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OCTOBER 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

 This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through October 31, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company's international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

 See also our "Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties" section below for an update on companies and persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

 

REGULATORY UPDATES

 

International Organizations

 

Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) Holds A Plenary Meeting In Sochi, Russia

 

Oct. 4-8, 2021:  The Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) held a plenary meeting in Sochi, Russia.  At the meeting the members adopted an updated Equipment, Software, and Technology Annex.  During the meeting, the member nations emphasized that the MTCR Guidelines are not designed to impede technological development, including space programs, as long as such activities cannot contribute to the proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) delivery systems.  The new Equipment, Software, and Technology Annex is on the Internet at http://mtcr.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/MTCR-TEM-Technical_Annex_2021-10-08.pdf, and a version showing the changes from the previous Annex is at https://mtcr.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/MTCR-TEM-Technical_Annex_2021-10-08-Track-Changes.pdf.

 

 

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

 

BIS Makes Minor Edits To Multiple Parts Of The EAR

 

Oct. 5, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 54807:  The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) made minor editorial revisions in Parts 732, 734, 736, 738, 740, 744, 748, 750, 770, 772, and 774 of the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) to correct inadvertent inconsistencies in the language of these parts.  The revisions did not change the substance of the EAR.

 

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BIS Adds ECCN 2D352 To Control "Software" Designed For Nucleic Acid Assemblers And Synthesizers Controlled By ECCN 2B352.j

 

October 5, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 54814:  BIS amended EAR Parts 742 and 774 to add new Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) 2D352 to reflect a decision made by the Australia Group (AG) in May 2021 to modify the AG biological equipment list.  Specifically, new ECCN 2D352 controls "software" designed for nucleic acid assemblers and synthesizers controlled by ECCN 2B352.j that is capable of designing and building functional genetic elements from digital sequence data. This "software," which BIS had previously identified as an emerging technology when controlled under new ECCN 2D352, now requires a license for chemical and biological weapons (CB) reasons and anti-terrorism (AT) reasons to the destinations indicated under CB Column 2 and AT Column 1, respectively, on the Commerce Country Chart (Supplement No. 1 to EAR Part 738).  BIS also amended ECCN 2E001 to extend controls to the "technology" for the development of this "software."

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BIS Takes Control Over Deuterium From The Nuclear Regulatory Commission Placing Control In ECCN 1C298

 

Oct. 6, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 55492:  BIS published a final rule completing the transfer from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to the Commerce Department for control of exports of deuterium that is intended for use other than in a nuclear reactor. The rule is effective December 6, 2021.  (See NRC paragraph below for the NRC's release of control of exports of these items.)  Deuterium intended for use other than in a nuclear reactor will now be classified for Nuclear Proliferation (NP) reasons in ECCN 1C298, which currently controls only certain graphite.  For purposes of ECCN 1C298, "deuterium" is defined as "deuterium and any deuterium compound, including heavy water, in which the ratio of deuterium atoms to hydrogen atoms exceeds 1:5000."

 

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BIS Establishes Controls On Certain Items That Can Be Used For Malicious Cyber Activities

 

Oct. 21, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 58205:  BIS issued an interim final rule establishing controls on the export, reexport, or transfer of certain items that can be used for malicious cyber activities by creating new ECCNs. This interim final rule added ECCNs: 4A005; 4D004; 4E001.a; 4E001.c; and 5A001.j. This interim final rule also overlaps with Category 5 – Part 2 when a cybersecurity item also incorporates particular "information security" functionality specified in ECCNs 5A002.a, 5A004.a, 5A004.b, 5D002.c.1, or 5D002.c.3 Category 5 - Part 2 of the CCL in Supplement No. 1 to part 774 of the EAR, these Category 5—Part 2 ECCNs prevail. Additionally, all items subject to the EAR that are controlled for Surreptitious Listening (SL) reasons under another ECCN not added by this rule will continue to be classified under the SL ECCN. This interim final rule also establishes License Exception (LE), LE Authorized Cybersecurity Exports ("ACE").  The announcement requests public comments on the potential cost to the U.S. industry and the cybersecurity community of compliance with the proposed controls.  The new rule, in conjunction with LE ACE, will allow the export of "cybersecurity items" to most destinations, while requiring a license for exports to countries of national security or weapons of mass destruction (WMD) concern or countries subject to a U.S. arms embargo, as well as for circumstances where the exporter knows or has reason to know at the time of the export that the "cybersecurity item" will be used to affect the confidentiality, integrity, or availability of information or information systems without authorization by the owner, operator or administrator of the information system.  A major goal of this rule is to ensure that U.S. companies are not fueling authoritarian practices. (Contact us for further information about the specific requirements of this rule if you have concerns about any proposed export, reexport, or in-country transfer.)  This rule will be effective January 19, 2022; the deadline for comments is December 6, 2021.

 

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BIS Proposes The Amendment Of License Exception STA For Certain ECCNs And Corrected Inconsistencies Between License Exceptions STA and TSR

 

Oct. 22, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 58615:  BIS issued a proposed rule amending the EAR to clarify restrictions on the availability of LE STA (Strategic Trade Authorization) for ECCNs 9D001, 9D002, 9D004, 9E001, 9E002, and 9E003 and to further restrict the availability of LE STA for certain technology controlled under ECCNs 2E003.f and 1E001. The proposed rules also corrects inconsistencies between LEs STA and Technology Software Restricted (TSR), including the exclusion of the same technologies from eligibility for License Exception TSR; and to make conforming amendments throughout LE STA (Requirements and Limitations, EAR Sec. 740.20(b)) and in affected ECCNs.  The deadline for comments is December 6, 2021.

 

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BIS Issues An Advance Notice Of Proposed Rulemaking Requesting Feedback From The Public And U.S. Industry About The Potential Uses Of Brain-Computer Interface Technology

 

Oct. 26, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 59070: BIS issued an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) requesting feedback from the public and U.S. industry about the potential uses of Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) technology, particularly regarding whether BCI technology could provide the U.S. or any of its adversaries with a military or intelligence advantage and whether it would be possible to subject BCI to effective export controls.  BCI technology, which includes, inter alia, neural-controlled interfaces, mind-machine interfaces, direct neural interfaces, and brain-machine interfaces, has until now been regarded as an emerging technology.  The deadline for comments is December 10, 2021.

 

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BIS Posts FAQs About the Foreign Direct Product Rule

 

Oct. 28, 2021:  BIS posted an extensive and very useful series of FAQs about the Foreign Direct Product (FDP) Rule titled "Foreign-Produced Direct Product (FDP) Rule as it Relates to the Entity List Sec. 736.2(b)(3)(vi) and footnote 1 to Supplement No. 4 to Part 744" on its website at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/about-bis/2681-2020-fpdp2-faq-120820-ea/file.  The FAQs in this 9-page compendium are shown under the following topics:

  • General Topics
  • Types of Items
  • Prior Exports
  • Plant/Major Component
  • De Minimis
  • Supply Chain
  • Prior Licenses
  • Licensing Policy
  • Item-Specific Questions
  • Savings Clauses

 

Footnote 1 to Supplement No. 4 to Part 744 identifies entities on the Entity List that exporters may not reexport, export from abroad, or transfer (in-country) without a license or license exception any foreign-produced item specified when there is "knowledge" that the foreign-produced item will be incorporated into, or will be used in the "production" or "development" of any "part," "component," or "equipment" produced, purchased, or ordered by any entity with a footnote 1 designation or any entity with a footnote 1 designation that is a party to any transaction involving the foreign-produced item, e.g., as a "purchaser," "intermediate consignee," "ultimate consignee," or "end-user."

 

Footnote 1 currently lists Huawei entities from around the world.

 

Nuclear Regulatory Commission

 

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission Completes Transfer Of Deuterium To The EAR When Its Intended Use Is Other Than In A Nuclear Reactor

 

Oct. 6, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 55476:  The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) issued a final regulation removing the NRC's licensing authority for exports of deuterium for non-nuclear end-use. (See item in BIS section above for regulatory action by BIS placing these items on the Commerce Control List (CCL, EAR Part 774, Supp. No. 1).)  The change of jurisdiction over these exports recognizes that exports of deuterium for commercial use have become far more common than exports of deuterium for nuclear end uses. Accordingly, responsibility for the licensing of such exports is being transferred to the Department of Commerce's Bureau of Industry and Security and the Export Administration Regulations ("EAR"). However, exports of deuterium for nuclear end-use will remain under the NRC's export licensing jurisdiction.

 

 

Department of State

 

DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

 

Oct. 6, 15, 19, 20, 22, 25, and 26, 2021:  The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at    

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

 

  • Change in Address for Airbus Helicopters' European Maintenance Repair and Overhaul Logistics Hub;
  • Change in Name for Babcock UK-owned entities due to corporate rebranding as follows:

From:                                                               To:

Bond Air Services Limited                                Babcock Mission Critical Services Onshore Limited

International Aviation Leasing Limited               Babcock Mission Critical Services Leasing Limited

Vastone Limited                                                Babcock Mission Critical Services Leasing Limited;

  • Change in Name from HENSOLDT Optronics (Pty.) Ltd. to HENSOLDT South Africa (Pty.) Ltd. due to consolidation of subsidiaries GEW Technologies (Pty.) Ltd. and HENSOLDT Optronics (Pty.) Ltd.;
  • Change in Name from Hawker Pacific Pty. Ltd. to Jet Aviation Australia Pty. Ltd. due to acquisition of Hawker Pacific by Jet Aviation Australia;
  • Change in Name from Selex ES Saudi Arabia Ltd. to Leonardo Saudi Ltd. due to corporate rebranding;
  • Change in Name from Harris C4i Pty. Ltd. to C4i Pty. Ltd. due to acquisition by Frequentis Group as part of Frequentis acquisition of L3 Harris ATM voice communications and arrival management product business;
  • Change in Address for Accenture S.L.; and
  • Change in Name from ST Engineering Land Systems Ltd., KIS Division, a legal entity of Singapore Technologies Engineering Ltd. to ST Engineering Land MRO & Services Pte. Ltd. due to corporate reorganization.

 

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

 

Department of the Treasury

 

OFAC Published Guidance On "Sanctions Compliance Guidance for the Virtual Currency Industry"

 

October 15, 2021:  The Treasury Department, Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) published "Sanctions Compliance Guidance for the Virtual Currency Industry," which provides an industry-specific overview of OFAC sanctions requirements and procedures, including licensing, enforcement, and sanctions compliance best practices.  This 28-page brochure is on the Treasury Department website at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/virtual_currency_guidance_brochure.pdf. At the same time, OFAC also published Frequently Asked Question (FAQ) 559, defining for OFAC sanctions purposes the terms "digital currency," "digital currency wallet," "digital currency address," and "virtual currency" (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/559) and FAQ 646 on how to block digital currency (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/646).

 

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines, and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

 

 

Sanctions

 

Department of State

October 1, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 54502:  The Bureau of Political-Military Affairs (PM) rescinded the statutory debarment imposed on Dennis Haag on April 25, 2018 (83 Fed. Reg. 18112).  The debarment was imposed based on Haag's plea of guilty of violating Sec. 38 of the Arms Export Control Act (AECA, 22 USC 2778 et seq.); the rescission was based on a review made in response to a request from Haag in accordance with International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR, 22 CFR Parts 120-130) Sec. 127.7(b).  However, pursuant to ITAR Sec. 127.11, this notice does not reinstate his export privileges.

 

 

Fines and Penalties

 

October 5, 2021:  Aydan Sin a/k/a/ Hon Chak Gordon Sin a/k/a Andy a/k/a Bullion of British Columbia, Canada, was sentenced in Federal District Court in Buffalo, NY, to serve 46 months in prison based on his May 17, 2017, a plea of guilty of violating the AECA by conspiring to export USML-listed firearms, suppressors, magazines, and ammunitions to Colombia and Dubai without the required authorization.  Sin and co-conspirators Guy Deland and Charan Singh communicated with an undercover law enforcement agent (UCA) and asked him whether he could export firearms from the U.S. to the United Arab Emirates (UAE).  In the course of their communications, the UCA advised them that a license from the State Department was required in order lawfully to export the firearms.  In response, the conspirators acknowledged the illegality of the exports, provided the UCA with an encrypted Blackberry for the purpose of covert communications, and wired approximately $70,000 as a 50% down payment for the export of the goods.  A similar process occurred subsequently with a requested export of firearms, magazines, suppressors, and ammunition to Colombia (via Panama).  The invoices for both shipments stated that exporting these products without an export license was prohibited by law.  Charges remain pending against Deland and Singh.

 

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Oct. 12, 2021:  VTA Telecom Corporation (VTA) of Milpitas, CA, the U.S. subsidiary of a Vietnam state-owned telecommunications company in Hanoi, Vietnam, agreed to pay $1,869,372 (of which $200,000 will be suspended for two years and thereafter waived if VTA observes the terms of the agreement, including spending $25,000 on additional ongoing compliance efforts within 12 months of the Order and retaining a Director of Trade Compliance to oversee VTA's export activities for two years from the date of the Order, or if VTA has dissolved or ceased its business operations) to settle charges by BIS that it provided false end-use and end-user information to officials of BIS and other U.S. government agencies in connection with export license applications and other export activities to conceal the defense purposes of some of its exports. The alleged violations that were covered by the settlement agreement were:

  • Charge 1: Evasion (EAR Sec. 764.2(e));
  • Charges 2-4: False Statements to BIS and/or another U.S. Government Agency and on Export Control Documentation (EAR Sec. 764.2(g));
  • Charge 5: Acting with Knowledge of a Violation: Unlicensed Export (EAR Sec. 764.2(e)); and
  • Charge 6: Engaging in Prohibited Conduct: Unlicensed Export (EAR Sec. 764.2(a)).

 

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Oct. 21, 2021:  Peter Sotis, of Delray Beach, FL, and Emilie Voissem, of Sunrise, FL, were convicted by a jury in federal court in Miami, FL, of conspiracy to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1701-1707), attempted violation of the IEEPA, and smuggling.  Sotis and Voissem willfully attempted to export rebreather diving equipment to Libya after they received an instruction from a Department of Commerce special agent that such items were detained and not to be exported while a license determination was pending.  (Rebreathers are specialized equipment that enable a diver to operate undetected for long periods of time underwater and therefore have both civilian and military applications.)  Despite this instruction, Sotis and Voissem lied to and misled a shipping company about what the agent had told them and about whether the rebreathers had a military use.  Sotis and Voissem will be sentenced on Jan. 6, 2022.

 

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Oct. 26, 2021:  Obaidulllah Syed, of Northbrook, IL, the owner of Pakistan-based Business System International Pvt. Ltd. (BSIP) and Chicago-based BSI USA (BSIUS), both of which provide high-performance computing platforms, servers, and software application solutions, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to export goods from the U.S. without the required license from the Commerce Department and to submit false export information.  In the plea agreement, Syed admitted that he conspired with BSIP employees to violate the IEEPA by exporting computer equipment from the U.S. to the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) – a Pakistani government agency whose responsibilities include designing and testing explosives and nuclear weapons parts – without the required authorization from the U.S. Department of Commerce.  Syed also admitted that he and other conspirators falsely represented to U.S.-based computer manufacturers that the illegal exports were intended for Pakistan-based universities or Syed's businesses while knowing that the true end-user of each shipment was either the PAEC or a research institute that trained PAEC engineers and scientists, thereby causing the U.S.-based computer manufacturers to submit shipping documents containing false information to the U.S. Government.  BSIP was charged as a corporate defendant in the conspiracy.  It has not responded to the charges.

 

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Editor's note to readers. If you would like to receive more practice tips about the ITAR or EAR join Jenny Hahn's or FD Associates' LinkedIn profile. Postings are made several times each week.

 

 

OCTOBER 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

SEPTEMBER 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through September 30, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company’s international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

See also our “Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties” section below for an update on companies and persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

 

REGULATORY UPDATES

 

European Union

 

New European Union Export Control Regulation Enters Into Force

 

Sep. 9, 2021:  The new European Union Export Control Regulation controlling trade in dual-use items (Regulation (EU) 2021/821 of May 20, 2021) entered into force, 90 days after it was officially published on June 11, 2021.  (See information on the Regulation in November 2020 and May and June 2021 Regulatory Updates.)

 

Regulation (EU) 2021/821 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 May 2021 setting up a Union regime for the control of exports, brokering, technical assistance, transit, and transfer of dual-use items (recast) is in the EU Official Journal at  https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=OJ:L:2021:206:FULL&from=EN).  A European Commission memorandum on the implementation of the Regulation is at https://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/press/index.cfm?id=2296, and the EU Commission’s description of the EU dual-use export control system under the Regulation is at https://ec.europa.eu/trade/import-and-export-rules/export-from-eu/dual-use-controls/

 

 

United Kingdom

 

U.K. Advises The European Union Export Control Regulation Is Directly Applicable To Northern Ireland

 

Sep. 14, 2021:  The Department for International Trade Export Control Joint Unit (ECJU) issued a notice that EU Regulation 2021/821 is directly applicable in Northern Ireland.  As a result, any applications for the export of dual-use items submitted to ECJU from 9 September from Northern Ireland will need to comply with this regulation.  Notice to Exporters 2021/12 is on the ECJU website at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/notice-to-exporters-202112-new-dual-use-regulation-eu-2021821/nte-202112-new-dual-use-regulation-eu-2021821.

 

 

The President

 

President Biden Continues The Cuban Assets Control Regulations

 

Sep. 7, 2021:  President Biden exercised his authority under Public Law 95-223 (50 USC Sec. 4305 note), Sec. 101(b) to continue the exercise of the authorities implemented under the Cuban Assets Control Regulations CACR, 31 CFR Part 515, for one year, until Sep. 14, 2022.  This action was necessary because the authorities regarding Cuba under the Trading With the Enemy Act which had previously authorized the CACR expired on Sep. 14, 2021.  Presidential Determination No. 2021-12 is at https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/09/07/memorandum-on-the-continuation-of-the-exercise-of-certain-authorities-under-the-trading-with-the-enemy-act/.

 

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U.S. Trade Officials Attend Inaugural Meeting Of The Trade And Technology Council

 

Sep. 29, 2021:  U.S.  Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, and U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai joined senior European officials in Pittsburgh, PA, at the inaugural meeting of the Trade and Technology Council, a new U.S.-European group launched by President Biden and the Presidents of the European Council and the European Commission, to establish common principles for the 21st-century economy.  Regarding export controls, they determined shared principles and areas for cooperation, including assisting third countries in building capacity to support multilateral export control regimes, holding prior consultations on current and upcoming legislative and regulatory developments, and developing convergent control approaches on sensitive dual-use technologies.

 

 

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

 

BIS Posts FAQs On The Classification Of Integrated Circuits For Program Protection Plans

 

Sep. 21, 2021:  The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) posted FAQs on the classification of integrated circuits used in connection with U.S. Government programs and the development of Program Protection Plans to prevent the release of controlled technology during the lifetime of an acquisition involving the production of integrated circuits. For Department of Defense acquisition programs relying on onshore foundries for integrated circuit production and which include approved Program Protection Plans, authorized program personnel may rely, as necessary, on existing industry technology control plans to assist in certifying that export of technical data does not occur during the production of integrated circuits. FAQs 1A, 1B, and 2 are on the BIS website at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/pdfs/2838-classification-of-items-subject-to-the-ear/file.

 

 

Department of State

 

DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

 

 

Sep. 3, 23, 24, 27, 2021:  The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at    

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

 

  • Change in Name from L3Harris Technologies, Inc. Combat Propulsion Systems Division (L3Harris CPSD) to RENK America, LLC due to the acquisition of L3Harris CPSD by Renk America;
  • Change in Name from DigiNext LLC to CS Group – France due to merger of DigiNext into CS Group – France;
  • Change in Name from Mission Systems Australia Pty Ltd to L3Harris Integrated Mission Systems Australia Pty Ltd due to corporate rebranding;
  • Change in Address for Improbable LLC; and
  • Change in Address for Hexadyne Corporation.

 

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

 

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The State Department Imposed Sanctions On Russia Under The Chemical and Biological Weapons Control And Warfare Elimination Act Of 1991

 

Sep. 7, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 50203, corrected Sep. 24 – 86 Fed. Reg. 53137:  The State Department imposed sanctions on Russia under the Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991 (CBW Act, 22 U.S.C. 5604(a)) in addition to the sanctions it had imposed on March 18, 2021 (see March 2021 Regulatory Update), based on its determination that the Government of the Russian Federation had used chemical or biological weapons in violation of international law or lethal chemical or biological weapons against its own nationals.  The new sanctions were based on the conclusion that Russia had not met conditions required under the law following the sanctions imposed in March.

