Archive for April, 2007


Apr

30

Between an Embargo and a Hard Place


Posted by at 8:48 pm on April 30, 2007
Category: BISCriminal PenaltiesSanctions

LogicaLogicaCMG, Inc., the U.S. subsidiary of U.K.-based LogicaCMG plc, pleaded guilty last Wednesday to violating the U.S. embargo on Cuba. According to a Department of Justice press release, the violation occurred in 2001 when New Hampshire based CMG, which was merged into LogicaCMG on December 30, 2002, configured and shipped a telecommunications server to Cuba through Panama. The server was designed to permit text messaging on the Cuban wireless telephone network. LogicaCMG agreed to pay a $50,000 fine. The company also entered into a settlement agreements with the Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”) and the Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”).

The conundrum for LogicaCMG is that its parent company, which almost surely approved the guilty plea, is subject to European Union Council Regulation 2271/96, which forbids LogicaCMG “whether directly or through a subsidiary” from complying with the U.S. embargo on Cuba. The Settlement Agreement with BIS, although not yet posted on the BIS website, almost certainly involves further representations from LogicaCMG that it will not further violate the Cuba embargo, normally enforced by conditioning a suspension of a denial of export privileges or suspension of all or part of a monetary fine on future compliance with U.S. export laws.

LogicaCMG is no doubt taking a calculated risk that the E.U. is unlikely to enforce Regulation 2271/96. To the best of my knowledge, the blocking regulation has only rarely been enforced if at all. Still, this is hardly a comfortable position for the company.

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Copyright © 2007 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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Apr

26

BIS Fines Supermicro Employee $60,000 for Exports to Iran


Posted by at 8:40 pm on April 26, 2007
Category: BIS

MotherboardThe Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”) recently released a settlement agreement in which Robert Abreu, the Senior Director of Strategic Sales for Supermicro Computers, agreed to pay $60,000 to settle charges arising from illegal exports of computer motherboards to Iran. The motherboards were shipped by Supermicro and Abreu to a distributor in the UAE which then re-exported the motherboards to Iran.

The charging letter set forth four separate shipments to Iran. Each shipment was alleged to have violated EAR § 764.2(b) inasmuch as Abreu aided and abetted export of items without the required licenses.

As usual, BIS can’t resist resist piling on by charging both an offense and the lesser included offense and then collecting fines for both. With respect to the fourth shipment, the charging letter also alleged that Abreu violated EAR § 764.2(e) because he had “knowledge” that a violation would occur.

Finally, Abreu was charged with violating EAR § 764.2(g) by making a false statement to a BIS Agent. According to the charging letter, Abreu made a false statement to the agent when he said that he did not know that the items were being reexported from the UAE to Iran until after the shipments were made.

Two facts set forth in the charging letter suggest why BIS may have sought such a significant fine against an employee of the exporter. First, Abreu was alleged to have sent an email in connection with the fourth shipment describing the shipment as a sale involving “motherboards to Iran.” Second, according to the charging letter, Abreu had previously sent a letter to Supermicro employees advising them of the embargo on shipments to Iran. This may also explain why Abreu agreed to such a significant fine.

As we have reported previously, Abreu’s employer, Supermicro, agreed last September to pay to BIS a civil penalty of $125,400 in connection with shipments of motherboards and computer chassis to Iran, some of which appear to be the same shipments charged against Abreu.

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

Apr

25

White House’s Proposed Export Legislation Released


Posted by at 9:12 pm on April 25, 2007
Category: BIS

Secretary of Commerce Carlos GutierrezThe White House’s early Christmas gift to BIS — the Export Enforcement Act of 2007 — was posted this afternoon on the Bureau of Industry and Security’s website. When we reported on it yesterday, only a somewhat misleading Reuter’s wire story was available.

The Reuter’s story suggested that the maximum penalty for corporations for violations of the EAR would be increased under the act to $5 million or ten times the value of the exported good, whichever is greater. What the news item didn’t make clear was that this was an increase in the criminal penalties for violations. But not to worry. The proposed law also includes a whopping increase in the available civil penalties from $50,000 per violation to $500,000. Even if an exporter gets the standard 50 percent mitigation for a voluntary disclosure, a $250,000 penalty will still make exporters think twice about whether to disclose a violation or take its chance that the violation will never come to light.

The other significant change for exporters in the White House proposal is the provision of the bill which expands the list of criminal violations that can be a predicate for a denial of export privileges. It’s an interesting mishmash of provisions. A denial can be premised, for example, on a threat to use a heat seeking missile (18 U.S.C. § 2332g) but not on actually blowing up an airport (18 U.S.C. § 2332g)

The White House export proposal also reauthorizes the Export Administration Act for another five years.

Personally I think the chance of getting this legislation through the current Congress is remote, so I don’t think anybody should be staying up nights fretting about increased export penalties.

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Copyright © 2007 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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Apr

24

No One Will Ever File Another Voluntary Disclosure with BIS


Posted by at 8:42 pm on April 24, 2007
Category: BIS

George W. BushThe White House today announced that it was sending to Congress the “Export Enforcement Act of 2007.” The proposed legislation would substantially increase penalties for violations of the Export Administration Regulations (“EAR”):

The proposed Export Enforcement Act of 2007 . . . would increase maximum corporate penalties from $50,000 under the executive orders to either $5 million or ten times the value of the exported good, whichever is more.

Yikes! Penalties at that level will certainly make exporters think twice about making a voluntary disclosure to BIS. Even if the exporter gets the 50 percent mitigation for the voluntary disclosure, the new penalties will result in significant payments for EAR violations.

As of the time of this post the only news report of the Bush administration’s proposal was the Reuters India story linked above. Nor was a copy of the legislation available for review on the White House website or on Thomas. When it becomes available, we’ll post a more detailed analysis.

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

Apr

23

U.S. Export Laws Block Access to Website on Crisis in Darfur


Posted by at 10:31 pm on April 23, 2007
Category: SanctionsSudan

Google Earth Crisis in Darfur ProjectThe United States Holocaust Museum joined with Google Earth in a project called “Crisis in Darfur” to document the genocide in Darfur. The project pinpoints, through a series of overlays on a Google Earth map, the precise location where each of the massacres in Darfur has occurred.

According to the Holocaust Museum’s website on the Crisis in Darfur project:

Crisis in Darfur enables more than 200 million Google Earth users worldwide to visualize and better understand the genocide currently unfolding in Darfur, Sudan.

Unless you happen to live in Sudan.

As reported in this article in the Sudan Times, soon after the Crisis in Darfur project came online, aid workers in Sudan reported that they were unable to download Google Earth, which is required to view the project. An email from a Google spokesperson to the Sudan Times reporter revealed the reason:

In accordance with US export controls and economic sanctions regulations, we are unable to permit the download of Google Earth in Sudan.

The spokesperson is right. The current Sudan sanctions program prohibits the export of Google Earth software to Sudan. Because of the interactive features of software, it is hard to argue that the information exception applies.

Needless to say, the absurd results of economic sanctions in this instance are clear. The major beneficiary from the prohibition of downloading Google Earth in Sudan, to the extent the ban is successful, is the government of Sudan, which is busy trying to deny or minimize the extent of the catastrophe unfolding in Darfur.

On the other hand, the application of the Sudan sanctions to the download of Google Earth also illustrates the futility of sanctions in this regard. An Internet surfer in Sudan can easily use an anonymous proxy service to conceal the geographic location of the download request.

Excuse me, OFAC, you have a call on line 3. It’s the 21st Century calling.

(Thanks to reader Creighton Chin who sent me a copy of the Sudan Times article.)

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