign entities from engaging in any transaction, directly or indirectly, which would be prohibited by the Iran Sanctions if engaged in by a U.S. person or an entity in the United States. It seems certain that the President will sign the new legislation and promptly issue an executive order with the required prohibition on dealings with Iran by U.S. owned foreign entities.

Sloppy drafting of the law would permit the President an interesting out here, were he so inclined. The exact language of the bill is that the President “shall prohibit an entity” controlled by a U.S. person from engaging in transactions with Iran. Under this language, the President would be in compliance if the new regulations singled out just one such entity for the new prohibition. Presumably the drafters wanted to say “shall prohibit any entity,” but for those who believe in strict statutory construction, that’s not what the statute actually says. This is, of course, more a comment on Congress’s carelessness in drafting laws than it is a prediction that the President will actually take this approach.

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Copyright © 2012 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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Aug

8

OFAC to UK: NYDFS Misread Our Rules


Posted by at 6:37 pm on August 8, 2012
Category: Iran SanctionsOFAC

Standard CharteredYesterday, I reported on the New York Department of Financial Services’ Order against Standard Chartered claiming that the Bank violated the rules of the Office of Foreign Assets Control by stripping out the names of Iranian entities in wires for legal U-turn transactions permitted before November 2008 under section 560.516(a)(1) of the Iranian Transaction Regulations. The New York agency attempted to premise this claim of illegality on section 560.516(c) of the regulations. That section reads:

Before a United States depository institution initiates a payment on behalf of any customer, or credits a transfer to the account on its books of the ultimate beneficiary, the United States depository institution must determine that the underlying transaction is not prohibited by this part.

This, NYDFS argued, required the U.S. bank to verify the legality of the transaction, something it couldn’t do if the customer data referring to Iran was stripped from the wires. I pointed out as long as the transaction was otherwise legal, this section wouldn’t be violated.

But in a letter on the Standard Chartered matter from OFAC to the U.K. authorities, obtained by Business Insider, OFAC makes a different and better point

Subsection 560.516(c) of the Iranian Transactions Regulations calls on U.S. financial institutions, including foreign financial institutions operating in the U.S., to confirm the applicability of a license only if the institution holds an account for a customer that is initiating or receiving a payment generally, the first and last banks in a transaction. Because U.S. financial institutions could not serve as either the originating or recipient bank on offshore-to offshore U-Turn transactions, this subsection did not apply to U.S. financial institutions serving as intermediaries on licensed U-Turn transactions.

That’s an excellent point. In a U-Turn transaction, the U.S. bank by definition would not be transferring money to or from one of its customers, and so this provision would not impose any obligation on the U.S. bank. Instead, this provision applies when, for example, there is a specific license permitting payment to or from a U.S. customer, as referenced by 560.516(a)(2), and in that case the U.S. bank would need to verify the existence and applicability of the license.

As I said yesterday, NYDFS shouldn’t get all tangled up in interpreting regulations that it doesn’t understand and has no authority to enforce.

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Copyright © 2012 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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Aug

7

You Won’t Like Me When I’m Angry


Posted by at 6:36 pm on August 7, 2012
Category: Iran Sanctions

Standard CharteredHere’s a good rule of thumb: Write all emails as if the distribution list included the entire planet because you never know when any given might come back to haunt you. If a certain executive at Standard Chartered had followed that rule, that bank might be worth 17 billion dollars more than it is today after the New York Department of Financial Services charged it with facilitating banking transactions for Iran. According to the Order released by the NYDFS, a Standard Chartered executive responded to concerns about the banks Iranian dealings with this pithy quote: “You f—ing Americans. Who are you to tell us, the rest of the world, that we‟re not going to deal with Iranians?” The New York regulators could scarcely make it through eight paragraphs of the Order before showcasing that gem, which they characterized as showing “contempt” for U.S. regulations and which led them to call Standard Chartered a “rogue” bank.

Leaving aside the email, which caused the NYDFS to go all Hulk on Standard Chartered, it seems that l’affaire Standard Chartered is more sizzle than steak. What most of the tut-tutting press accounts seem to have missed is that the large bulk of the transactions pointed to by the NYDFS were perfectly legal even though they did involve clearing dollar transactions for the Iranians. Up until November 6, 2008, section 560.516(a)(1) of the Iranian Transaction Regulations promulgated by the Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”) explicitly permitted so-called U-turn transactions by which foreign non-Iranian banks were allowed to clear U.S. dollar transactions for Iranians through U.S. correspondent accounts.

The NYDFS focuses mostly on Standard Charter having removed references to Iran in wire instructions although it is not at all clear that this was illegal if the underlying transaction was still permissible under the U-turn rules. Section 560.516(c), cited by the NYDFS and which requires the U.S. bank to determine that the transaction is legal before completing it, does not change this conclusion as long as the underlying transaction was permitted by the U-turn rules. Even more significantly, where does a state agency gain the competence to determine that a bank has violated OFAC rules absent a determination to that effect by OFAC?

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Copyright © 2012 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
(No republication, syndication or use permitted without my consent.)