 

The new sanctions prohibit exports to Russia of all other goods and technology (except food and other agricultural commodities and products), subject to significant waivers deemed essential to U.S. national security interests. The waivers include, among others, exports of goods or technology eligible under License Exceptions GOV, ENC, BAG, TMP, and AVS; new licenses issued on a case-by-case basis, consistent with the export licensing policy for Russia prior to the enactment of these sanctions for items controlled for AT, CC, FC, and RS reasons, goods or technology necessary for the safety of flight of civil fixed-wing passenger aviation, deemed exports and reexports, exports to wholly-owned U.S. and other foreign subsidiaries, and government space cooperation; and new licenses subject to a presumption of denial for items controlled for CB, MT, and NP reasons, licenses in support of commercial space launches, licenses for exports for commercial end uses, and exports to Russian state-owned or state-funded enterprises.  Also, U.S. banks will be prohibited under most circumstances from making loans or providing credit to the Government of the Russian Federation, and most applications for permanent imports of Russian firearms or ammunition, as defined on the U.S. Munitions Import List (USMIL, 27 CFR 447.21, Categories I and III), will be denied in accordance with Section 38 of the Arms Export Control Act (AECA, 22 U.S.C. 2778) and Executive Order 13637.

 

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DDTC Extended Temporary Modification Of The ITAR Related To Cyprus

 

Sep. 30, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 54044:  DDTC extended through Sep. 30, 2022, the effective period of the temporary modification of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR, 22 CFR Parts 120-130) that removed prohibitions on exports, reexports, retransfers, and temporary imports of non-lethal defense articles and defense services destined for or originating in the Republic of Cyprus.  (See information about reasons for the ban and the authorization of a one-year Presidential waiver in September 2020 Regulatory Update.)  During this period, applications for exports of non-lethal defense articles and non-lethal defense services to Cyprus will continue to be reviewed on a case-by-case basis, while applications for lethal defense articles and defense services will continue to be denied.

 

 

Department of the Treasury

 

OFAC Issues General Licenses Related to Humanitarian Exports To Ethiopia, Eritrea, And The Greater Horn Of Africa

 

Sep. 17, 2021:  Concurrent with the issuance by President Biden of an Executive Order Imposing Sanctions on Certain Persons With Respect to the Humanitarian and Human Rights Crisis in Ethiopia (E.O. 14046 of Sep. 17, 2021, 86 Fed. Reg. 52389, Sep. 21, 2021), the Office of Foreign Assets Control issued Ethiopia General License Number 1, “Official Activities of Certain International Organizations and Other International Entities,” Ethiopia General License Number 2, “Certain Transactions in Support of Nongovernmental Organizations' Activities,” and Ethiopia General License Number 3, “Transactions Related to the Exportation or Reexportation of Agricultural Commodities, Medicine, Medical Devices, Replacement Parts and Components, or Software Updates,” all of which were targeted at supporting the U.S. commitment to support the people of Ethiopia, Eritrea, and the greater Horn of Africa region and ensuring that U.S. sanctions do not limit the ability of civilians in Ethiopia and the region to receive humanitarian support from the international community and to participate in certain transactions related to the exportation or reexportation of agricultural commodities, food, medicine, and medical items.

 

In addition, OFAC published several related frequently asked questions (FAQs 922923924925926, and 927).  Details are in a White House Fact Sheet at https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/09/17/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-actions-in-response-to-ongoing-crisis-in-northern-ethiopia/.

 

Also, the Fact Sheet stated that while imposing sanctions under E.O. 14046, the U.S. would take measures to mitigate unintended effects on the people of Ethiopia and the wider region, including seeking to ensure personal remittances to non-sanctioned persons, humanitarian assistance to at-risk populations, and longer-term assistance programs and commercial activities that address basic human needs in Ethiopia and the greater Horn of Africa region through legitimate and transparent channels.

 

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OFAC Issues Updated Advisory Regarding Malicious Cyber-Enabled Activities

 

Sep. 21, 2019:  OFAC issued an updated advisory to highlight the sanctions risks associated with ransomware payments in connection with malicious cyber-enabled activities and the proactive steps companies can take to mitigate such risks, including actions that OFAC would consider to be “mitigating factors” in any related enforcement action.  The advisory is on the Treasury Department website at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/ofac_ransomware_advisory.pdf.

 

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OFAC Issues General Export Licenses Related To Afghanistan

 

Sep. 24, 2021:  OFAC issued General License (GL) 14, “Authorizing Humanitarian Activities in Afghanistan,” and GL 15, “Transactions Related to the Exportation or Reexportation of Agricultural Commodities, Medicine, Medical Devices, Replacement Parts, and Components, or Software Updates in Afghanistan.”  Both GL 14 and GL 15 authorize transactions involving the Taliban or the Haqqani Network, or any entity in which the Taliban or the Haqqani Network owns, directly or indirectly, individually or in the aggregate, a 50 percent or greater interest that would otherwise be prohibited by OFAC’s terrorism-related sanctions.  GL 14, on the Treasury Department website at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/ct_gl14.pdf, authorizes transactions by the U.S. Government, NGOs, and specified international organizations and entities and those acting on their behalf to provide humanitarian assistance or support basic human needs.  GL 15, at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/ct_gl15.pdf, authorizes all transactions that are ordinarily incident and necessary to the exportation or reexportation of agricultural commodities, medicine, medical devices, replacement parts and components for medical devices, or software updates for medical devices to Afghanistan, or to persons in third countries purchasing specifically for resale to Afghanistan. 

 

OFAC also issued four FAQs related to GLs 14 and 15.  FAQs 928, 929, 930, and 931 are at https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/928, https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/929, https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/930 and  https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/931.  A press release describing the Treasury Department’s aims regarding exports to Afghanistan is at https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0372.

 

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OFAC Issues FAQ Regarding Visiting Or Making Donations To The Imam Reza Hold Shrine In Iran

 

Sep. 30, 2021:  OFAC issued a detailed FAQ discussing whether U.S. sanctions prohibit U.S. persons from visiting, or making donations to the Imam Reza Holy Shrine in Mashad, Iran.  FAQ 932 is on the Treasury Department website at https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/932.

 

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

 

This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines, and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

 

 

Sanctions

 

Department of Commerce

 

Sep. 7, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 50021:  BIS denied the export privileges of Luis Lopez of Donna, TX, until Dec. 17, 2029, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas of violating 18 USC Sec. 554(a) by fraudulently and knowingly exporting and sending or attempting to export and send five AK-47 semi-automatic rifles from the U.S. to Mexico without the required authorization.  In the criminal case, Lopez was sentenced to 37 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment.  BIS also revoked any BIS-issued licenses in which Lopez had an interest at the time of his conviction.

 

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Sep. 13, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 50874:  BIS denied the export privileges of Anastacio San Miguel-Padron of Big Spring Correctional Institution, Big Spring, TX, until Feb. 6, 2027, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas of violating 18 USC Sec. 554 by fraudulently and knowingly exporting and sending or attempting to export or send from the U.S. to Mexico .38 super caliber ammunition, .40 caliber ammunition, 9mm caliber ammunition, and a 7.62 x 39 mm drum magazine.  In the criminal case, Miguel-Padron was sentenced to 30 months in prison and a $100 assessment.

 

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Sep. 13, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 50875:  BIS denied the export privileges of Samy Jecrois of St. Petersburg, FL, until Feb. 1, 2024, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida of violating 18 USC Sec. 554 by knowingly attempting to export and send a firearm from the U.S. to Haiti.    In the criminal case, Jecrois was sentenced to 5 months in prison, two years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment.

 

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Sep. 13, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 50875:  BIS denied the export privileges of Akeem Shonari Awer of Big Spring Correctional Institution, Big Spring, TX, until Feb. 14, 2030, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida of violating Sec. 38 of the AECA by knowingly and willfully attempting to export firearms and ammunition from the U.S. to Barbados without the required authorization from the State Department.  In the criminal case, Awer was sentenced to 46 months in prison, two years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment.

 

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Sep. 14, 2021 -- 86 Fed. Reg. 51113:  BIS denied the export privileges of Tengiz Sydykov of Arlington, VA, until Jan. 11, 2029, based on his conviction in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia of violating Sec. 38 of the AECA by knowingly and willfully exporting and causing to be exported from the U.S. to Grozny, Chechnya, Russia, assembled firearms, fully assembled lower receivers, firearm slides, firearm barrels, firearm magazines, stocks, firearm frames, and additional functional firearms, designated as defense articles on the U.S. Munitions List (USML, 22 CFR Sec. 121.1), without the required authorizations from the State Department.  In the criminal case, Sydykov was sentenced to 36 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment.

 

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Sep. 14, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 51114:  BIS denied the export privileges of Rrok Martin Camaj of Federal Correctional Institution Morgantown,  Morgantown, WV, until Feb. 28, 2030, based on his conviction in U.S. District Court for Eastern District of Michigan of violating Sec. 38 of the AECA by knowingly and willfully exporting and causing to be exported from the U.S. to Australia pistol frames/receivers, magazines,  pistol kits, and other firearm parts which were defense articles on the USML without the required authorizations from the State Department.  In the criminal case, Camaj was sentenced to 42 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment.

 

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Sep. 14, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 51115:  BIS denied the export privileges of Eli Ramirez-Rios of Matamoros, Tamaulipas, MX, until Feb. 26, 2027, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas of violating 18 USC Sec. 554(a) by knowingly exporting and sending or attempting to export and send from the U.S. to Mexico, a Palmetto State Armory Build the Wall L10, AR-10 rifle with an obliterated serial number.  In the criminal case, Ramirez-Rios was sentenced to 28 months in prison and a $100 assessment.

 

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Sep. 14, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 51116:  BIS denied the export privileges of Katherine O’Neal, of Colorado Springs, CO, based on her conviction in U.S. District Court for Colorado of violating 18 USC Sec. 554 by fraudulently and knowingly exporting firearms from the U.S. to the Dominican Republic.  In the criminal case, O’Neal was sentenced to 36 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment.

 

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Sep. 14, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 51117:  BIS denied the export privileges of Andy Lloyd Huebschmann of Chilton, WI, until Dec. 13, 2029, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin of violating AECA Sec. 38 by knowingly and willfully exporting and causing to be exported from the U.S. to Australia defense articles including a rifle kit with a Model GA 9mm lower receiver, upper receiver, barrel, trigger control group, bolt carrier, and pistol grip.  In the criminal case, Huebschmann was sentenced to 24 months in prison, one year of supervised release, a criminal fine of $15,000, and a $100 assessment, and BIS also revoked any BIS-issued licenses in which he had an interest at the time of his conviction.

 

Fines and Penalties

 

Sep. 8, 2021:  Shuren Qin of Wellesley, MA, a Chinese national, was sentenced in federal court in Boston to a two-year prison sentence, two years of supervised release, and a $20,000 fine after admitting that he had exported at least 60 hydrophones – devices used to monitor sound underwater – valued at more than $100,000 to Northwestern Polytechnical University (NWPU), a military research institute in Xi’an, China that works closely with the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) on the advancement of its military capabilities, without the required authorization from the Commerce Department.  NWPU has been on the Entity List (15 CFR Part 744, Supp. No. 4) since 2001.  Qin, a marine biologist, was aided in the illegal exports by LinkOcean Technologies, LTD, a company that he established and used to import into the PRC goods and technology with underwater and marine applications from the U.S., Canada, and Europe.  According to prosecutors, Qin and LinkOcean purposely concealed from their U.S. supplier that the hydrophones were going to NWPU, causing false end-user information to be filed with the U.S. Government.   Qin will face deportation proceedings upon completion of his sentence.

 

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Sep. 9, 2021:  NewTek, Inc., a company headquartered in San Antonio, Texas that developed and supplied live production and 3D animation hardware and software systems, agreed to pay $189,483 to settle its potential civil liability for 52 apparent violations of the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR, 31 CFR Part 560). The apparent violations occurred from 2013 through 2018, when NewTek exported goods, technology, and services from the United States to two third-country distributors that it knew or had reason to know were specifically intended for a reseller located in Iran.  The Iranian reseller sold three of the exported products to Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), an entity that at that time was included on OFAC’s List of Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons (the “SDN List”). At least three times NewTek provided support, software updates, reseller training, or other services in support of sales to customers located in Iran. Further, NewTek was a party to a distribution agreement that specifically excluded Iran from the sales territory.

 

According to OFAC, the base civil monetary penalty amount in this case, taking into consideration that NewTek voluntarily self-disclosed the apparent violations and that OFAC determined that the violations constituted a non-egregious case, was $291,512; however, the penalty was reduced to $189,483 in consideration of mitigating factors, including that NewTek had substantially cooperated with OFAC during the investigation and that it had taken extensive remedial actions. A detailed description of the case, including the factors that influenced the penalty, is on the Treasury Department website at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/20210909_newtek.pdf.

 

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Sep. 14, 2021:  U.S. citizens Marc Baier and Ryan Adams and former U.S. citizen Daniel Gericke, all former employees of the U.S. Intelligence Community (USIC) or the U.S. Military, agreed in a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) to pay penalties of $750,000, $600,000, and $335,000, respectively, and to accept restrictions on their future employment and activities to resolve a DOJ investigation regarding violations of U.S. export control, computer fraud, and access device fraud laws.  Baier, Adams, and Gericke (“the defendants”) worked as senior managers of a team known as Cyber Intelligence-Operations (CIO) at a company based in the United Arab Emirates (“UAE Co.”) that supported and carried out computer network exploitation (CNE) operations (i.e., “hacking”) for the benefit of the UAE Government, including supporting, directing, and supervising UAE Co. employees in creating sophisticated “zero-click” hacking and intelligence-gathering systems that the defendants knew were used to illegally obtain and use access credentials for online accounts issued by the U.S. and other companies, and gain access to computers and mobile phones around the world, including in the U.S.  Subsequently, the CIO team expanded the breadth and sophistication of their CNE operations, including creating two additional “zero-click” systems that leveraged servers in the U.S.  to obtain unauthorized access to tens of millions of smartphones and mobile devices.  The defendants did all this work without a license from the U.S. State Department despite having been informed on several occasions that this work constituted a “defense service” under the ITAR.

 

Prior to their employment at UAE Co., the defendants had worked for a U.S. company that provided cyber services to a UAE Government agency in compliance with a DDTC-issued Technical Assistance Agreement that specifically required the parties to abide by U.S. export control laws, including not targeting U.S. persons and obtaining preapproval from the U.S. Government prior to releasing information regarding the cryptographic analysis.  This company also provided periodic ITAR and TAA training, and prior to the defendants’ departure for UAE Co., it told them that the services they were providing constituted “defense services” under the ITAR which they could not provide to UAE Co. without obtaining a separate TAA.

 

The DPA signed by the defendants provided, in addition to the monetary penalties, that they would cooperate fully with the relevant DOJ and FBI components; relinquish any foreign or U..S. security clearances and accept a lifetime ban on future U.S. security clearances; accept future employment restrictions including a prohibition on employment that involves CNE activity or exporting defense articles or providing defense services under the ITAR; and restrictions on employment with certain UAE organizations.

 

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Sep. 14, 2021:  Mehrdad Ansari, an Iranian citizen resident in the UAE and Germany, was sentenced to 63 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release based on his conviction of one count each of violating the ITSR, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, conspiracy to defraud the U.S. Department of the Treasury and two counts of aiding and abetting the making of false statements in connection with his attempts to transship to Iran testing equipment obtained from the U.S. by co-defendants Susan Yip, aka Susan Yeh, a citizen of Taiwan, and Mehrdad Foomanie, aka Frank Foomanie, a citizen of Iran, using Ansari’s companies in Dubai, UAE, Gulf Gate Sea Cargo LLC, and Global Merchant LLC.

 

Yip and Foomanie obtained or attempted to obtain from companies worldwide over 105,000 parts valued at approximately $2,630,800. They did not notify their U.S. sellers that these parts would be shipped to Iran, and neither they nor Ansari ever applied for the license from OFAC or the Department of Commerce that was required to ship any of these goods to Iran.

 

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Sep. 27, 2021:  Cameron International Corporation of Houston, TX, a subsidiary of Schlumberger Limited, agreed to pay $1,423,766 to settle its potential liability for apparent violations of the Ukraine-Related Sanctions Regulations (URSR, 31 CFR Part 589) involving the approval by U.S.-person senior managers at Cameron of contracts for its subsidiary, Cameron Romania S.R.L., to supply oil production or exploration goods to Gazprom-Neft Shelf, a Russian energy firm, for use in an offshore project in the Russian Arctic, a prohibited destination.  The contracts that were approved by the Cameron senior managers referenced the oil-related nature of the project and the fact that the Russian Arctic was the destination of the goods.

 

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Sep. 27, 2021:  Schlumberger Rod Lift, Inc. (SRL, now d/b/a Lufkin Rod Lift, Inc.), of Frisco, TX, formerly a subsidiary of Schlumberger Lift Solutions LLC (SLS), which itself was a U.S. subsidiary of Schlumberger Limited (“Schlumberger”) of Curacao, Netherlands, agreed to pay $160,000 to settle its potential liability incurred on one occasion when three U.S.-person employees of SRL – two of whom were senior managers -- facilitated the sale and shipment of oilfield equipment from a Schlumberger subsidiary in Canada to a Schlumberger joint venture in China, for ultimate delivery to Sudan.  The facilitation of the export to Sudan was at the time a violation of the since-repealed Sudanese Sanction Regulations (SSR, 31 CFR Part 538).   The U.S.-person employees who approved the transaction knew that the equipment was destined for Sudan and that Sudan was a prohibited destination.

 

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Sep. 27, 2021:  Virgil Griffith, a U.S. citizen resident in Singapore, pled guilty in federal court in New York City to conspiring to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1701 -1707) by providing services to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK or North Korea) including technical advice on using cryptocurrency and blockchain technology to evade sanctions.  Griffith knew that the DPRK could use actions involving cryptocurrency to evade and avoid U.S. sanctions and to fund its nuclear weapons program and other illegal activities.  In April 2019 Griffith traveled to the DPRK, despite the State Department’s denial of permission to travel to the DPR, where he delivered presentations at the Pyongyang Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Conference, knowing that this violated U.S. sanctions against the DPRK, and also provided instruction on how the DPRK could use blockchain and cryptocurrency technology to launder money, evade sanctions, and assist with nuclear weapons negotiations with the U.S.  Griffith also attempted to broker introductions for the DPRK to other cryptocurrency and blockchain service providers.  At no time did he obtain permission from OFAC to provide goods, services, or technology to the DPRK.

 

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Sep. 28, 2021:  Medtronic Mediterranean SAL (Lebanon), a controlled-in-fact foreign affiliate of Medtronic, Inc., a domestic company, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $13,750 to resolve charges by the BIS Office of Antiboycott Compliance that it had committed 11 violations of EAR Sec. 760.5, Failing to Report the Receipt of a Request to Engage in a Restrictive Trade Practice or Foreign Boycott Against a Country Friendly to the U.S.  If Medtronic Mediterranean does not pay this penalty within 30 days after the entry of the Order, BIS may deny all of its export privileges for one year.

 

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Sep. 28, 2021:  Silicon Space Technology Corporation, d/b/a Vorago Technologies, Inc., of Austin, TX, agreed to pay an administrative penalty of $497,000 (of which $247,000 will be suspended until September 2023 and thereafter waived, if Vorago has paid the full $250,000 and committed no further violation) and accept a suspended denial of export privileges under the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) until September 2023 to settle allegations by BIS that it had conspired to export radiation-hardened 16 Mb SRAM silicon wafers controlled on the Commerce Control List (CCL, EAR Part 774, Supp. No. 1) under Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) 9A515.e.1 to Russia via a Bulgarian company without obtaining the required license from the Department of Commerce.  The exported goods required an export license for export to Russia, but not for export to Bulgaria. [* Charging Letter and Settlement Agreement: https://efoia.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/export-violations/export-violations-2021/1333-e2686/file]

 

 

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Sep. 29, 2021:  Oleg Vladislavovich Nikitin, of St. Petersburg, Russia, the general director of KS Engineering (KSE), a St. Petersburg-based energy company, was sentenced in U.S. Court for the Southern District of Georgia to 28 months in prison and a fine of $5,000 based on his plea of guilty of conspiracy to violate the IEEPA, the Export Control Reform Act (ECRA, 50 USC § 4801 et seq.), and the EAR.  Nikitin, KSE, and an Italian company, GVA International Oil and Gas Services, all participated in this conspiracy, which involved obtaining a turbine in the U.S. and exporting it for ultimate use on a sanctioned Russian Arctic deepwater drilling platform. (See additional details about this project in August 2021 Regulatory Update.)  In addition to the prison term and fine, Nikitin was also ordered to be subject to deportation upon completion of his prison term, and KSE and GVA were ordered to serve five years’ probation.

SEPTEMBER 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

AUGUST 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through August 31, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company’s international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments. 

See also our “Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties” section below for an update on companies and persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

 

REGULATORY UPDATES

The President

President Biden Issues Notice Continuing For One Year The National Emergency With Respect To The Expiration Of The Export Administration Act Of 1979, As Amended

Aug. 10, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 43901:  President Biden issued a Notice continuing for one year the national emergency with respect to the unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States related to the expiration of the Export Administration Act of 1979 (EAA), as amended, which was first declared in Executive Order 13222 of Aug. 17, 2001, pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1701 et seq.) and amended by EO 13637 of March 8, 2013.  President Biden’s Notice, issued in accordance with Sec. 202(d) of the National Emergencies Act (50 USC Sec. 1622(d)), permits the continued implementation under the IEEPA of sanctions authorities that had been authorized under the EAA and otherwise would have expired with the EAA.

 

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS Issues Final Rule Correcting The January 23, 2020 Rule Transferring Certain Firearms, Guns, Armament, and Ammunition To The EAR

Aug. 9, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 46590:  The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) issued final rulemaking corrections and clarifications in the rule issued Jan. 23, 2020 (85 Fed. Reg. 4136), in conjunction with a State Department final rule that transferred items that no longer warrant control under U.S. Munitions List (USML, 22 CFR Sec. 121.1) Categories I (firearms, close assault weapons, and combat shotguns), II (guns and armaments), and III (ammunition/ordnance) to the Commerce Control List (CCL, 15 CFR Part 774, Supp. No. 1).  The changes made in this rule are intended to make the requirements easier to understand, interpreted consistently, and in accordance with the intent of the Jan. 23 rule.  The changes occur in Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) Parts 740, 742, 748, and 758 and CCL Export Control Classification Numbers (ECCNs) 0A501, 0E501, 0A505, 0B501, and 0E505.

Please contact your consultant if you require further clarification of the rule’s impact on your company.

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BIS And OFAC Issue Joint Fact Sheet Titled “Supporting the Cuban People’s Right to Seek, Receive, and Impart Information through Safe and Secure Access to the Internet.”

Aug. 11, 2021:  BIS and the Treasury Department, Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) jointly issued “Supporting the Cuban People’s Right to Seek, Receive, and Impart Information through Safe and Secure Access to the Internet,” a fact sheet describing existing OFAC general licenses (GLs) and BIS license exceptions that facilitate exports of certain telecommunications equipment, software, and services to Cuba without specific U.S. government authorizations while complying with the Cuba Assets Control Regulations (CACR, 31 CFR Part 515) and the EAR.  The fact sheet also describes the favorable licensing policies of both OFAC and BIS for activities that benefit the free flow of information to and from Cuba but are not covered by existing GLs and license exceptions.  This 5-page Fact Sheet is on the Treasury Department website at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/cuba_fact_sheet_20210811.pdf.

 

Department of State

 DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

Aug. 2 and 3, 2021:  The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at    

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

  • Change in Address for AeroVironment, Inc.; and
  • Change in Address for DRS Sustainment Systems, Inc.

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

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DDTC Requested Public Comments Regarding Its Request To OMB To Continue To Use Currently Approved DSP Forms

Aug. 2, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 41530:  DDTC requested public comments regarding its request to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for approval of extension of the following currently approved forms:

  • Form DSP-5, Application/License for Permanent Export of Unclassified Defense Articles and Related Unclassified Technical Data;
  • Form DSP-61, Application/License for Temporary Import of Unclassified Defense Articles;
  • Form DSP-85, Application/License for Permanent/Temporary Export or Temporary Import of Classified Defense Articles and Related Classified Technical Data;
  • Form DSP-73, Application/License for Temporary Export of Unclassified Defense Articles;
  • Forms DSP-6, DSP-62, and DSP-74, Application for Amendment to License for Export or Import of Classified or Unclassified Defense Articles and Related Classified Technical Data; and
  • Form DSP-83, Non-transfer and Use Certificate.

The deadline for comments is Oct. 1, 2021.

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DDTC Is Reviewing Pending And Issued Export Licenses / Approvals For Afghanistan

Aug. 18, 2021:  DDTC announced that in light of the “rapidly-evolving circumstances” in Afghanistan, it is reviewing all relevant pending and issued export licenses and other approvals to determine their suitability in furthering world peace, national security, and U.S. foreign policy.  Additional updates will be provided soon.

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DDTC Continues Temporary Modification To USML Category XI(b)

 

Aug. 27, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 48021:  DDTC announced the continuation until Aug. 30, 2026, of the temporary modification to USML Category XI(b), first announced July 1, 2014 (79 Fed. Reg. 37536), and later extended through a series of rules to Aug. 30, 2021.  DDTC noted that this modification continues to be regarded as temporary and that it is working with its partners to develop a long-term wholesale revision of USML Category XI.

The temporary modification to USML Category XI(b) includes reinserting the words “analyze and produce information from” and the addition of software to the description of items controlled.

 

Department of the Treasury

 

OFAC Issues Iran General License (GL) M-1, “Authorizing The Exportation Of Certain Graduate-Level Educational Services And Software To Iranian Students”

Aug. 24, 2021:  OFAC issued Iran General License (GL) M-1, “Authorizing the Exportation of Certain Graduate-Level Educational Services and Software,” authorizing accredited graduate and undergraduate degree-granting U.S. academic institutions to provide certain online educational services and software to Iranian students who are not physically present in the U.S. due to the COVID-19 pandemic, provided that the software is classified as EAR99 under the EAR or is not subject to the EAR.  GL M-1 replaces GL M in its entirety.  OFAC also issued FAQ 853, describing the extent to which U.S. academic institutions can provide online learning services and technology companies can provide software and services to assist Iranian students in accessing online coursework under GLs G, M-1, and D-1 and Sec. 560.540 of the  Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR, 31 CFR Part 560).

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OFAC Issues A Statement That It Will Initiate The Annual Renewal Of Its Website www.treasury.gov

Sep. 27, 2021:  OFAC issued an “Important Technical Notice for Users of the OFAC Website and Sanctions List Data Files” stating that the Treasury Department will initiate the annual renewal of the public

certificate securing the www.treasury.gov website, including OFAC sanctions list downloads, on Sep 1, 2021, as the current certificate will expire Sep. 9, 2021.  Users whose applications trust the existing certificate should update their configuration to trust the renewed certificate.  This notice can be accessed through https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/recent-actions/20210827_33; the renewed public certificate can be downloaded at  https://s3.amazonaws.com/www.treasury.gov-2021-certificate/www.treasury.gov-2021-2022-Renewed-Certificate.zip.

 

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines, and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

  

Sanctions

 

Department of Commerce

Aug. 16, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 45703:  BIS denied the export privileges of Roger Sobrado, of Lewisburg U.S. Penitentiary, Lewisburg, PA, until Sep. 5, 2029, based on his conviction in the US. District Court for the District of New Jersey of violating 18 USC Sec. 371 by knowingly and intentionally conspiring and agreeing with others to export ITAR-controlled drawings and technical data to one or more foreign nationals without the required authorization from the Department of State.  (See more information in September 2019 Regulatory Update.)  In the criminal case, Sobrado was sentenced to 36 months in prison, three years of supervised release, a $300 special assessment, and restitution of $8,043,977.

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Aug. 16, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 45704:  BIS denied the export privileges of Oben Cabalceta, of  Oakdale Federal Correctional Institution, Oakdale, LA, until Sep. 18, 2029, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey of violating 18 USC Sec. 371 by knowingly and intentionally conspiring and agreeing with others to export ITAR-controlled technical data to one or more foreign nationals without having obtained the required authorization from the Department of State.  (See more information in April 2019 Regulatory Update.)  In the criminal case, Cabalceta was sentenced to 42 months in prison, two years of supervised release, a $200 special assessment, and restitution of $1,890,939.

 

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Aug. 16, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 45705:  BIS denied the export privileges of Armando Antonio Perez Cepeda, Jr. until Jan. 10, 2022, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida of violating 18 USC Sec. 554 by fraudulently and knowingly buying, selling, and facilitating the transportation and sale of a defense article without having obtained the required authorization, contrary to 22 USC Sec. 2278 and 22 CFR Sec. 127.1(a)(1), knowing the same to be intended for exportation in violation of 18 USC Sec. 554.  In the criminal case, Cepeda was sentenced to 48 months of probation and a $100 assessment.

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Aug. 16, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 45706:  BIS denied the export privileges of Matteo Taerri, a/k/a Majid Taheri, of Atlanta, GA, until June 4, 2030, based on his conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia of violating the IEEPA by knowingly and willfully attempting to export a U.S.-origin Prostak Filter Module to Iran without having obtained the required authorization from OFAC.  In the criminal case, Taerri was sentenced to time served, supervised release for three years, and a $200 assessment.

Fines and Penalties

 

Aug. 2, 2021:  World Mining and Oil Supply (WMO) of Dacula, GA, pled guilty to violation of the Export Control Reform Act (ECRA, 50 U.S.C. § 4801 et seq.) and its owner, Dali Bagrou, pled guilty to conspiracy in U.S. District Court in Savannah, GA for their roles in a conspiracy to procure a power turbine from a U.S.-based manufacturer and ship it overseas for ultimate use by a Russian company on a Russian Arctic deepwater drilling platform, a use expressly prohibited unless a license has been obtained from the Commerce Department.  The parties conspired to conceal the true end-user of the turbine from the U.S. manufacturer and the U.S. Government by submitting false documentation stating that the turbine would be used by a U.S. company in and around Atlanta.  Bagrou and co-conspirators Oleg Vladislavovich Nikitin, general director of KS Engineering, an energy company based in St. Petersburg, Russia, and Gabrielle Villone were arrested in Savannah in 2019 while attempting to complete the illegal transaction.  Villone is currently serving a 28-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to conspiracy.  Bagrou and Nikitin are awaiting sentencing.  (See June 2020 and March and May 2021 Regulatory Updates for earlier developments in the prosecution of this conspiracy.)

*******

Aug. 3, 2021:  DDTC has entered into a Consent Agreement (Agreement) with Keysight Technologies, Inc. (Keysight), of Santa Rosa, CA, related to multiple violations of the ITAR.  Keysight has agreed to pay a civil fine of $6.6 million (of which $2.5 million will be suspended if Keysight applies that amount to agreed remedial compliance costs) to settle 24 charges by DDTC that it had violated the AECA and ITAR by making unauthorized exports of technical data, including software, to 17 countries including the PRC, a proscribed destination.  The charges involved unlicensed exports of Multi-Emitter Scenario Generation (MESG) software, which could be used in modeling and simulating multi-emitter electronic warfare threat scenarios for testing radar equipment on fixed or mobile platforms.  DDTC expressed concerns to Keysight that the MESG software might be controlled and recommended that Keysight submit a Commodity Jurisdiction (CJ) request,  Keysight submitted the request, and DDTC determined that the software was controlled under U.S. Munitions List  Category XI(d).  While the CJ was pending, Keysight continued to export the software without a license; however, it treated MESG software as ITAR-controlled after it received the determination.  Keysight submitted an initial voluntary disclosure within a month after receiving the CJ and followed with a full disclosure two months later.  Keysight subsequently submitted a reconsideration request, but DDTC ruled that the MESG software was controlled under USML Category XI(d).

In addition to payment of the fine, the Agreement also requires Keysight to appoint an outside Special Compliance Officer to serve for a minimum of 2 years, conduct at least one third-party audit, and review the classification of all hardware and software pertaining to its ITAR-related business activities and any related technical data or defense services.

See FD Associates’ Article "The Golden Rule" for more thoughts on the Consent Agreement.

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Aug. 16, 2021:  Dynatex International of Santa Rosa, CA, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $469,060 (subject to terms described below) to settle a charge by BIS that it had committed one violation of EAR Sec. 764.2(d) (Conspiracy) when it conspired with others to export semiconductor manufacturing equipment (a DTX-150 MDB scribe and break tool and associated consumables and accessories), valued at $234,530 and designated EAR99, to two companies in China -- Chengdu GaStone Technology Company (CGTC), a.k.a. Chengdu HiWafer Semiconductor, and China Electronics Technology Group Corporation 55th Research Institute (CETC 55) – without the license from the Commerce Department that was required because the two companies were on the Entity List (EAR Part 744, Supp. No. 4).  Dynatex was aware that the companies were on the Entity List, but even when it was informed that CGTC’s name should not be shown on shipping documents, it erroneously claimed that the shipments were permissible because CGTC was a customer of the distributor, not Dynatex, and that in any event, Dynatex did not understand the license requirement to apply to consumables and accessories.

Under the terms of the agreement, BIS suspended $419,060 of the penalty for a year and agreed to waive that amount entirely (provided that the $50,000 payment had been made) once Dynatex took one of the following actions:

  1. dissolves or ceases its business operations;
  2. is acquired by a U.S.-based company that meets specified export control requirements; or
  3. completes the one-year probationary period with no further export violations.

*******

Aug. 31, 2021:  Anton Perevoznikov of Brooklyn, NY, was sentenced in Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania to 4 years in prison and 3 years of supervised release based on his October 2018 plea of guilty to one count of conspiracy to unlawfully export defense articles.  Perevoznikov conspired with 3 Russian co-conspirators to export technologically sensitive imaging devices without first obtaining the required State Department authorization.  To implement the conspiracy, Perevoznikov purchased night vision equipment from a U.S. vendor after acknowledging in writing that he understood that these items were legally precluded from export and falsely affirming that he did not intend to export them.  Using funds supplied by his Russian co-conspirators, he ultimately purchased more than 30 pieces of night-vision and thermal-imaging devices worth over $100,000, which he then described falsely on shipping documents using terms including “case box,” “case for camera,” “camera, and soft case,” “photo camera,” “camcorder,” and “jacket.”

AUGUST 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

JULY 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through July 31, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company’s international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

See also our “Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties” section below for an update on companies and persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

REGULATORY UPDATES

United Kingdom

UK Strategic Export Controls Annual Report 2020

July 27, 2021:  The Export Control Joint Unit (ECJU) of the U.K. Department for International Trade published the UK Strategic Export Controls Annual Report 2020.  The report, which includes a brief section on EU Exit and U.K. Legislation and other policy discussions as well as export licensing data and performance statistics, is at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/uk-strategic-export-controls-annual-report-2020 .

U.S. Government Agencies

U.S. Government Updates the Xinjiang Supply Chain Business Advisory

July 13, 2021:  Six U.S. Government agencies released an updated “Xinjiang Supply Chain Business Advisory” detailing for U.S. industry the risks and considerations for U.S. business and individuals with exposure to entities engaged in forced labor and other human rights abuses linked to Xinjiang, China. The updated advisory describes the various activities that pose opportunities for violations of U.S. laws including export controls that are inherent in participating in the supply chain to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and other areas of China where the Chinese government engages in abuse of Uyghurs and other ethnic groups.  The Advisory focuses on topics including four primary risks of possible export control violations:

(1) Assisting in the development of surveillance tools for the Peoples Republic of China (“PRC”) government;

(2) Sourcing labor or goods from Xinjiang, or from entities outside of China that source labor from Xinjiang;

(3) Supplying U.S.-origin commodities, software, and technology to entities engaged in such surveillance and forced labor practices; and

(4) Aiding in the construction and operation of internment facilities used to detain Uyghurs and members of other Muslim minority groups, and/or in construction or operation of possibly related manufacturing facilities.

The Advisory is on the State Department website at https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Xinjiang-Business-Advisory-13July2021-1.pdf ;  the participating agencies are the Departments of Labor, State, Treasury, Commerce, and Homeland Security and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS Adds Four Entities In Burma To The Entity List

July 6, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 35389:  The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) amended the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) by adding 4 entities in Burma to the Entity List (EAR Part 744, Supp. No. 4) based on a determination that each of these entities had acted contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the U.S.  A license requirement with a license review policy of presumption of denial and no license exceptions will now apply to exports, reexports, or in-country transfers to these persons of all items subject to the EAR.  The 4 entities are:

  • King Royal Technologies Co.,, Ltd.;
  • Myanmar Wanbao Mining Copper, Ltd.;
  • Myanmar Yang Tse Copper, Ltd.; and
  • Wanbao Mining, Ltd.

In the same rule, BIS also corrected the address of one already-listed entity, Myanmar Economic Corporation.

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BIS Adds 34 Entities To The Entity List

July 12, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 36496:  BIS amended the EAR by adding 34 entities to the Entity List under 43 entries.  U.S. companies are prohibited from exporting or transferring any item subject to the EAR to any listed entity without an export license, and no license exceptions are available.  The entities are:

Additions to Entity List:

  • Canada

Karim Daadaa; and Modern Agropharmaceuticals & Trade Establishment

  • China, People’s Republic of

Armyfly;

Beijing E-science Co., Ltd.;

Beijing Geling Shentong Information Technology Co., Ltd.;

Beijing Hileed Solutions Co., Ltd.;

Beijing Sinonet Science & Technology Co., Ltd.;

Chengdu Xiwu Security System Alliance Co., Ltd.;

China Academy of Electronics and Information Technology;

Hangzhou Hualan Microelectronics Co., Ltd.;

Info Rank Technologies;

Kindroid;

Kyland Technology Co., Ltd.;

Leon Technology Co., Ltd.;

Shenzhen Cobber Information Technology Co., Ltd.;

Shenzhen Hua’antai Intelligent Technology Co., Ltd.;

Suzhou Keda Technology Co., Ltd.;

Tongfang R.I.A. Co., Ltd.;

Urumqi Tianyao Weiye Information Technology Service Co., Ltd.;

Wingel Zhang;

Wuhan Raycus Fiber Laser Technologies Co., Ltd.;

Xinjiang Beidou Tongchuang Information Technology Co., Ltd.;

Xinjiang Lianhai Chuangzhi Information Technology Co., Ltd.;

Xinjiang Sailing Information Technology Co., Ltd.; and

             Xinjiang Tangli Technology Co., Ltd.

  • Iran

     Payam Nabavi; and Sina Biomedical Chemistry Company

  • Lebanon

Karim Daadaa; and Modern Agropharmaceuticals & Trade Establishment

  • Netherlands

Suzhou Keda Technology Co., Ltd.

  • Pakistan

 Suzhou Keda Technology Co., Ltd.

  • Russia

Andrey Leonidovich Kuznetsov;

Dmitry Alexandrovich Kravchenko

Margarita Vasilyevna Kuznetsova;

OOO Teson;

OOO Trade-Component; and Radiant Group of Companies

  • Singapore

            Suzhou Keda Technology Co., Ltd

  • South Korea

  Suzhou Keda Technology Co., Ltd.

  • Taiwan

 Hangzhou Hualan Microelectronics Co., Ltd.

  • Turkey

 Suzhou Keda Technology Co., Ltd.

  • United Arab Emirates

  TEM International FZC

  • United Kingdom

  China Academy of Electronics and Information Technology

Removal from Entity List:

  • Germany:

Maintenance Services International (MSI) GmbH

Revision of Entry in Entity List:

  • China

Remove Guangqi Science Co., Ltd. as an alias for Kuang-Chi Group

Removal from Unverified List (Supp. No 6 to EAR Part 744)]:

  • United Arab Emirates:

   TEM International FZC

Addition to Military End User List (Supp. No. 7 to EAR Part 744):

  • Russia:

JSC Kazan Helicopter Plant Repair Service

 

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BIS Adds Six Entities In Russia To The Entity List

 

July 7, 2019 – 86 Fed. Reg. 37901:  BIS added six entities in Russia to the Entity List based on the determination that that they had acted contrary to U.S. national security or foreign policy interests.  A license with a review policy of presumption of denial will be required for exports, reexports, and transfers (in-country) to these entities of all items subject to the EAR, and no license exceptions will be available.  The six added entries are:

  • Aktsionernoe Obshchestvo AST;
  • Aktsionernoe Obshchestvo Pasit;
  • Aktsionernoe Obshchestvo Pozitiv Teknolodzhiz;
  • Federal State Autonomous Institution Military Innovative Technopolis Era;
  • Federal State Autonomous Scientific Establishment Scientific Research Institute Specialized Security Computing Devices and Automation; and
  • Obshchestvo S Ogranichennoi Otvetstvennostyu NEOBIT

 

The action also corrected the Entity List entry for the Federal Security Service (FSB) by changing the License Requirement column to recognize Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) General License 1B and amending the effective date from February 2, 2017, to the current effective date of March 2, 2021.

 

 

Department of State

 

DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

July 2 12, 14, 16, 22, and 30, 2021:  The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

 

  • Change in Address for Castalia Systems, LLC;
  • Change in Name from SCISYS Group PLC to CGI IT UK Limited due to acquisition of SCYSYS by CGI;
  • Change in Address for Tecnilogica Ecosistemas, S.A.;
  • Change in Address for Wescam Inc.;
  • Change in Name from FLIR Systems Inc. to Teledyne FLIR, LLC due to acquisition of FLIR by Teledyne;
  • Change in Name of FLIR entities due to acquisition of FLIR by Teledyne as follows:
  • FLIR Detection, Inc. to Teledyne FLIR Detection, Inc. (Incorp. in DE);
  • FLIR EOC, LLC to Teledyne FLIR EOC, LLC (Incorp. in CA);
  • FLIR Government Systems, Inc. to Teledyne FLIR Government Systems, Inc. (Incorp. in DE);
  • FLIR Surveillance, Inc. to Teledyne FLIR Surveillance, Inc. (Incorp. in DE); and
  • FLIR Unmanned Ground Systems, Inc. to Teledyne FLIR Unmanned Ground Systems, Inc. (Incorp. in DE)
  • Change in Name from Saudi Prerogative Company to Vision 30 Systems for Military Equipment.

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

*******

 

DDTC Posts Its Golden Sentry Report And Blue Lantern Report

 

July 6, 2021:  DDTC posted on its website and provided to Congress two End Use Monitoring (EUM) reports: 1) the Golden Sentry Report – End Use Monitoring of Defense Articles and Services – Government-to-Government Services; and 2) the Blue Lantern Report – End Use Monitoring of Defense Articles.  The Golden Sentry Report, on the DDTC website at https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/sys_attachment.do?sysparm_referring_url=tear_off&view=true&sys_id=5c52d53f1b01b8502b6ca932f54bcbd0, covers actions taken in FY 2020 by the Department of Defense to comply with EUM requirements of the Foreign Assistance Act (FAA) of 1961 or the Arms Export Control Act (AECA, 22 USC 2778 et seq.), Sec. 40A, for defense articles and defense services transferred through the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program.  The Blue Lantern Report, on the DDTC website at  https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/sys_attachment.do?sysparm_referring_url=tear_off&view=true&sys_id=1852993f1b01b8502b6ca932f54bcb66, covers actions taken in FY 2020 by the Department of State to monitor the end-use of defense articles, technical data, defense services, and brokering activities exported through commercial channels and subject to Department of State licenses or other approvals under AECA Sec. 38.

 

Department of the Treasury

 

OFAC issues Venezuela-related General License (GL) 40 Regarding Liquefied Petroleum Gas

July 12, 2021:  OFAC issued Venezuela-related General License (GL) 40, “Authorizing Certain Transactions Involving the Exportation or Reexportation of Liquefied Petroleum Gas to Venezuela,” and related new Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) 914 and 915.  GL 40 is limited to certain transactions related to the exportation or reexportation of liquefied petroleum gas to Venezuela, involving the Government of Venezuela or Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PdVSA).  GL 40 is valid until July 8, 2022.

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OFAC Publishes Ukraine-Related General License (GL) 15J

 

July 28, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 40310:  OFAC published Ukraine-related GL 15J, which authorizes certain transactions and activities otherwise prohibited by the Ukraine-Related Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR part 589 (URSR), that are ordinarily incident and necessary to the manufacture and sale of existing and new models of vehicles, components, and spare parts, including automobiles, light commercial vehicles, trucks, buses, engines/powertrains, produced by GAZ Group, or any entity in which GAZ Group owns, directly or indirectly, a 50 percent or greater interest.  GL 15J, which was originally issued on OFAC’s website on Dec. 23, 2020, expires on Jan. 26, 2022.  In the same announcement, OFAC published earlier versions of GL 15, which were previously issued on the OFAC website and subsequently expired.  Note:  In a similar action on July 28, 2021 (86 Fed. Reg. 40316), OFAC published Ukraine-related GL 13P, covering certain financial transactions relating to GAZ Group, and earlier, since-expired versions of GL 13.  GL 13P will expire Jan. 26, 2022.

 

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

 

This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

 

Fines and Penalties

 

July 19, 2021:  Ge Songtao of Nanjing, China was sentenced to 3 years and 6 months in federal prison and ordered to forfeit $114,834.27 for conspiring to submit false export information through the Automated Export System (AES) and to export maritime raiding craft and engines to China fraudulently.  Ge, the chairman of Shanghai Breeze Technology Co. Ltd. of Shanghai, China, wanted to find a source of supply for U.S.-manufactured combat rubber raiding craft equipped with multi-fuel engines that are used by the U.S. military and can be operated after being launched from a submerged submarine or dropped into the ocean by an aircraft.  No comparable engine is manufactured in China.  A U.S.-based employee of Ge’s identified a supplier and having been told that a U.S. manufacturer would be more likely to be willing to sell to a customer in Hong Kong than to a customer in mainland China, told the supplier that the purchaser was an entity called United Vision Limited in Hong Kong, thereby causing false information to be entered into the AES.  Ge arranged for payment through a Hong Kong entity.  However, the plot failed, and Ge and his co-defendant employees were arrested before the raiding craft and engines were exported.

 

*******

July 19, 2021:  BIS announced an administrative settlement with Alfa Laval US (AL-US) of Richmond, VA and Alfa Laval Middle East Ltd. (AL-ME) of Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) whereby AL-US operations, Alfa Laval Tank, Inc. located in Exton, PA (AL-Tank) and AL-ME will pay a civil penalty of $215,000 to resolve allegations that Alfa operations in the U.S. exported two Alfa Laval Gamajet 10 automated tank cleaning machines used to clean underground storage tanks, valued at approximately $18,585 and designated under the EAR as EAR99, falsely listing a UAE company  as the ultimate consignee although they had been informed of the U.S. embargo on Iran and they knew and had reason to know that the items were destined for Iran and would ultimately be shipped there.

The apparent violations were committed between May 2015 and March 2016 when AL Tank, which manufactures and sells storage tank cleaning equipment, referred a known Iranian business opportunity to its foreign affiliate in Dubai, UAE. The foreign affiliate then orchestrated a scheme to export goods from the United States to Iran and did so by using AL Tank to export its Gamajet brand cleaning units to Iran via the “UAE end user”.

The unlicensed shipment was discovered when BIS conducted a post-shipment verification at AL’s distributor in the UAE.  Settlement of related charges by OFAC was a condition of this settlement with BIS.  (See next item.)

*******

July 19, 2021:  OFAC announced that AL-ME had agreed to pay $415,695 to settle its potential civil liability for apparent violations of the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR, 31 CFR Part 560) committed when AL-ME conspired with Dubai- and Iran-based companies to have exported Gamajet storage tank cleaning units from the U.S. to Iran, thereby causing its US.-based affiliate to falsely list a UAE-based company as the end-user on its export documentation.

Separately, OFAC also announced a $16,875 settlement with AL-US to cover AL-US’ potential liability for apparent violations committed by AL-Tank when it referred an Iranian business opportunity to its foreign affiliate in Dubai, and the affiliate then orchestrated a scheme for an illegal export to Iran.

*******

July 22, 2021:  Arash Yousefi Jam, an Iranian national living in Ontario, Canada, pleaded guilty to charges of conspiring to export U.S. goods to Iran in violation of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1701-1707) and the ITSR. The conspiracy included actual shipments of at least nine electrical discharge boards, one CPU board, two servo motors and two railroad crankshafts to Iran via the UAE. Jam and co-conspirators allegedly also hid the ultimate destination of the shipments by ensuring that payment for the goods came from banks outside Iran.

*******

July 23, 2021:  Yi-Chi Shih, an electrical engineer of Hollywood Hills, CA, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, CA to 63 months in federal prison and ordered to pay $362,698 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service and a $300,000 fine based on his conviction of conspiracy to violate the IEEPA, the EAR, and several other federal laws.  The conspiracy involved a complex scheme to illegally obtain broadband, high-powered semiconductor chips known as monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs) and export them to AVIC 607, a state-owned entity in China.  To accomplish this, he defrauded a U.S. company that manufactured MMICs out of the confidential and proprietary business information that was part of its MMIC manufacturing services, gaining access to the victim company’s web portal through an associate who posed as a domestic customer seeking to obtain custom-designed MMICs that would be used solely in the United States. Shih financed the manufacturing of the MMICs by the victim U.S. company by funneling funds provided by Chinese entities through a U.S. company that he controlled.  Shih was convicted in July 2019 after a seven-week jury trial.  (See July 2019 Regulatory Update.)  An associate, Kiet Mai, pleaded guilty in December 2018 to one felony count of smuggling and was sentenced to 18 months’ probation and a $5,000 fine.

JULY 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

JUNE 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through June 30, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company’s international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

 See also our “Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties” section below for an update on companies and persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

REGULATORY UPDATES

European Union

EU Published New EU Dual-Use Regulation

June 11, 2021:  The European Union (EU) published the official version of the new EU Dual-Use Regulation, which will go into effect Sep. 9, 2021.  (See background in May 2021 and November 2020 Regulatory Updates.)  “Regulation (EU) 2021/821 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 May 2021 setting up a Union regime for the control of exports, brokering, technical assistance, transit and transfer of dual-use items (recast)” is in the EU Official Journal at https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32021R0821.

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS Issued A Public Notice Regarding The Reinstatement Of EAR Control Of “Technology” and “Software” Regarding 3D Printing Of EAR Controlled Firearms To BIS

June 1, 2021 -- 86 Fed. Reg. 29189:  The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) issued a public notice of a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (Washington v. U.S.  Dep’t of State, 2021 U.S. App.LEXIS 12448, Apr 27, 2021) that had the effect of reinstating the validity of a State Department Directorate of Trade Controls (DDTC) rule that transferred control of “technology” and “software” that fall

under U.S. Department of Commerce regulations, 15 CFR 732.2(b) and 734.7(c) from the U.S. Munitions List (USML, 22 CFR Sec. 121.1) to the Commerce Control List (CCL, EAR Part 774, Supp. No. 1).  (Prior to the Circuit Court decision, the transfer of control of these items from the USML to the CCL had been vacated by the decision of a lower federal court – see April 2021 Regulatory Update.)  BIS has posted 12 FAQs about the transfer at

https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/policy-guidance/2572-faqs-for-the-commerce-category-i-iii-firearms-rule-posted-on-bis-website-7-7-20/fileThis rule affects technical data and software directly related to the production of firearms and firearm parts using a 3-D printer or similar equipment and is complicated.  Contact us if you believe that your products may be affected.

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BIS Added 8 Pakistan and UAE Entities To The Entity List

June 1, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 29190:  BIS amended the EAR by adding 8 entities in Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to the Entity List (EAR Part 744, Supp. No. 4) based on a determination that each of these entities was involved in proliferation of unsafeguarded nuclear activities that are contrary to the national security and/or foreign policy of the United States. A license requirement with license review policy of presumption of denial, and no license exceptions will now apply to exports, re-exports, or in-country transfers to these persons for all items subject to the EAR.  The 8 entities are:

Pakistan

  • Hassan Scientific Corporation;
  • Mecatech (Private) Limited;
  • Middle East Automation & Controls Services;
  • Mirza and Co;
  • Techno-Commercial; and
  • TELEC Electronics & Machinery (Pvt) Ltd.

UAE

  • Delta Engineering Concern FZE; and
  • Future Trends International, FZE LLC.

In the same notice, BIS revised the entries for DJI and Seajet Company Limited in China; corrected the entry for China State Shipbuilding Corporation, Limited (CSSC) 750th Test Center in China; and removed the entry for IKAN Engineering Services in Pakistan.

*******

BIS updates the List of Countries Participating In The Arab League Boycott Of Israel by removing the UAE

June 9, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 30535:  BIS recognizes the formal termination by the UAE of its participation in the Arab League Boycott of Israel by adding new Supplement No. 17 to the Anti-Boycott provisions of EAR Part 760.  Supplement No. 17 is an Interpretation stating that certain requests for information, action or agreement from the UAE, which were presumed to be boycott-related prior to August 16, 2020, the date of issuance of the UAE decree terminating participation in the Arab League Boycott of Israel, would not be presumed to be boycott-related if issued after August 16, 2020, and thus would not be subject to the prohibitions or reporting requirements of Part 760 of the EAR.  The Interpretation warns U.S. persons, however, that requests that are on their face boycott-related or that are for action obviously in furtherance or support of an unsanctioned foreign boycott are subject to the rules of EAR Part 760, irrespective of the country of origination.  (See April 2021 Regulatory Update for comparable action by the Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).)

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BIS Removed Satori Corporation Of France And The UAE From The Entity List

June 16, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 31909:  BIS amended the EAR by removing one entity, Satori Corporation, under destinations for France and the UAE, from the Entity List.  This action was based on a review of information provided in a request for removal.

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BIS Added Five Chinese Entities To The Entity List

 

June 24, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 33119:  BIS amended the EAR by adding the following 5 entities to the Entity List under the destination of the People’s Republic of China, based on a determination that they have engaged in or enabled activities contrary to U.S. foreign policy interests, i.e., human rights and other violations against Uyghurs, Kazakhs, and other members of Muslim minority groups in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China:

  • Hoshine Silicon Industry (Shanshan) Co., Ltd.;
  • Xinjiang Daqo New Energy, Co. Ltd.;
  • Xinjiang East Hope Nonferrous Metals Co. Ltd.;
  • Xinjiang GCL New Energy Material Technology, Co. Ltd.; and
  • Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps.

For these entities, a license requirement with a license review policy of presumption of denial will apply for all items subject to the EAR except several specific items for which there will be a case-by-case license review policy.  No license exceptions will be available.

Department of State

DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

June 7, 10, 14, 16, 22, 24, 28, and 29, 2021:  The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at    

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981. The following are included changes to the list:

  • Change in name for Fights on Logistics Sp. zoo to Alioth Logistics Sp. zoo
  • Change in name and address for Leonardo MW Ltd to Leonardo UK Ltd.
  • Change in name from KPN Security B.V. to KPN B.V.
  • Change in name from CMI Defence Poland Spolka z organiczona odpowiedzialnoscia to John Cockerill Defense Spolka z organiczona odpowiedzialnoscia  due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in name from ST Engineering Aerospace Supplies Pte Ltd, Aviation Division to ST Engineering Synthesis Pte Ltd due to corporate reorganization.
  • Change in name from ST Engineering Aerospace Supplies Pte Ltd to ST Engineering Aerospace Systems Pte Ltd due to corporate reorganization.
  • Change in Name and Address from General Electric International Inc. (Australia Branch) to GE Aviation Systems Australia Pty Ltd due to corporate restructuring.
  • Change in Name from MTU do Brasil Ltda to Rolls-Royce Solutions Brasil Ltda due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Middle East FZE to Rolls-Royce Solutions Middle East FZE due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU France SAS to Rolls-Royce Solutions France SAS due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Reman Technologies GmbH to Rolls-Royce Solutions Magdeburg GmbH due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Israel Ltd to Rolls-Royce Solutions Israel Ltd due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Korea Ltd to Rolls-Royce Solutions Korea Ltd due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Benelux BV to Rolls-Royce Solutions Benelux BV due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Rus LLC to Rolls-Royce Solutions RUS LLC due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Africa Pty Ltd to Rolls-Royce Solutions Africa (Pty) Ltd due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU South Africa (Pty) Ltd to Rolls-Royce Solutions South Africa (Pty) Ltd due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Iberica Propulsion y Energia SL to Rolls-Royce Solutions Iberica SLU due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU UK Limited to Rolls-Royce Solutions UK Ltd due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Hong Kong Limited to Rolls-Royce Solutions Hong Kong Ltd due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Engineering (Suzhou) Company Limited to Rolls-Royce Solutions China Co. Ltd due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from PT MTU Indonesia to PT Rolls-Royce Solutions Indonesia due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Italia SRL to Rolls-Royce Solutions Italia SRL due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in Name from MTU Motor Turbin Sanayi ve Ticaret AS to Rolls-Royce Solutions Motor San. Ve Tic. A.S. due to corporate rebranding.
  • Change in address for Gromelski & Associates.
  • Change in address for Presagis Europe SAS.
  • Change in address for Yulista holding LLC and subsidiaries.
  • Change in address for Presagis Canada Inc.
  • Change in name from Trelleborg Offshore Norway AS to Vipo AS due to new ownership and rebranding.
  • Changes in name due to corporate restructuring: Saab AB is dissolving and integrating two-businesses, Support & Services (S&S) and Industrial Products and Services (IPS) into multiple business areas: Aeronautics, Surveillance, and Dynamics. The changes are as follows:
  • The S&S branch’s Communication and Tactical Solutions will change to BU Tactical Support Solutions.
  • IPS BU Aerosturctures will change to BU Aerospace Systems.
  • IPS BU Avionics Systems and Surveillance BU Electronic Warfare will change to BU Electronic Warfare and Aircraft Systems.
  • BU Airborne ISR will combine into Surveillance BU Radar Solutions.

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

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DDTC Issues A Public Notice Regarding Reinstatement Of The Transfer to the EAR, Control Of “Technology” and “Software” Regarding 3D Printing Of EAR Controlled Firearms

June 1, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 29196:  The State Department informed the public of the Circuit Court decision that invalidated a lower court order and thereby restored the effectiveness of the Department of State’s Jan. 23, 2020, rule transferring exclusive control over software and technical data related to 3-D printing of firearms or components to the EAR, administered by the Department of Commerce, effective May 26, 2021.  See additional information in Commerce Department section above.

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DDTC Extends Ability Of “Regular Employees” To Work At A Remote Location

June 10, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 30778:  The State Department extended until further notice the temporary suspensions, modifications, and exceptions that –

  1. allow persons who are “regular employees” for purposes of International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR, 22 CFR Parts 120-130) Sec. 120.39(a)(2) to work at a remote work location, and
  2. authorize regular employees who work remotely in a country not currently authorized by a technical assistance agreement (TAA), manufacturing license agreement (MLA), or exemption to send, receive, or access any technical data authorized for export, reexport, or retransfer to their employer via a TAA, MLA, or exemption – provided that the individual is not located in a country listed in ITAR Sec. 126.1, which now includes Russia (see March 2021 Regulatory Update).

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DDTC Posted Its 2020 “Section 655 Report”

June 14, 2021:  DDTC posted its 2020 “Section 655 report,” which lists the defense articles and defense services licensed for permanent export to every foreign country and international organization during FY 2020.  This 30-page report lists every country and organization separately, showing for each a list of authorized value and shipped value, by USML categories.  An introduction to the report is on the DDTC

website at https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/sys_attachment.do?sysparm_referring_url=tear_off&view=true&sys_id=06f22f571be4bc90c6c3866ae54bcb3c; the full report is at

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/sys_attachment.do?sysparm_referring_url=tear_off&view=true&sys_id=06f22f571be4bc90c6c3866ae54bcb3e.  (This annual report is required by Sec. 655 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 as amended.)

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Department of the Treasury

OFAC Issues The Burma Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR § 525

June 1, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 29197:  OFAC issued the Burma Sanctions Regulations, 31 CFR § 525, to implement President Biden’s Executive Order (EO) 14014, “Blocking Property With Respect to the Situation in Burma,” in response to the Feb. 1, 2021, military coup in that country.  (See February 2021 Regulatory Update.)  OFAC stated that these regulations are being published in abbreviated form to provide immediate guidance to the public; it intends to publish a more comprehensive set of regulations in the future.

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OFAC Issued GL 8H, "Authorizing Transactions Involving Petróleos De Venezuela, S.A. (Pdvsa) Necessary For The Limited Maintenance Of Essential Operations In Venezuela Or The Wind Down Of Operations In Venezuela For Certain Entities”

June 1, 2021:  OFAC issued GL 8H, "Authorizing Transactions Involving Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PdVSA) Necessary for the Limited Maintenance of Essential Operations in Venezuela or the Wind Down of Operations in Venezuela for Certain Entities,” extending the authorization for certain limited activities until December 1, 2021.  GL 8H is on the OFAC website at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/venezuela_gl8h_0.pdf.

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OFAC Issued Covid-19-Related General Licenses Authorizing Transactions And Activities Involving Iran, Syria, And Venezuela

June 17, 2021:  The Treasury Department announced that it had issued Covid-19-related General Licenses (GLs) authorizing transactions and activities involving Iran, Syria, and Venezuela to support the work of governments, international organizations, non-governmental organizations, and private sector actors in providing COVID-19-related assistance to the people in these sanctioned jurisdictions.  The Treasury Department announcement also states that OFAC prioritizes applications, compliance questions, and other requests related to COVID-19 relief and other humanitarian support and stands ready to provide guidance and respond to sanctions-related questions.

Iran GL N is at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/iran_gln.pdf; Syria GL 21 is at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/syria_gl21.pdf; and Venezuela GL 39 is at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/venezuela_gl39.pdf.  The Treasury Department announcement is at https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0234.

At the same time, OFAC issued six FAQs that provide further clarity on what the COVID-19-related GLs authorize, OFAC’s due diligence expectations for U.S. financial institutions facilitating activity authorized by the COVID-19-related GLs, and guidance for non-U.S. persons engaging in activities authorized for U.S. persons under the COVID-19-related GLs.  The six FAQs are on the Treasury Department website at 906907908909910, and 911.

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

Sanctions

 

Department of Commerce

June 1, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 29236:  BIS denied the export privileges of Behzad Pourghannad, of Tehran, Iran until Nov. 13, 2029, based on his conviction of violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1701-1707) by conspiring to export carbon fiber from the U.S. to Iran without having obtained the required U.S. Government authorization.  In the criminal case, Pourghannad was sentenced to 20 months in prison and a special assessment of $100.  (See additional information in September 2019 and November 2019 Regulatory Updates.)

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June 3, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 29741:  BIS denied the export privileges of Chris Rodriguez of Thomasville, NC until Oct. 18, 2026, based on his conviction of violating Section 38 of the AECA by willfully attempting to export, exporting, and causing to be exported from the U.S. to Honduras two firearms and hundreds of rounds of ammunition without having obtained the required authorization from the Department of State.  In the criminal case, Rodriguez was sentenced to 18 months in prison and a special assessment of $100.

Department of State

June 4, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 30074:  The Bureau of Political-Military Affairs gave notice of the statutory debarment of seven persons convicted in U.S. District Courts of violating, or conspiring to violate, the AECA.  The debarred persons are (Name, Date of Judgment; Judicial District; and Year of Birth):

(1) Danso, Ronald Adjei; September 15, 2020; District of Utah; November 1968;

(2) Higuera, Julian Alonso; September 24, 2020; District of Arizona; October 1990;

(3) Li, Qingshan; June 12, 2020; Southern District of California; February 1985;

(4) Park, Si Mong; September 14, 2020; District of the District of Columbia; September 1970;

(5) Rubio, Maritza; June 6, 2019; District of Arizona; February 1979;

(6) Sun, Wei; November 18, 2020; District of Arizona; December 1971; and

(7) Williams, Randy Lew; March 3, 2021; Western District of Oklahoma; August 1963.

These persons will remain debarred unless, after at least three years following the date of conviction, a request for reinstatement from statutory debarment is approved by the Department of State. An updated List of Statutorily Barred Parties is on the DDTC website at https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=7188dac6db3cd30044f9ff621f961914.

 

Fines and Penalties

May 28, 2021:  Photonics Industries International, Inc., of Ronkonkoma, NY, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $350,000 (with $50,000 payable within 30 days and payment of the remaining $300,000 suspended for

two years and then waived if Photonics has not committed any further violations) to settle charges by BIS of three violations of 15 CFR 764.2(a) by exporting laser systems to China without the required BIS license; one violation of 15 CFR 764.2(c) by attempting to export laser systems to China without the required BIS license; and one violation of 15 CFR 764.2(a) by exporting a laser system to Sichuan University, Chengdu, China, an entity listed on the  Entity List (EAR Part 744, Supp. No. 4), without the required BIS license.  The settlement agreement also provided that failure to make full and timely payment of the civil penalty could result in a one-year denial of all Photonic’s export privileges under the EAR.

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May 28, 2021:  Alsima Middle East General Trading LLC, a/k/a Al Sima  Middle East General Trading LLC, of Dubai, UAE, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $25,000 (with $12,500 payable within 30 days and the remaining $12,500 suspended for two years and thereafter waived if the company commits no further violations) to settle charges by BIS that it had violated EAR Sec. 764.2(g) (Misrepresentation and Concealment of Facts) in connection with the submission to BIS of a license application for the export of powder grade nickel to the UAE when it falsely and misleadingly represented that the nickel powder was to be used to manufacture self-lubricating seal rings in the UAE for distribution in the UAE, and that it would not be reexported without further authorization from BIS.  The falsity of this representation came to light when, in a Post Shipment Verification (PSV) at Alsima, conducted by BIS, the company’s director stated that the manufactured rings had actually been intended for export to an Azerbaijani company.  The settlement agreement also provides that if Alsima fails to comply fully with the terms of the agreement, BIS can deny its export privileges for two years.

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June 16, 2021:  USGoBuy, LLC, a packaging company based in Portland, OR, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $20,000 (with $5,000 payable within 30 days and the remaining $15,000 suspended for three years and thereafter waived if the company commits no further violations) and complete an external audit to settle charges by BIS that it had committed two violations of the EAR by exporting riflescopes controlled under Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) 0A987 and associated items valued in total at approximately   $1,299.96 to the UAE, Iran, and China without the required authorizations.  USGoBuy will also be subject to a 3-year debarment, suspended for 3 years and thereafter waived if it pays the fine, completes the audit, and commits no further violations.

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June 23, 2021:  Skyline USA, Inc., of Sanford, FL agreed to pay a civil penalty of $140,000 (the first $10,000 payable in monthly installments of $1,000 each and the remaining $130,000 suspended for two years and thereafter waived if Skyline commits no further violations) to settle charges by BIS that it had committed 15 violations of EAR Sec. 764.2(a) (Engaging in Prohibited Conduct) and one violation of EAR Sec. 764.2(i) (Failure to Comply with Recordkeeping Requirements) when on at least 15 occasions it had

exported stun guns, police batons, handcuffs, and/or pepper spray (the “items”) to Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Trinidad and Tobago, or Uruguay without the required licenses from BIS. The exported items were controlled for crime control reasons under ECCNs 0A978, 0A982, 0A985, and 0A984 and valued at a total of approximately $50,644.  If Skyline fails to pay the civil penalty or otherwise fails to comply in full with the terms of the agreement, BIS can issue an order denying its export privileges for two years from the date of issuance of any such denial order.

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June 27, 2021:  Patriot 3, Inc., of Fredericksburg, VA agreed to pay a civil penalty of $200,000 (payable in quarterly installments of $50,000 each, with none suspended or waived) to settle a charge of one violation of EAR Sec. 764.2(c), Acting with Knowledge of a Violation, for selling and/or transferring one pair of maritime jet boots with underwater propulsion systems (“JetBoots”) controlled under ECCN 8A992 when at the time of the transfer, Patriot 3 was aware that the JetBoots were intended to be sold and transferred to the Russian Government’s Federal Guard Service (the “FSO”), a  military end user in Russia, and that  EAR Sec. 744.21 required an export license for exports of items controlled under ECCN 8A992 to military end users or military end uses in Russia.  The JetBoots were valued at approximately $329,760.  If Patriot 3 fails to comply fully with the terms of the agreement, BIS can issue an order denying its export privileges for two years.

JUNE 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

MAY 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through May 31, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company’s international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

See also our “Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties” section below for an update on companies and persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

REGULATORY UPDATES

European Union

EU Revises Its Dual-Use Regulation

May 10, 2021:  The Council of the European Union (EU) formally adopted a revised version of the EU’s Dual-Use Regulation.  This new Regulation – the first major structural reform since 2009 in the EU regime controlling exports, brokering, technical assistance, transit, and transfer of dual-use items – was approved by the European Parliament on March 26, 2021 and will enter into force 90 days after it is published in the EU Official Journal.  Prominent among the goals of the new rules are promotion of human rights compliance (including the addition of new controls on cyber-surveillance) and fostering of cooperation between member states.  (See additional information in November 2020 Regulatory Update.)  The full text of the new Regulation is at https://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/PE-54-2020-INIT/en/pdf .

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS Released Updated FAQs Regarding Transition Of USML Categories I, II and III To The EAR

May 13, 2021:  The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) released an updated version of “FAQs for the Commerce Categories I-III (final rule) Control of Firearms, Guns, Ammunition and Related Articles the President Determines No Longer Warrant Control Under the United States Munitions List (USML, 22 CFR Sec. 121.1) (85 FR 4136). The original FAQs were originally published Jan. 23, 2020, effective March 9, 2020, after BIS amended the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) to add 17 new ECCNs to the Commerce Control List (CCL, EAR Part 774, Supp. No. 1) to facilitate the transfer from the ITAR U.S. Munitions List of commercially available firearms and ammunition items that had been determined no longer to require control under USML Categories I, II, and III.  (See January 2020 Regulatory Update.)

This detailed 69-page updated document, including 119 FAQs (including 13 FAQs on “3D Printing of Firearms”) and definitions of 14 key terms, is on the BIS website at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/policy-guidance/2572-faqs-for-the-commerce-category-i-iii-firearms-rule-posted-on-bis-website-7-7-20/file.

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BIS Posted FAQs Regarding Exports Of Items Normally Regulated By The EAR Become Not “Subject To The Export Administration Regulations (EAR)” Solely Because They Are Authorized For Export Under The Foreign Military Sales (FMS) Program

May 12, 2021:  BIS posted FAQs regarding exports of items that are not “subject to the Export Administration Regulations (EAR)” solely because they are authorized under the Foreign Military Sales (FMS) Program of the Arms Export Control Act (AECA, 22 USC 2778 et seq.) pursuant to a Letter of Offer and Acceptance (LOA).  The FAQs were developed jointly by BIS and the U.S. Census Bureau at the Department of Commerce; the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) and the Office of Regional Security and Arms Transfers (RSAT) at the Department of State; the Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA) at the Department of Defense; and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) at the Department of Homeland Security and relate specifically to the export under FMS authority of items whose control was moved from the USML to the CCL.

See these FAQs on the BIS website at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/pdfs/2756-fms-faqs-dated-5-12-21/file.

Department of State

DDTC Name and Address Changes Posted To Website

May 3, 7, 12, 21, 27, and 28, 2021:  DDTC posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at    

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

  • Change in Name from Hockley Pattern & Tool Co Ltd to NEOS Technologies Limited due to corporate reorganization/rebranding of subsidiary by NEOS Technologies;
  • Change in Name from FLIR Systems ATS SAS and FLIR Systems Holding France SAS to FLIR Systems France due to corporate reorganization;
  • Change of Address for KYB Corporation;
  • Change in Name of the following MTU entities to listed Rolls Royce entities due to corporate reorganization of subsidiaries by Rolls Royce Power Systems:

- MTU Friedrichshafen GmbH to Rolls-Royce Solutions GmbH;

- MTU Onsite Energy GmbH to Rolls-Royce Solutions Augsburg GmbH;

- MTU Onsite Energy Systems GmbH to Rolls-Royce Solutions Ruhstorf GmbH;

- MTU Asia Pte Ltd to Rolls-Royce Solutions Asia Pte Ltd; and

- MTU America Inc Rolls-Royce Solutions America Inc;

  • Change in Name of Ausy Engineering GmbH to Ylipson GmbH due to acquisition of AUSY Engineering GmbH by Ylipson;
  • Change in Name from 3SDL Ltd to Meta Mission Data Ltd. due to acquisition by Meta Mission Data; and
  • Change in Name from Andoya Space Center AS to Andoya Space AS due to corporate rebranding.

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

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DDTC Proposed Changes To The ITAR’s Definition Of “Regular Employee”

May 27, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 28503:  DDTC proposed to amend the definition of “regular employee” in Sec. 120.39 of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR, 22 CFR Parts 120-130) to recognize and take account of the evolving workplace environment.  The proposed changes would replace the requirement that a “regular employee” must work at a company’s facilities with clear criteria intended to allow for remote work.  The proposal also offers clear criteria that will allow regulated entities to treat certain contractual staff as regular employees for the purposes of the ITAR, provided that the individual remains sufficiently under the employer’s control such that the Department can hold the regulated employer responsible for the individual’s actions.  A codification of the meaning of “long term contractual relationship” is also included.  Comments on this proposal will be accepted until July 26, 2021.

Editor’s Note: The proposed changes would significantly expand the company obligations when using contractual staff to treat the personnel as regular employee to include validating U.S. person status to ensure ITAR compliance instead of relying on certifications or representations made by the contractor.

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

 This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

 

Sanctions

Department of Commerce

May 5, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 23920:  BIS denied the export privileges of Abel Hernandez, Jr. of Pharr, TX until Aug. 29, 2029, based on his conviction of violating 18 U.S.C. 554(a) (Smuggling goods from the United States) by fraudulently and knowingly exporting and sending. or attempting to export and send. from the U.S. to Mexico 2,080 rounds of 7.62X39mm caliber ammunition.  In the criminal case, Hernandez was sentenced to 27 months in prison and a special assessment of $100.

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May 5, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 23921:  BIS denied the export privileges of Sergio Daniel Serrano-Lopez of Big Spring Correctional Institution, Big Spring, TX, until Aug. 30, 2029 based on his conviction of violating 18 USC 554(a) by fraudulently and knowingly exporting and sending, or attempting to export and send, ammunition and magazines from the U.S. to Mexico.  In the criminal case, Serrano-Lopez was sentenced to 40 months in prison and a special assessment of $100.

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May 5, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 23922:  BIS denied the export privileges of Mehmet Hakan Atilla of Istanbul, Turkey until May 16, 2028 based on his conviction of violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (‘‘IEEPA,”, 50 U.S.C § 1701, et seq.) by knowingly and willfully conspiring with others known and unknown to provide financial services to Iran and to the Government of Iran without obtaining the required approval from the Office of Foreign Assets Control.  In the criminal case, Atilla was sentenced to 32 months in prison and a special assessment of $500.

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May 27, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 28540:  BIS renewed for an additional 180 days the Temporary Denial Order (TDO) issued on Nov. 24, 2020 against the following persons:

  • Mahan Airways, Tehran, Iran;
  • Pejman Mahmood Kosarayanifard A/K/ A Kosarian Fard, Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE);
  • Mahmoud Amini, Dubai, UAE;
  • Kerman Aviation A/K/A Gie Kerman Aviation, Paris, France;
  • Sirjanco Trading LLC, Dubai, UAE;
  • Mahan Air General Trading LLC, Dubai, UAE;
  • Mehdi Bahrami, Istanbul, Turkey;
  • Al Naser Airlines A/K/A Al-Naser Airlines A/K/A Al Naser Wings Airline A/K/A Alnaser Airlines And Air Freight Ltd., Baghdad, Iraq, Dubai, UAE, and Amman, Jordan;
  • Ali Abdullah Alhay A/K/A Ali Alhay A/K/A Ali Abdullah Ahmed Alhay, Baghdad, Iraq, and Qatif, Saudi Arabia;
  • Bahar Safwa General Trading, Dubai, UAE;
  • Sky Blue Bird Group A/K/A Sky Blue Bird Aviation A/K/A Sky Blue Bird Ltd A/K/A Sky Blue Bird FZC Ras Al Khaimah Trade Zone, UAE; and
  • Issam Shammout A/K/A Muhammad Isam Muhammad Anwar Nur Shammout A/K/A Issam Anwar, Damascus, Syria, Beirut, Lebanon, London, United Kingdom, and Istanbul, Turkey.

Fines and Penalties

April 30, 2021:  MDA Precisions LLC of Gilroy, CA agreed to pay $60,000 (of which $25,000 is payable within 30 days and the remaining $35,000 will be suspended for two years and thereafter waived if MDA has not committed any further violations) and complete an export compliance training course within one year to resolve charges by BIS that it had violated EAR Sec. 764.2(e) by exporting a five-axis drilling machine that was controlled under the EAR for nuclear nonproliferation and anti-terrorism reasons to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) without a license when it had reason to know that an export license was required.

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May 3, 2021: Honeywell International, Inc. of Charlotte, NC agreed to pay a civil penalty of $13 million (of which $5 million will be suspended if Honeywell uses the funds for specified compliance measures) and take specified compliance measures to settle 34 charges by DDTC of unauthorized exports and retransfers of technical data for parts and components controlled under USML Categories VIII(i), XI(d), and XIX(g)  to the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and unauthorized exports of technical data related to aircraft parts and components controlled under USML Categories VIII(i) and XIX(g) to Taiwan, Canada, Ireland, and Mexico.  The unauthorized transactions primarily involved exports to affiliated and unaffiliated foreign suppliers of engineering prints – some of which contained technical data designated as Significant Military Equipment (SME) -- showing layouts, dimensions, and geometries for manufacturing castings and finished parts for multiple aircraft, military electronics, and gas turbine engines.

The compliance measures in the settlement – all specified in detail -- require Honeywell to appoint an external Special Compliance Officer for at least 18 months, conduct an external audit of its compliance program, implement additional compliance measures, and facilitate on-site reviews by DDTC with minimum advance notice.  The State Department determined not to administratively debar Honeywell because Honeywell voluntarily disclosed the alleged violations, acknowledged their serious nature, cooperated with the Department’s review, and instituted a number of compliance program improvements during the course of the review.

The State Department noted that the settlement demonstrated its role in strengthening U.S. industry by protecting U.S.-origin defense articles, including technical data, from unauthorized exports and that it highlighted the importance of obtaining appropriate authorization for exporting controlled articles.

See our article for more details.

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May 3, 2021:  Kleiss & Co. BV of Zwijndrecht, The Netherlands, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $60,000 and have its export privileges denied for two years (suspended for two years and thereafter waived if it pays the $60,000 and has not committed any further violations) to settle charges by BIS that it had twice violated EAR Sec. 764.2(e) (Acting with Knowledge of a Violation) by ordering, buying, and concealing details of a shipment of EAR99 U.S.-origin extruded butyl sealants to Iran in violation of the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR, 31 CFR Part 560).  After a U.S. freight forwarder stopped an initial shipment of the sealants by Kleiss to a customer in Iran and returned it to Kleiss because of the U.S. sanctions, Kleiss on subsequent occasions in September 2016 and March 2017 ordered the sealants from its U.S. supplier, but provided a new addressee in Dubai, UAE and removed all references to Iran from the invoices and packing list.  The 2017 attempted export was discovered and stopped by BIS.

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May 17, 2021:  TeleDynamics LLC of Austin, TX agreed to pay a civil penalty of $55,000 to settle 10 charges by BIS of violating EAR Sec. 764.2(b) (Causing, Aiding, or Abetting a Violation) by forwarding rifle scopes classified under Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) 0A987, valued at $1,047, for export from the U.S. to Russia and Ukraine without the required authorization.  TeleDynamics had previously been notified by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) that rifle scopes forwarded by TeleDynamics had been detained because they lacked the required export licenses.

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May 18, 2021:  Aerojet Rocketdyne Inc., a rocket and missile propulsion manufacturer, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $37,008 and take actions including training its employees who conduct hiring in its Jupiter, FL location to resolve a charge by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) that it violated the anti-discrimination provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) by not allowing non-U.S. citizens to apply for 12 mechanic positions, based on their citizenship status.  The DOJ investigation found that the violation resulted from a misunderstanding by Rocketdyne of its obligations under federal regulations, including the ITAR, in mistakenly believing that they imposed restrictions on the company’s ability to hire non-U.S. citizens, which the DOJ announcement said they do not.  The announcement also noted, however, that while the INA protects U.S. citizens, non-citizen nationals, refugees, asylees, and recent lawful permanent residents from hiring discrimination based on citizenship status, it also includes an exception if an employer or recruiter is required to limit jobs due to a law, regulation, executive order, or government contract.

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May 21, 2021:  Tsvetan Kanev of Sofia, Bulgaria, was sentenced in federal court in Denver, CO to 24 months in prison based on his March 2021 plea of guilty of violating the IEEPA by seeking to export export-controlled electronic equipment that is commonly used in satellites from the U.S. to the Russian military and space program without the required export license.  Kanev told the U.S. manufacturer that the circuits were sought by the Bulgarian Academy of Science, but the manufacturer was suspicious of this claim and referred the matter to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Counter-Proliferation Investigations Center (CPIC).  Undercover HSI agents then engaged with Kanev, offered to sell the controlled parts, and learned that Kanev intended to transship the parts from Bulgaria to Finland, and then to reexport them to Russia in a suitcase, which would avoid documenting the ultimate destination.  Kanev ultimately confirmed to the HIS agents that the end-users were the Russian military and space program and that he was aware that the transactions were illegal.  In transactions in October 2015 and December 2015 Kanev transferred $357,261 to the agents to purchase the items that he planned to export, including clock driver and random-access memory programmable multi-chip modules and a multiple analog-to-digital converter designed for aerospace applications that are controlled for national security reasons.  (The money was subsequently seized and forfeited to the U.S.)  Kanev was arrested in Germany in January 2020 and then extradited to Colorado.

*******

May 26, 2021:  GVA International Oil and Gas Services, an Italian company, pled guilty in U.S. District Court in Savannah, GA to violating the Export Control Reform Act (ECRA, 50 USC Chapter 58) in a conspiracy to purchase a power turbine from a U.S.-based manufacturer for use by a Russian government-controlled business on a Russian Arctic deepwater drilling platform without first obtaining the export license required by U.S. law.  The conspiracy, which included concealing the true end user from the U.S. manufacturer and the U.S. Government by submitting false documentation stating that the turbine would be used by a U.S. company in and around Atlanta, began when a Russian government-controlled business contracted with Oleg Vladislavovich Nikitin, general director of KS Engineering (KSE), a Russia-based energy company, to purchase the turbine.  Nikitin then conspired with GVA, GVA’s owner, Gabrielle Villone, and another GVA employee to obtain the turbine.  Nikitin and Villone were arrested in Savannah, GA while attempting to complete the illegal transaction.   Villone is currently serving a 28-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to conspiracy in the case in 2020 (see June 2020 Regulatory Update); Nikitin and KSE pled guilty to conspiracy to evade U.S. export regulations and to defraud the U.S. on March 30, 2021, and await sentencing (see March 2021 Regulatory Update).

*******

May 28, 2021:   Lionel Chan of Brighton, MA and Muhammad Mohd Radzi of Brooklyn, NY, both Malaysian nationals, were sentenced in federal court in Boston, MA for conspiring to violate the AECA by exporting firearm parts from the U.S. to Hong Kong without the required export licenses, based on guilty pleas they had made Jan. 22, 2021 (see January 2021 Regulatory Update).  Both men purchased export-controlled U.S.-origin firearm parts, including parts used to assemble AR-15 assault rifles and 9MM semi-automatic handguns, for a buyer located in Hong Kong and then sent them to Hong Kong via Federal Express, concealing the contents of the shipments by providing Federal Express with false information about the shipments and concealing the parts inside each package.  The violations were discovered when Hong Kong authorities intercepted two of these packages and found that they contained numerous export-controlled firearms parts.  Chan, who shipped at least 12 of these packages, was sentenced to 8 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and a fine of $10,000.  Radzi, who shipped 21 packages, was sentenced to five years of probation with the condition that he leave the United States on or before June 15, 2021 and not return for five years or without a valid visa, and a fine of $10,000.

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MAY 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

APRIL 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through April 30, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company’s international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

See also our “Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties” section below for an update on companies and

persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

 REGULATORY UPDATES

U.S. Courts

The U.S. Court Of Appeals For The Ninth Circuit Overturned A Preliminary Nationwide Injunction Regarding Technical Data And Software Related To 3D Printed Guns

April 27, 2021:  The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit overturned a preliminary nationwide injunction issued by the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington in Seattle, WA on March 6, 2020 (see March 2020 Regulatory Update) that prohibited the transfer of  jurisdiction over “technical data and software directly related to the production of firearms or firearm parts using a 3D-printer or similar equipment” from the U.S. Munitions List (USML, 22 CFR Sec. 121.1) to the Commerce Control List (CCL, EAR Part 774, Supp. No. 1).  (This transfer would otherwise have occurred as part of the implementation of the rules adopted Jan. 23, 2020 by the Commerce Department (85 Fed. Reg. 4136) and the State Department (85 Fed. Reg. 3819), effective March 9, 2020, that transferred jurisdiction over many firearms and related technologies controlled under USML Categories I, II, and III from the State Department to the Commerce Department.)  The Ninth Circuit based its decision on a holding that the District Court did not have jurisdiction to review agency determinations of whether any item is, or is not, a “defense article” because the International Security Assistance and Arms Export Control Act of 1976 (22 U.S.C. § 2778(a)(1)) “precluded judicial review of both the designation and undesignation of items as defense articles.”

See the State Department section below for an announcement that the State Department will continue to enforce implementation of the District Court’s injunction, maintaining the technical data as export controlled ITAR data.

The President

President Biden Issued Additional Russia Sanctions Via Executive Order 14024

April 18, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 20249:  President Biden issued Executive Order 14024 of April 15, 2021, “Blocking Property With Respect To Specified Harmful Foreign Activities Of The Government Of The Russian Federation.”  The harmful foreign activities of the Government of the Russian Federation that underlay E.O. 14024 included, among others, undermining the conduct of free and fair democratic elections in the U.S. and its allies, engaging in and facilitating “malicious cyber-enabled activities,” and fostering and using transnational corruption to influence foreign governments.  E.O. 14024 authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State, to block property and impose other sanctions on Russian persons found to be involved in any of a wide range of malign activities.  The sanctions do not involve the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) or the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR, 22 CFR Parts 120-130).  A White House Fact Sheet about E.O. 14024 and its implementation is on the White House website at   https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/04/15/fact-sheet-imposing-costs-for-harmful-foreign-activities-by-the-russian-government/.  See information about implementation of E.O. 14024 in the Treasury Department Sanctions section below.

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS Applied Military Intelligence-Related Controls To Burma (Myanmar)

April 9, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 18433:  The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) amended the EAR to apply military intelligence-related controls to Burma (Myanmar) and to restrict U.S. persons’ activities in  connection with military-intelligence end uses and end users in Burma.  Specifically, EAR Sec. 744.22 was amended to impose a license requirement on the export, reexport, or transfer (in-country) of any item subject to the EAR if an exporter, reexporter, or transferor has knowledge, or is informed by BIS, that the item is destined for a military-intelligence end use or end user in Burma, expressly including Burma’s Office of Chief of Military Security Affairs (OCMSA) and the Directorate of Signal, a branch of the Burmese Army responsible for the military telecommunications network.  Also, EAR Sec. 736.2(b)(7)(i)(A)(5) (General Prohibition Seven, on U.S. Person controls) and Sec. 744.6(b)(5) (Restrictions on specific activities of ‘‘U.S. Persons’’) are revised by adding Burma to the list of countries in which U.S. persons are prohibited from supporting military intelligence end uses or end users, even when such support does not involve an item subject to the EAR.

In the same rule, BIS also made further technical corrections and conforming changes to the Jan. 15, 2021 (86 Fed. Reg. 4865) rule that amended the EAR to implement, among other things, controls on exports, reexports, and transfers (in-country), as well as specific activities of U.S. persons, in connection with military-intelligence end uses and end users in China, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia, Syria, and Venezuela.  (See January 2021 and March 2021 Regulatory Updates for information on original Jan. 15 rule and technical corrections made March 17, 2021 (86 Fed. Reg. 14534).)

This interim final rule became effective April 9, 2021.

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BIS Added Seven Chinese Supercomputing Entities To The Entity List

April 9, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 18437:  BIS added seven Chinese supercomputing entities to the Entity List (15 CFR Part 744, Supp. No. 4) based on their procurement of U.S.-origin items for activities that support China’s military actors, its destabilizing military modernization efforts, and/or its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs.  The 7 entities are:

  • National Supercomputing Center Jinan;
  • National Supercomputing Center Shenzhen;
  • National Supercomputing Center Wuxi;
  • National Supercomputer Center Zhengzhou;
  • Shanghai High-Performance Integrated Circuit Design Center;
  • Sunway Microelectronics; and
  • Tianjin Phytium Information Technology.

 

For these entities, BIS imposes a license requirement with a license review policy of a presumption of denial for all items subject to the EAR. In addition, no license exceptions will be available for exports, reexports, or transfers (in-country) to these entities.

Department of State

DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

April 5, 7, 12, 14, 21, and 30, 2021:  The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at    

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

  • Change in Name from Pratt & Miller Engineering & Fabrication Inc. to Pratt & Miller Engineering & Fabrication LLC due to corporate restructure;
  • Change in Name and Address from Leonardo MW Ltd to Leonardo UK Ltd due to corporate reorganization;
  • Change in Name of Babcock Spain entities due to corporate rebranding as follows:

From:                                                                          To:

Helisureste Centro de Mantenimiento Aeronautico SA;    Babcock Mission Critical Services Espana

Helicopteros del Sureste SAU;                                         SA

Helicsa Helicopteros, SAU;

Inaer Helicopteros Off Shore SAU;

Transportes Aereos del Sur SA;

Transportes Aereos del Sur SLU;

Helisureste Centro de Mantenimiento Aeronautico SA;

Inaer Maintenance SA Heliasset SL;                              Babcock Mission Critical Services Asset

Inaer Asset Management SAU                                       Management SAU

Inesair Fleet Spain SLU;                                                Babcock Mission Critical Services Fleet

Inaer Fleet Management SAU                                        Management SAU

Prioris Aviation Spain SAU;                                          Babcock Mission Critical Services Group

Avincis Mission Critical Services Group SAU                SAU

Inaer Inversionres Aereas SL;                                        Babcock Mission Critical Services SAU

Inaer Aviation Spain SAU;

Avincis Mission Critical Services SAU Idomeneo SLU;

Inaer Aviation International SLU;                                  Babcock Mission Critical Services

Inaer Aviation International SAU                                   International SAU

Heli-Europa SA;                                                           Babcock Mission Critical Services

Heli-Europa SL;                                                            Galicia SL

Inaer Galicia SL

  • Change in Name from SAVIS Tecnologia e Sistemas S/A to Embraer S.A. due to merger of Savis with Embraer;
  • Change in Name of FLIR Radars Inc. and 360 Surveillance Inc. to FLIR Unmanned Aerial Systems ULC due to corporate restructure;
  • Change in Name from Milrem LCM to Milworks OU due to corporate rebranding;
  • Panta Aerospace B.V. Acquires GKN Aerospace Netherlands B.V. Subsidiaries Fokker Services B.V. and Fokker Techniek B.V. (Names/Addresses Unchanged); and
  • Due to Corporate Reorganizaiton HENSOLDT AG is now a party to DSP authorizations and agreements to which HENSOLDT Holding Germany GmbH, its German subsidiary, is a party.

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

*******

DDTC Issued A Factsheet, “Summary Of Changes To International Traffic in Arms Regulations Sec. 126.1 – Russia” And Updated FAQs

April 12, 2021:  DDTC issued a Factsheet, “Summary of Changes to International Traffic in Arms Regulations Sec. 126.1 – Russia,” and updated Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) related to the March 18, 2021 amendment (86 Fed. Reg. 14802 – see March 2021 Regulatory Update) that subjected Russia to the coverage of ITAR Sec. 126.1(d)(2), which applies a policy of denial for exports, subject to an exception in Sec. 126.1(l) providing that a license or other approval may be issued on a case-by-case basis (1) for government space cooperation, and (2) prior to September 1, 2021, for commercial  space launches; and also amends ITAR Sec. 126.1(a) to allow exporters to use the exemptions provided in
ITAR § 126.4(a)(2) and (b)(2) for exports to Russia when in support of government space cooperation.  The Factsheet and related FAQs are on the DDTC website at https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/sys_attachment.do?sysparm_referring_url=tear_off&view=true&sys_id=a6baec641baf2c14d1f1ea02f54bcbfc ; many more new FAQs are at https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_public_portal_faq_cat&topic=840e3f6cdb3bc30044f9ff621f9619c0&subtopic=e4d3fc6c1b236c14d1f1ea02f54bcbb3#e4d3fc6c1b236c14d1f1ea02f54bcbb3 .

*******

DDTC Issued A Notice That It Is Still Enforcing The Court Injunction Treating Technical Data And Software Related To 3D Printed Firearms As ITAR Controlled

April 30, 2021:  DDTC issued a notice ( https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_public_portal_news_and_events )  stating that it is continuing to enforce the March 6, 2020 injunction calling for the treatment of “technical data and software directly related to the production of firearms or firearm parts using a 3D-printer or similar equipment” as subject to control on the U.S. Munitions List  (USML, 22 CFR Sec. 121.1), because the opinion issued by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals (see Courts section above) that mandates vacating that injunction will not go into force until certain further court procedures have been completed.

Department of the Treasury

OFAC Published New Syria FAQs

April 5, 2021:  The Office of Foreign  Assets Control (OFAC) published new Syria FAQs 884 and 885. FAQ 884 states that non-U.S. persons who engage in or facilitate activities that would be authorized for a U.S. person under a general license issued pursuant to the Syrian Sanctions Regulations (SySR) do not risk exposure to U.S. secondary sanctions pursuant to the Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act of 2019 (Caesar Act).  FAQ 885 states the general rule that U.S. and non-U.S. persons, including nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and foreign financial institutions, may provide or facilitate certain humanitarian assistance to Syria without the risk of sanctions; recommends contacting the BIS Foreign Policy Division for questions specific to transactions involving items subject to the EAR destined to Syria; and for additional information cites OFAC’s April 16, 2020 Fact Sheet on Provision of Humanitarian Assistance and Trade to Combat COVID-19 (https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/covid19_factsheet_20200416.pdf; see April 2020 Regulatory Update).  FAQ 885 also states as a general principle applicable to transactions by non-governmental organizations that may implicate sanctioned persons or countries that “OFAC remains committed to ensuring that humanitarian assistance can flow to the people of Syria and maintains a favorable policy supporting the provision of humanitarian assistance.”    FAQs 884 and 885 are on the Treasury Department website at https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/884 and https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/885 .

*******

The Treasury Department Published Its Quarterly List Of Countries That Require Or May Require Participation In, Or Cooperation With, An International Boycott And Removes The UAE From The List

April 8, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 18374:  The Treasury Department published its quarterly list of countries that require or may require participation in, or cooperation with, an international boycott. The countries named are Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Yemen.  The Treasury Department states that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has been removed from the list due to the repeal of its law mandating a boycott of Israel and subsequent UAE government actions to implement this new policy.  Exporters and others should note, however, that this action by the Treasury Department does not change the scope or the substantive rules and reporting requirements of the Anti-Boycott Regulations (ABR, EAR Part 760) administered by the Department of Commerce Office of Anti-Boycott Compliance (OABC).

*******

OFAC Published FAQs Regarding Format Options For OFAC License Applications

April 12, 2021:  OFAC published amended FAQ 97 (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/97) and FAQ 98 (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/98), which address presentation and format options for license applications pursuant to the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act of 2000 (TSRA).  

*******

OFAC Published Two Amended FAQs On Sudan-related Sanctions

April 12, 2021:  OFAC published two amended FAQs on Sudan-related sanctions issues.  FAQ 500 (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/500 ) states that  no license from OFAC is required to export or reexport agricultural commodities, medicines, or medical devices to Sudan, and FAQ 836 ( https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/836 ) summarizes the few Sudan-related sanctions that remain in effect since the Sudanese Sanctions Regulations (SSR, 31 C.F.R. Part 538) were revoked on June 28, 2018.

*******

OFAC Amended The Somalia Sanctions Regulations

April 28, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 22346:  OFAC amended the Somalia Sanctions Regulations (31 CFR Part 551) by reissuing them in their entirety, replacing regulations that were published in abbreviated form on May 5, 2010.  Effective April 28, 2021, this new final rule includes additional interpretive and definitional guidance, general licenses, statements of licensing policy, and other regulatory provisions to provide further guidance to the public.

*******

OFAC  Moved Its its Non-SDN Communist Chinese Military Companies (NS-CCMC) List To Its Standard List Format

April 30, 2021: OFAC announced that it will migrate its Non-SDN Communist Chinese Military Companies (NS-CCMC) List from its current temporary PDF and CSV format to the standard OFAC list format, and that this data will now be included in OFAC's Non-SDN Consolidated Data Files for machine processing.  Human-readable versions of the NS-CCMC list will now be available on a dedicated NS-CCMC landing page.

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

 This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

Sanctions

Department of the Treasury

April 15, 2021:  OFAC took numerous actions to implement Executive Order 14024, “Blocking Property With Respect To Specified Harmful Foreign Activities Of The Government Of The Russian Federation,” signed by President Biden April 15, 2021.  (See The President section above.)   In accordance with E.O. 14024, these actions involve sanctions such as blocking property, prohibiting U.S. financial institutions from participating in the primary market for Russia’s sovereign debt, and adding persons to the Specially Designated Nationals (SDNs) List; they do not involve the EAR or the ITAR.  A Treasury Department release at https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0127 summarizes the sanctions and identifies the sanctioned Russian persons that are designated as Russian Companies in the Technology Sector Supporting Russian Intelligence Services and Russian Malicious Cyber Actors; another Treasury Department release at https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/recent-actions/20210415 includes links to new FAQs 886, 887, 888, 889 ,890, and 891 and updated FAQs 673, 674, 675, and 676.

 

 

Fines and Penalties

April 15, 2021:  Harsimran Singh and Panther Trading Company, Inc. (PTC), both of Landsdowne, MD, have agreed to pay a civil penalty of $42,000, for which they are jointly and severally liable, to settle charges by BIS that they committed three violations of EAR Sec. 764.2(a) (two violations by engaging in prohibited conduct by exporting items controlled for crime control reasons to Mexico without BIS authorization  and one violation by exporting items controlled for crime control reasons to the Dominican Republic without BIS authorization) and one violation of EAR Sec. 764.2(b) (causing, aiding, or abetting exports of crime control items to Nigeria without BIS authorization).  A payment of $12,500 will be paid within 30 days, and the remaining $29,500 will be suspended for one year and then waived, provided that Singh and PTC have made full and timely payment of the $12,500 and have committed no further violations of the Export Control Reform Act (ECRA, 50 U.S.C. § 4801 et seq.), the EAR, or any order, license or authorization issued thereunder.

*******

April 19, 2021:  OFAC announced that Alliance Steel, Inc. of Oklahoma City, OK, a designer and manufacturer of prefabricated steel structures, agreed to pay $435,003 to settle its potential civil liability for apparent violations of the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR, 31 CFR Part 560) when on at least 61 occasions it knowingly imported engineering services from a third-party engineering company located in Tehran, Iran.   Alliance sells its products exclusively to domestic consumers, does not export goods or services, and does not market itself outside the United States.  However, when demand for engineering services exceeded its available resources, it outsourced the work to third-party contractors, including an Iranian engineering company.  Numerous senior managers were aware that the subcontractor was an Iranian company, and several were involved in the process of approving and paying for each transaction with the Iranian company.  However, Alliance asserted that because the company otherwise operates entirely within the United States, these management officials were “not attuned to the laws and regulations administered by OFAC.”

In the announcement of this case (https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/20210419_alliance.pdf), OFAC notes that this enforcement action demonstrates the importance of developing and maintaining effective, risk-based sanctions compliance controls, even for companies operating predominantly within the United States, and recommends several OFAC resources that can aid in this task.

*******

April 28, 2021:  Shuren Qin, a Chinese national residing in Wellesley, MA, pleaded guilty in Federal District Court in Boston, MA in connection with illegally procuring and causing the illegal export of $100,000 worth of U.S.-origin hydrophones to Northwestern Polytechnical University (NWPU), a Chinese military university that works closely with the People’s Liberation Army, to one count of conspiracy to unlawfully export items from the U.S. to NWPU without first obtaining the required export licenses as well as counts of visa fraud, making false statements to law enforcement agents, money laundering, and smuggling. Qin and his company, LinkOcean, concealed from the U.S. manufacturer of the hydrophones that NWPU was the true end-user, thereby causing false end-user information to be filed with the U.S. government.

*******

April 29, 2021:  FLIR Systems, Inc., of Wilsonville, OR agreed to pay an administrative fine of $307,922 to resolve allegations by BIS that it made inaccurate or incomplete representations in the course of seeking a commodity jurisdiction determination that a newly developed Uncooled Focal Plane Array (UFPA) was subject to the EAR rather than the ITAR.  In response to concerns expressed by the U.S. Government about possible diversion of the UFPA to end-users of concern, FLIR represented that the UFPA was designed specifically for insertion into commercial smartphones and that FLIR recognized the need to prevent diversion to other uses, while internally contemplating other markets and developing plans for military applications.  Later, FLIR sold cameras incorporating the UFPA to a Norwegian customer in the defense industry.  FLIR also represented to USG officials that its UFPAs incorporated novel anti-tamper encryption protection, but it never actually developed or added such protection to the UFPA.

*******

April 29, 2021:  SAP SE of Walldorf, Germany, entered into separate agreements with the U.S. Departments of Justice, Commerce, and Treasury as part of a global resolution of voluntary disclosures to all three agencies of violations of the EAR and the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR, 31 CFR Part 560).    All three cases involved the export of SAP software products to Iran in two ways: releasing U.S.-origin software, including upgrades or software patches, more than 20,000 times to users in Iran without using geolocation filters to identify and block Iranian nationals, and allowing foreign subsidiaries to permit approximately 2,360 Iranian users to access U.S.-based cloud services from Iran.

The charges by DOJ resulted in a non-prosecution agreement that recognized the importance of SAP’s voluntary self-disclosures and cooperation with the government during and after the three-year investigation, spending more than $27 million on measures including remediating and implementing changes in its export compliance and sanctions program, deactivating thousands of users of SAP cloud-based services based in Iran, instituting automated sanctioned party screening of its affiliates, auditing and suspending partners that sold to Iran-affiliated customers, hiring experienced U.S.-based export controls staff, and conducting more robust due diligence regarding new acquisitions.  SAP will also disgorge $5.14 million of ill-gotten gain. The Commerce Department case concluded with an administrative settlement of $3,290,000 and a requirement of three annual audits.  The Treasury Department case concluded with an administrative settlement of $2,132,174, which will be satisfied by the penalties assessed by DOJ and DOC.

In its announcement, DOJ stated that this is the first case in which a voluntary self-disclosure of export violations led to a non-prosecution agreement between the violating company and the DOJ. Also, it encouraged companies to voluntarily self-disclose all potentially willful violations of the statutes implementing the U.S. government’s primary export control and sanctions regimes — the Arms Export Control Act (AECA), the Export Control Reform Act (ECRA), and the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), — directly to the National Security Division (NSD). DOJ also recommended a DOJ publication as a source of guidance for future cases:  Export Control And Sanctions Enforcement Policy For Business Organizations, https://www.justice.gov/nsd/ces_vsd_policy_2019/download (Dec. 13, 2019).

APRIL 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

MARCH 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

 

 

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through March 31, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company’s international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

See also our “Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties” section below for an update on companies and

persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

 

REGULATORY UPDATES  

European Union

EU To Establish A Union Regime For Export Controls Of Dual-Use Items

March 25, 2021:  The European Parliament agreed to adopt a regulation establishing a Union regime for the control of exports, transfer, brokering, technical assistance and transit of dual-use items.  This rule, which still requires agreement by the European Council, is on the European Parliament website  at https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2021-0101_EN.pdf ; a press release describing it is at https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20210322IPR00534/parliament-agrees-to-new-eu-export-rules-on-dual-use-items?xtor=AD-78-[Social_share_buttons]-[linkedin]-[en]-[news]-[pressroom]-[control-of-exports-transfer-brokering-technical-assistance.

United Kingdom

The United Kingdom Export Control Joint Unit (ECJU) Published Updated Guidance On Transferring Military And Dual Use Technology

 

March 24, 2021:  The United Kingdom Export Control Joint Unit (ECJU) published updated detailed guidance on the scope of U.K. regulations on transferring controlled military or dual-use technology and the definitions of terms used in those regulations. This information can be accessed at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/exporting-military-or-dual-use-technology-definitions.

U.S. - Miscellaneous 

DOS/ISN, OFAC and BIS Jointly Issued A North Korea Ballistic Missile Advisory

March 11, 2021:  The U.S. State Department of State Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation (ISN), the Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), and the Commerce Department Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) jointly issued a North Korea Ballistic Missile Advisory identifying key North Korean ballistic missile procurement entities, describing their deceptive procurement techniques, and listing key materials and equipment used in the ballistic missile program.  The Advisory is intended to aid persons that produce or trade in these products or provide related services in establishing procedures and making informed decisions to avoid the risk of violating United Nations, U.S., and other sanctions and laws.  This 19-page Advisory is on the BIS website at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/policy-guidance/2625-2020-north-korea-ballistic-missile-advisory-005/file.

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS Adds 14 Entities In Germany, Russia and Switzerland To The Entity List

March 4, 2021 -- 86 Fed. Reg. 12529:  BIS amended the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) by adding 14 entities in Germany, Russia, and Switzerland to the Entity List (EAR Part 744, Supp. No. 4) based on a determination that each of these entities had acted contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the U.S. by engaging in proliferation activities in support of Russia’s weapons of mass destruction programs and chemical weapons activities.  The 14 entities are:

  • Germany
    Chimconnect Gmbh;
    Pharmcontract Gmbh; and
    Riol-Chemie
  • Russia
    27th Scientific Center of the Russian Ministry of Defense;
    Chimmed Group;
    Femteco;
    Interlab;
    LabInvest;
    OOO Analit Products;
    OOO Intertech Instruments;
    Pharmcontract GC; and
    Rau Farm
  • Switzerland

Chimconnect AG

A license requirement with a policy of denial will now apply to exports, reexports, or in-country transfers to these persons of all items subject to the EAR, and no license exceptions will be available.

The rule also corrected one existing Entity List entry for the destination of Germany for the entity “Huawei OpenLab Munich,” and five entries for China.

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BIS Amends The EAR To Apply More Restrictive Treatment To Myanmar (Burma)

March 8, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 13173:  In response to the military coup that overthrew the elected government of Myanmar (Burma), BIS made the following amendments to the EAR to apply more restrictive treatment to exports and reexports to, and in-country transfers within, Myanmar:

  • Moved Burma from Country Group B to Country Group D:1 (EAR Part 740, Supplement No. 1), resulting in –
    • Removal or limitation of eligibility for the following License Exceptions:
  • Shipments of Limited Value (LVS) (EAR Sec. 740.3);
    • Shipments to Group B Countries (GBS) (Sec. 740.4);
    • Technology and Software under Restriction (TSR) (Sec. 740.6);
    • Temporary Imports, Exports, Reexports, and Transfers (in-country) (TMP) (Sec. 740.9);
    • Servicing and Replacement Parts and Equipment (RPL) (Sec. 740.10);
    • Aircraft, Vessels, and Spacecraft (AVS) (Sec.740.15);
    • Additional Permissive Reexports (APR) (Sec. 740.16(j)); and
    • Encryption Commodities, Software and Technology (ENC) (Sec. 740.17);
  • Restrictions on the export, reexport, and transfer (in-country) of certain microprocessors and associated “software” and “technology” to “military end uses” and “military end users” in Myanmar;
  • Restrictions on certain exports and reexports to vessels and aircraft located in ports in Myanmar or owned, operated or controlled by Myanmar or a Myanmar national; and
  • Imposition of licensing requirements for reexports of foreign-produced direct products of certain U.S.-origin technology and software to Myanmar (General Prohibition Three, EAR Sec. 736.2(b)(3)).
  • Changes in licensing policy to policies associated with Sec. 744.21 for military end use and end user controls, and with Sec. 742.4(b)(7) for NS-controlled items.

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BIS Added Four Entities To The Entity List

March 8, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 13179:  BIS amended the EAR by adding four entities in Myanmar to the Entity List to support U.S. Government efforts to promote a return to democracy in Myanmar and prevent Myanmar’s military and security services from obtaining items subject to the EAR.  The four Myanmar  entities are:

  • Ministry of Defence;
  • Ministry of Home Affairs;
  • Myanmar Economic Corporation; and
  • Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited.

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BIS Revises Incorrect Instruction Related To “Military-Intelligence End User” or “Military-Intelligence End Use”

March 17, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 14534:  BIS revised an incorrect instruction in the January 15, 2021, rule (86 Fed. Reg. 4865) that created a new license requirement for transactions involving a “military-intelligence end user” (MIEU) or “military-intelligence end use” in certain countries (see January 2021 Regulatory Update). BIS updated an instruction error, which directed the revision of paragraph (a)(3) of § 744.3 of the EAR, rather than only the introductory text of that paragraph, upon its effective date, the January 15 rule would have resulted in the inadvertent deletion of § 744.3(a)(3)(i) and (ii) of the EAR, which describe the license requirements that apply when an exporter, reexporter, or transferor cannot determine the range capabilities of a rocket system or unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) in certain countries of missile technology concern (Country Group D:4) (see Supplement No. 1 to part 740 of the EAR), or whether such rocket system or UAV will be used in connection with the delivery of certain weapons of mass destruction. Following the incorrect instruction would have resulted in the inadvertent deletion of § 744.3(a)(3)(i) and (ii) restricting certain rocket systems and unmanned aerial vehicles.

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BIS Imposes Sanctions On Russia

March 18, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 14689:   BIS issued a Notification of Implementation of sanctions imposed on Russia by the State Department pursuant to a determination under the Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991 (CBW Act) that Russia had used chemical or biological weapons in violation of international law or lethal chemical or biological weapons against its own nationals.  (See State Department March 2 announcement in State Department section below.)  The sanctions imposed by BIS under this State Department determination include a prohibition, subject to a partial waiver, on the export to Russia of national security-controlled goods and technology subject to the EAR.  Accordingly, BIS will now review license applications for exports and reexports to Russia of items controlled for national security (NS) reasons under a presumption of denial and will suspend License Exceptions (LEs) Servicing and Replacement Parts and Equipment (RPL), Technology and Software Unrestricted (TSU), and Additional Permissive Reexports (APR) for NS items destined for Russia.

 

However, a partial waiver will continue to permit the use of the following LEs for such exports and reexports:  Temporary Imports, Exports, Reexports, and Transfers (TMP); Governments, International Organizations, International Inspections under the Chemical Weapons Convention and the International Space Station (GOV); Baggage (BAG); Aircraft, Vessels and Spacecraft (AVS), and Encryption Commodities, Software, and Technology (ENC).  Also, license applications for the export and reexport to Russia of the following NS-controlled items will be reviewed under the licensing policy in effect prior to these sanctions:  items necessary for the safety of flight of civil fixed-wing passenger aviation; deemed exports and reexports to Russian nationals; items destined for wholly-owned U.S. subsidiaries and other foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies that are located in Russia; items in support of government space cooperation; and (until Sep. 1, 2021 only) items in support of commercial space launch activities.

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BIS Publishes Interim Final Rulemaking, Which Allows The Secretary Of Commerce To Prohibit Certain Information And Communications Technology And Services Supply Chain (ICTS) Transactions

March 29, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 16312:  On Jan. 19, 2021 BIS published an interim final rulemaking, effective March 22, 2021 (86 Fed. Reg. 4909 – see January 2021 Regulatory Update), which allowed the Secretary of Commerce to prohibit certain Information and Communications Technology and Services Supply Chain (ICTS) transactions to address national security threats and committed BIS to implement a pre-approval licensing process or similar program that would reduce uncertainty for entities seeking to engage in ICTS transactions.

The March 29, 2021 announcement is an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) seeking comments on such a pre-clearance process.  The announcement includes several detailed questions for which responses would be of particular interest.  Deadline for comments is April 28, 2021.

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BIS Amends The Commerce Control List And Related EAR Provisions To Conform With Changes In The Wassenaar Arrangement

March 29, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 16482:  BIS amended the Commerce Control List (CCL, EAR Part 774, Supp. No. 1) and related EAR provisions to conform with changes in the Wassenaar Arrangement (WA) dual-use control list that had been agreed upon at the WA 2019 Plenary meeting.  The changes include elimination of reporting requirements in some encryption items to reduce the regulatory burden for exporters; changes in various provisions related to CCL Category 5 – Part 2 (Information Security) including LE Encryption Commodities, Software, and Technology (ENC); and changes in the following 22 Export Control Classification Numbers (ECCNs):  0A502, 0A503, 0A606, 1A002, 1A005, 1A006, 1A613, 1B002, 1C001, 1C002, 1C006, 1C010, 2A001, 3B001, 3E002, 5A002, 6A004, 6A005, 6A008, 9A011, 9D515, 9E003.  Contact us if your company works in these effected ECCNs to learn more details.

Department of State

Editor’s Notes:

In response to a client inquiry, we learned that the State Department Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) accepts digital signatures from U.S.-registered applicants on transmittal letters for Agreements.  However, DDTC does not currently accept a digital signature as valid to sign an approved Technical Assistance Agreement or Manufacturing License Agreement. DDTC will accept a PDF copy of a pen-and-ink signature as an acceptable signature for an Agreement.

Annual Sales Reports for 2020 – It’s time to uploaded the Annual Sales reports for your Manufacturing License Agreements and Warehouse Distribution Agreements to DDTC/DECCS.

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DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

March 4, 22, and 29, 2021:  DDTC posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at    

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

  • Change in Name from Wajax Industrial Components Limited Partnership to Delom Services Inc., due to corporate rebranding;
  • Change in Name from CMI Defence S.A. to John Cockerill Defense S.A. due to corporate rebranding;
  • Change in Name from Geodis USA, Inc., to Geodis USA, LLC, due to corporate restructure;
  • Change in Name from Rolls-Royce plc to ITP Aero UK Limited due to transfer of business unit (Hucknall, UK, manufacturing plant and personnel) to ITP Aero;
  • Change in Name from Andoya Test Center AS to Andoya Space Defence AS due to corporate rebranding of Andoya Space subsidiary;
  • Changes in Name of the following foreign entities resulting in formation of the HTM Technologies Group:
  • PM Aerotec B.V. to HTM Aerotec B.V.;
  • PM Precision B.V. to HTM Precision B.V.; and
  • PM PSM B.V. to HTM PSM B.V.;
  • Change in Name of the following Maxar Technologies Inc. subsidiaries due to corporate rebranding:
  • Space Systems/Loral, LLC to Maxar Space LLC;
  • SSL Robotics LLC to Maxar Space Robotics LLC;
  • DigitalGlobe, Inc. to Maxar Intelligence Inc.;
  • DigitalGlobe International Inc. to Maxar International Inc.;
  • Radiant Missions Solutions Inc. to Maxar Mission Solutions Inc.;
  • Radiant Analytic Solutions Inc. & Radiant Geospatial Solutions LLC to Maxar Mission Solutions Inc.;
  • DigitalGlobe International Great Britain Limited to Maxar International Great Britain Limited;
  • DigitalGlobe International India Private Limited to Maxar International India Private Limited;
  • DigitalGlobe Australia Pty. Ltd. to Maxar Australia Pty. Ltd;
  • DigitalGlobe International Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd. to Maxar International Asia Pacific PTE. Ltd.;
  • GeoEye Middle East Ltd. to Maxar Middle East Ltd.; and
  • DigitalGlobe International Canada Inc. to Maxar International Canada Inc.

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

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The State Department Posts A Fact Sheet, “U.S. Sanctions And Other Measures Imposed On Russia In Response To Russia’s Use Of Chemical Weapons”

March 2, 2021:  The State Department posted a Fact Sheet, “U.S. Sanctions and Other Measures Imposed on Russia in Response to Russia’s Use of Chemical Weapons,” on its website at https://www.state.gov/u-s-sanctions-and-other-measures-imposed-on-russia-in-response-to-russias-use-of-chemical-weapons/

announcing that the Secretary of State had “determined that the Government of the Russian Federation has used a chemical weapon against its own nationals, in violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention,” and that as a result, specific sanctions (subject to specified full or partial waivers) would be imposed after a 15-day Congressional notification period.  The sanctions, which will require implementation by the appropriate government agency actions, include termination of the following with respect to Russia:

  • Assistance under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, except for urgent humanitarian assistance and food or other agricultural commodities;
  • Sales of defense articles or defense services under the Arms Export Control Act (AECA, 22 USC 2778 et seq.) and licenses for the export of any item on the U.S. Munitions List (USML, 22 CFR Sec. 121.1), except in support of government space cooperation and, for only 6 months, commercial space cooperation;
  • Foreign military financing under the AECA;
  • S. Government credit or other financial assistance; and
  • Exports of goods or technology on the National Security Control List established under 50 App. Sec. 2404(c)(1).

Currently applicable waivers that will remain available, with license applications reviewed on a case-by-case basis include:

  • Foreign assistance – waived in all respects;
  • Certain waivers currently available for existing sanctions, including –
    • As noted earlier, export license exceptions TMP, GOV, BAG, AVS, or ENC;
    • As noted earlier, exports to ensure the safe operation of commercial passenger aviation;
    • Exports to wholly-owned subsidiaries of U.S. and other foreign companies in Russia;
    • Deemed export licenses for Russian nationals working in the U.S.; and
    • Exports in support of government space cooperation.

However, some currently applicable waivers will no longer be available, including:

  • As noted earlier, EAR export license exceptions RPL, TSU, and APR;
  • Exports and reexports of EAR NS items to commercial end-users in Russia for civil end-uses; and
  • After a 6-month transition period, exports of USML and NS items in support of commercial space flight activities in Russia.

In the same Fact Sheet, DDTC also announced new designations by the State Department and the Treasury Department under the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) Sec. 231 List of Specified Persons; Section 1(a)(ii) of E.O. 13382 (“Blocking Property of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferators and Their Supporters”); and E.O. 13661 (“Blocking Property of Additional Persons Contributing to the Situation in Ukraine”).

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DDTC Updates Its Website Content Related To The Canadian Exemption

March 15, 2021:  DDTC announced that it had refreshed its website content related to Canada, including updated information about the Canadian exemption, key Canadian partners, Canada’s Controlled Goods

Program, a Canadian exemption user guide, and FAQs.  The updated content is on the DDTC website in the “Country Policies” section under “Canadian exemption,” or https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=31002473dbb8d300d0a370131f9619b0.

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DDTC Adds Russia As A Sanctioned Destination

March 18, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 14802:   Consistent with the March 2, 2021 announcement of the determination by the Secretary of State that Russia had violated international law by its use of chemical weapons (see item above), the Department of State added Russia to the list in Sec. 126.1 of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR, 22 CFR Parts 120-130) of countries that are subject to a policy of denial of exports of defense articles and defense services.  Specifically, ITAR Sec. 126.1(d)(2) was amended to subject Russia to a policy of denial for exports of defense articles and defense services with the exception of case-by case review of exports to Russia in support of government space cooperation and – for six months only – exports related to commercial space launches.

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The State Department Issues A Notice Implementing Sanctions Against Russia

March 18, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 14804:  The State Department issued a Notice of Sanctions implementing the sanctions against Russia described in its March 2 notice (see item above).  The sanctions are based on the authority of the Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991 (22 U.S.C. Sec. 5604 and 5605), with waivers essential to U.S. national security.   The sanctions, all specific to Russia and all “to be implemented by the responsible departments and agencies of the U.S. Government,” include:

  • Foreign Assistance under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, except urgent humanitarian assistance and food or other agricultural commodities or products, with application waived because essential to U.S. national security interests;
  • Arms Sales: Sales under the AECA of defense articles, defense services, or design and construction services, and export licenses of any item on the USML, with waivers relating to certain space activities;
  • Arms Sales Financing: All foreign military financing under the AECA;
  • Denial of U.S. Government Credit or Other Financial Assistance:  Any credit or other financial assistance by any U.S. Government instrumentality, including the U.S. Export-Import Bank;
  • Exports of National Security-Sensitive Goods and Technology on control list established under 50 USC 4813(a)(1), with specified full or partial waivers and license requirements for exports and reexports involving –
    • EAR License Exceptions GOV, ENC, BAG, TMP, and AVS;
    • Safety of Flight: Goods or technology pursuant to new licenses necessary for the safety of flight of civil fixed-wing passenger aviation;
    • Deemed Exports/Reexports:  Deemed exports to Russian nationals;
    • Wholly-Owned U.S. and Other Foreign Subsidiaries in Russia;
    • Government Space Cooperation;
    • Commercial Space Launches (only until Sep. 21, 2021);
    • Goods or technology pursuant to new licenses for commercial end-users civil end-uses; and
    • Goods or technology pursuant to new licenses for Russian state-owned or state-funded enterprises.

Department of the Treasury

OFAC Issues Cyber-Related General License 1B Regarding Russia

March 2, 2021:  The Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued Cyber-related General License 1B "Authorizing Certain Transactions with the Federal Security Service" (https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/cyber_gl1b.pdf) authorizing a narrow range of transactions and activities involving the Russian Federal Security Service acting in its administrative and law enforcement capacities. The GL was issued to ensure that U.S. persons engaging in certain business activities in Russia that are not otherwise prohibited are not unduly impacted.  OFAC also amended and issued three related FAQs on its website at https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/501, https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs /502, and https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs /503.

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OFAC Adjusts Civil Monetary Penalties

March 17, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 14534:  OFAC issued a final rule adjusting civil monetary penalties (CMPs) for violations of the statutes it administers for inflation pursuant to the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990, as amended by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act Improvements Act of 2015, effective March 17, 2021.  The current and new maximum penalties are:

 

Statute Existing Maximum

CMP Amount

Maximum CMP

Amount Effective

March 17

Trading With the Enemy Act $90,743 $91,816
International Emergency Economic Powers Act $307,922 $311,562
Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 $81,283 $82,244
Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act $1,529,991 $1,548,075
Clean Diamond Trade Act $13,910 $14,074

 

The rule also includes updated CMPs for violations of recordkeeping requirements.

This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

Sanctions

 

Department of Commerce

March 11, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 13876:  BIS denied the export privileges of Alexander Brazhnikov, Jr., of Mountainside, NJ, for 15 years based on his participation in a multi-year conspiracy to export U.S.-origin electronic components to Russia without the required export licenses, including exports to a Russian entity whose public website states that it is a world-class nuclear weapons center.  The conspiracy included the use of front companies and falsification of shipping documents to understate the value of the items to evade the requirement of filing Electronic Export Information with the U.S. Government.  Brazhnikov pleaded guilty in federal court for the District of New Jersey to charges of smuggling and conspiracy to commit money laundering and was sentenced to 70 months in prison, a $75,000 criminal fine, a $56 million forfeiture, forfeiture of his two houses valued at approximately $500,000 each, and a $200 special assessment.

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March 30, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 16578:  BIS denied the export privileges of Alonso Gonzalez-Granados for 5 years based on his March 8, 2019, conviction in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas of violating 18 U.S.C. 554(a) by exporting and unlawfully sending from the U.S., and attempting to export and send from the U.S., 50 rifle magazines and two boxes of ammunition without the required State Department licenses.  In the criminal case, Gonzalez-Granados was sentenced to 10 months in prison with credit for time served and supervised release for two years.

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March 30, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 16579:  BIS denied the export privileges of Mark Hammond based on his conviction in U.S. District Court in Arizona of violating Sec. 38 of the AECA by knowingly and willfully exporting and causing to be exported from the U.S. to Mexico 5 AK-47 Draco Mini Pistols and 5 30-round firearms magazines designated as defense articles on the USML without the required State Department licenses.  In the criminal case, Hammond was sentenced to 27 months in prison, two years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment.  He was also placed on the U.S. Department of State debarred list.

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March 30, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 16580:  BIS denied the export privileges of Claudia Guerra for 10 years based on her conviction in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas of violating Sec. 38 of the

AECA by knowingly and willfully attempting to export to Mexico 18 boxes of 1,020 rounds of 7.62 x 39-mm caliber ammunition which were designated as defense articles on the USML, without the required U.S. Department of State licenses. In the criminal case, Guerra was sentenced to 48 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment.

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March 30, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 16583:  BIS denied the export privileges of Jean Baptiste Kingery for 7 years based on his conviction in U.S. District Court in Arizona of violating Sec. 38 of the AECA by knowingly and willfully attempting to export from the U.S. to Mexico, MK-II, M-67, M-61 Grenade Shells, M213, M228 Detonating Fuse, Winchester .45 Caliber 230 FMJ ammunition, and Speer Lawman .380 Caliber ammunition which were designated as defense articles on the USML without the required U.S. Department of State licenses. In the criminal case, Kingery was sentenced to 60 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $100 assessment. He was also placed on the U.S. Department of State debarred list.

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March 30, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 16584:  BIS denied the export privileges of Luis Felipe Varela for 5 years based on his conviction in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas of violating 18 U.S.C. § 554(a) by fraudulently and knowingly attempting to export two FN M249S, 5.56 caliber rifles from the U.S. to Mexico, designated as defense articles on the USML, without the required U.S. Department of State licenses.  In the criminal case, Varela was sentenced to 6 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $100 special assessment.

Fines and Penalties

March 5, 2021:  MSI Aircraft Maintenance Services International GmbH & Co., of Ruesselsheim, Germany agreed to pay $51,921 and accept a three-year denial of export privileges (suspended and waived if MSI pays the fine, cooperates with BIS and OFAC during the three-year period, and does not commit any further violations of the  Export Control Reform Act (ECRA, 50 U.S.C. § 4801 et seq.)), to settle charges by BIS that it conspired with a German company and Mahan Airways to procure U.S.-origin aircraft parts and components that were subject to the EAR and export or reexport them to Iran via transshipment through Germany.

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March 5, 2021:  In a case involving illegal exports of cesium atomic clocks to Hong Kong without authorization, Alex Yun Cheong Yue of South El Monte, CA was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Boston, MA to time served (one day) and 3 years of supervised release (a year of which must be served in home confinement) during which he will be prohibited from engaging in import or export transactions, based on his plea of guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit export violations, two counts of unlawful exports and attempted exports of U.S. goods to Hong Kong, and one count of smuggling.  Yue purchased the atomic clocks by falsely representing to the U.S. seller that they would be used solely in California for cordless phone research and redevelopment; however, he reshipped them from California to Hong Kong without obtaining the required export licenses from BIS, with paperwork that falsely described them and undervalued their worth.

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March 10, 2021:  Comtech XiCom Technology, Inc., of Santa Clara, CA agreed to pay an administrative penalty of $122,000 to settle allegations by BIS that on three occasions between 2015 and 2017, Comtech had violated the EAR when it exported Traveling Wave Tubes (TWT) controlled for National Security reasons to Russia, the United Arab Emirates, and Brazil without the required export licenses.  According to BIS, in each of these cases Comtech XiCom had correctly identified the appropriate ECCN for the TWTs, but its internal compliance officials had mistakenly determined that the exports did not require licenses.

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March 15, 2021:  UniControl, Inc., of Cleveland, OH, a manufacturer of process controls, airflow pressure switches, and other instrumentation, agreed to remit $216,464 to settle potential civil liability for apparent violations of the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR, 31 CFR Part 560) for 19 shipments of its goods from the U.S. to two European companies with reason to know that the two companies intended to transfer the goods to Iran, and two shipments with actual knowledge that they would be reexported to Iran.  The OFAC announcement of this case, at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/20210315_uc.pdf, includes useful descriptions of warning signs  of intended illegal reexports and steps exporters can take to avoid such violations.

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March 26, 2021:  OFAC announced that Norddgas, S.r.l., an Italian company that produces and sells components for gas boiler systems and applications, had agreed to remit $950,000 to settle its potential civil liability for apparent violations of the ITSR.  OFAC reported that Nordgas knowingly reexported 27 shipments of air pressure switches procured from a U.S. company intended for as many as 10 customers in Iran, obfuscating the reexportation and Iranian customers from the U.S. company and causing the U.S. company to indirectly export its goods to Iran. In view of Nordgas’s cooperation with OFAC, its agreement to implement enhanced compliance commitments, and other circumstances, $650,000 of the settlement amount will be suspended pending satisfactory completion of Nordgas’s compliance commitments.

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March 30, 2021:  Oleg Vladislavovich Nikitin, general director of KS Engineering (KSE)a St. Petersburg, Russia-based energy company, and KSE pled guilty in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia to conspiracy to evade the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1701-1707) and the Export Control Reform Act of 2018 (ECRA) and to defraud the United States in an effort to purchase a power turbine from a U.S.-based manufacturer for intended use on a Russian Arctic deepwater drilling platform without first obtaining the required license. Nikitin admitted that he and another KSE employee conspired with Gabrielle Villone and his Italian-based company to obtain the turbine from a U.S.-based manufacturer and have it shipped overseas, concealing the true end user from the U.S. manufacturer and the U.S. Government by submitting false documentation that stated it would be used by a U.S. company in Georgia.  Nikitin, Villone, and a third conspirator, Dali Bagrou, were arrested in Savannah, GA while attempting to complete the illegal transaction.  Villone was sentenced in June 2020 to 28 months in prison after pleading guilty to the conspiracy, and Bagrou remains in custody pending further legal action.

 

 

 

MARCH 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

FEBRUARY 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

 

 

February 2021

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through February 28, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It provides a summary of recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company’s international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

See also our “Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties” section below for an update on companies and persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

 

REGULATORY UPDATES

 

The President

President Biden Issues Executive Order 14014, “Blocking Property With Respect to the Situation in Burma.”

Feb. 12, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 9429:  President Biden issued Executive Order 14014, “Blocking Property With Respect to the Situation in Burma,” authorizing sanctions on a wide range of persons and government entities found to be involved in the February 1, 2021, coup in which the military overthrew the democratically elected civilian government of Burma (Myanmar) and undermined the country’s democratic transition and rule of law.

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS Limits Exports And Reexports Of Sensitive Goods To Burma’s Military And Security Services

Feb. 18, 2021 – 85 Fed. Reg. 10011:  In response to the military coup in Burma (Myanmar), the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) took action to limit exports and reexports of sensitive goods to Burma’s military and security services.  Specifically, BIS –

  • announced that it will apply a presumption of denial for items subject to the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) requiring a license for export, reexport, or in-country transfers when destined to Burma’s Ministry of Defense, Ministry of Home Affairs, armed forces, and security services, and
  • suspended the use of the following License Exceptions (LEs) that would otherwise be available to Burma as a result of its current placement in Country Group B:

o   Shipments to Country Group B Countries (GBS, EAR Sec. 740.4);

o   Technology and Software under Restriction (TSR, EAR Sec. 740.6);

o   Shipments of Limited Value (LVS, EAR Sec. 740.3); and

o   Computers (APP, EAR Sec. 740.7).

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BIS Posted Two Sets Of FAQs Regarding Changes In The Treatment Of Exports To Hong Kong

Feb. 19, 2021:  BIS posted two sets of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding changes in the treatment of exports to Hong Kong under the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) in light of the shift in Hong Kong’s status under the EAR from being treated as a separate destination to being treated as a part of China.  A set of five FAQs clarifying the effects of this change is on the BIS website at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/pdfs/2719-new-china-hong-kong-faqs/file, and a three-page collection of  “Revised China/Hong Kong Recordkeeping Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)” is at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/pdfs/2720-china-hong-kong-recordkeeping-faqs/file.

Government Accountability Office

 

GAO Report On The Humanitarian Impact Of U.S. Sanctions On Venezuela

Feb. 4, 2021:  The U.S. Government Accountability Office released a report on the humanitarian impact of U.S. sanctions on Venezuela titled, “Venezuela: Additional Tracking Could Aid Treasury’s Efforts to Mitigate Any Adverse Impacts U.S. Sanctions Might Have on Humanitarian Assistance” (GAO-21-239, https://www.gao.gov/assets/720/712232.pdf). The report examined how the Venezuelan economy performed before and after sanctions were imposed in 2015, the steps U.S. agencies have taken to identify and mitigate the sanctions’ potential negative humanitarian consequences, and the impact of the sanctions on the U.S. oil industry.  As the title of the report indicates, the report was unable to draw broad conclusions, as the agencies involved have not collected adequate data.

Department of State

 

DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

Feb. 4, 11, and 16, 2021:  The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

  • Change in Name of Hydroid Inc. to HII Unmanned Systems due to acquisition of Hydroid, Inc. by Huntington Ingalls Industries;
  • Change in Name of Aeroflex Wichita Inc. to Viavi Solutions LLC due to corporate reorganization;
  • Change in Name from Fuji Xerox Service Link Co., Ltd. to FUJIFILM Service Link due to corporate rebranding;
  • Change in Name from Bell Helicopter Co., Ltd. to Bell Textron Co., Ltd. due to corporate rebranding.

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

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DOD Adjusts The Civil Penalty For Violations Of The ITAR

Feb. 2, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 7804:  The State Department made its annual inflationary adjustment of civil monetary penalties (CMPs), based on guidance from the Office of Management and Budget.  The maximum CMP for violations of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR, 22 CFR Parts 120-130) was increased from $1,183,736 to $1,197,728.  The new amount will apply only to penalties assessed on or after Feb. 2, 2021, regardless of the date on which the violation occurred.

Department of the Treasury

 

OFAC Issues Venezuela-related General License (GL) 30A, “Authorizing Certain Transactions Necessary to Port and Airport Operations.”

Feb. 2, 2021:  The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued Venezuela-related General License (GL) 30A, “Authorizing Certain Transactions Necessary to Port and Airport Operations.”  GL 30A authorized payments to Instituto Nacional de los Espacios Acuaticos (INEA), Venezuela's major port operator.   OFAC’s designation of INEA as a Specially Designated National (SDN) on Jan. 19, 2021, had triggered concerns about humanitarian and other imports into the country.  GL 30A is on the Treasury Department website at https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/venezuela_gl30a.pdf.

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OFAC Revokes Restrictions On Ansarallah As A Foreign Terrorist Organization And A Specially Designated Global Terrorist

Feb. 16, 2021:  In an announcement about actions regarding Yemen (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/recent-actions/20210216), OFAC referenced the revocation by the Department of State of the designations of Ansarallah as a Foreign Terrorist Organization and a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (see Feb. 16, 2021, State Department action in Sanctions section below) and noted that U.S. persons no longer require authorization from OFAC to engage in transactions or activities with Ansarallah, provided such activities do not involve blocked persons or otherwise prohibited activities.  Accordingly, OFAC revoked the following Counter Terrorism-related general licenses:  GL 9, “Official Business of the United States Government,” GL 10, “Official Activities of Certain International Organizations,”  GL 11, “Certain Transactions in Support of Nongovernmental Organizations’ Activities in Yemen,” and GL 12, “Transactions Related to the Exportation or Reexportation of Agricultural Commodities, Medicine, Medical Devices, Replacement Parts, and Components or Software Updates” (all of which OFAC had issued Jan.19, 2021) and GL 13, “Authorizing Transactions Involving Ansarallah,” which it had issued Jan. 25, 2121.  OFAC also removed FAQs 875, 876, and 877 from its website.

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines, and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

 

 

Sanctions

 

Department of Commerce

Feb. 1, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 7693:  BIS denied the export privileges of Issam Hamade of Beirut, Lebanon, for 10 years based on his April 27, 2020 conviction in U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota of violating 18 U.S.C. 371 by conspiring to export parts and technology, including inclusion in unmanned aerial vehicles from the United States to Lebanon, specifically to Hizballah, without obtaining the required export licenses under the EAR or the ITAR.  In the criminal case, Hamade was sentenced to time served and a $100 special assessment.

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Feb. 1, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 7695:  BIS denied the export privileges of Irma Lizette Trevizo of Federal Correction Institution Victorville Medium II, Adelanto, CA, for 10 years based on her April 30, 2019, conviction in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas of violating 18 U.S.C. 371 by knowingly and willfully conspiring to smuggle firearms and ammunition from the U.S. to Mexico.  In the criminal case, Trevizo was sentenced to 24 months in prison, supervised release for two years, and a $100 special assessment.

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Feb. 24, 2021 – 85 Fed. Reg. 11223:  BIS denied the export privileges of Fahad Saleem Kharbey of  Federal Medical Center, Lexington, KY for 7 years based on his May 31, 2019 conviction in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida of violating 18 U.S.C. 554(a) (Smuggling goods from the U.S.) by fraudulently and knowingly exporting firearms and magazines, designated as defense articles on the U. S. Munitions List (USML, 22 CFR Sec. 121.1), from the U.S. to Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE), without having first obtained a license or other approval from the U.S. Department of State.  In the criminal case, Kharbey was sentenced to 36 months in prison, supervised release for three years, a $200 special assessment, and restitution of $755,281.13.

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Feb. 24, 2021 – 85 Fed. Reg. 11224:  BIS denied the export privileges of Siddharth Bhatt, of Chicago, IL and Mumbai, India, for 10 years based on his Sep. 16, 2020, conviction in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia of violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1701 -1707) by willfully exporting, attempting to export, and causing to be exported a U.S.-origin thermal imaging camera from the U.S. to the UAE without having first obtained the required license from the U.S. Department of Commerce.  Bhatt was sentenced to probation for a term of 48 months, a $100 assessment, and a fine of $2,500.

 

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Feb. 24, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 11225:  BIS denied the export privileges of Jesse Rodriguez of Brownsville, TX for 5 years based on his Jan. 16, 2019, conviction in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas of violating 18 U.S.C. 554(a).  Specifically, Rodriguez was convicted of fraudulently and knowingly facilitating the transportation, concealment, and sale of merchandise, including .223 and 7.62 caliber ammunition, which were defense articles as defined under the USML, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 554. In the criminal case, Rodriguez was sentenced to 30 months in prison, supervised release for one year, and a $100 special assessment.

 

 

Department of State

Feb. 16, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 9568: In a single-sentence notification in the Federal Register, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken revoked the designation of Ansarallah – the formal name of the political and religious armed rebel group in Yemen better known as Houthi – as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, changing a long-standing U.S. policy on the conflict in Yemen.  Immediately following this action, Blinken revoked the designations of Ansarallah and three other persons as Specially Designated Global Terrorists.

Fines and Penalties

Jan. 13, 2021:  Mediterranean Shipping Company (USA) Inc. of Chicago, IL, agreed to pay a civil penalty of $81,000 and complete an internal audit of its antiboycott compliance program to settle charges by BIS of eight violations of 15 CFR Sec. 760.2(d) (Furnishing Information About Business Relationships With Boycotted Countries or Blacklisted Persons) and two violations of 15 CFR Sec. 760.5 (Failing to Report the Receipt of a Request To Engage in a Restrictive Trade Practice of Foreign Boycott Against a Country Friendly to the U.S.)  The charges involved trade with Libya and Oman.

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Feb. 1, 2021:  Princeton University of Princeton, NJ agreed to pay a civil penalty of $54,000, complete one external audit and one internal audit of its export compliance program, and, if the audits identify actual or potential violations, provide BIS with a detailed plan of corrective actions, and complete two reports describing enhancements to its compliance with the EAR to settle charges by BIS that on 37 occasions it had exported various strains and recombinants of animal pathogens classified under Export Control Classification Numbers (ECCNs) 1C351, 1C352, or 1C353 to various foreign research institutions without the BIS licenses required by EAR Sec. 742.2.  The illegally exported items had a total value of approximately $27,000.  The university voluntarily self-disclosed the potential violations and cooperated with the investigation.

 

 

FEBRUARY 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES Read More »

JANUARY 2021 EXPORT CONTROL REGULATION UPDATES

 

 

This newsletter is a listing of the latest changes in export control regulations through January 31, 2021.  The newsletter is provided as a complimentary service to assist exporters with their ITAR and EAR export compliance responsibilities. It summarizes recent changes to export control regulations or other regulatory matters of interest that may impact your company's international trade and export compliance functions. Call us at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net with questions or comments.

 

See also our "Latest Sanctions Fines & Penalties" section below for an update on companies and persons denied export privileges by the United States Government.

 

REGULATORY UPDATES

 

United Kingdom

 

The United Kingdom (UK) Department For International Trade Published Guides On Export Controls Following The End Of The Brexit Transition Period

 

January 8, 2021:  The United Kingdom (UK) Department for International Trade (DIT) published a compendium of guides on export controls following the end of the Brexit transition period.  The guides, issued by the Export Control Joint Unit, cover topics including overall key changes, changes to licensing of exports to European Union (EU) countries, changes of rules for exporting specific types of items such as firearms, differences between rules for exports from Great Britain vs. Northern Ireland, UK trade sanctions, changes in general export authorizations (GEAs), and many others.  The compendium is on the DIT website at

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/notice-to-exporters-202101-changes-to-export-control-legislation-and-licensing/nte-202101-changes-to-export-control-legislation-and-licensing

 

Editor's Note: FD Associates has teamed with a U.K. consultant expert in U.K. export controls. Please contact us for details.

 

Department of Commerce – Bureau of Industry and Security

BIS Extended ECCN 0Y521 Controls On Software Specially Designed To Automate The Analysis Of Geospatial Imagery, Through January 6, 2022

January 6, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 461: The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) amended the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) by extending the existence of temporary Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) 0Y521, Software Specially Designed to Automate the Analysis of Geospatial Imagery, through January 6, 2022.  Specifically, ECCN 0Y521 covers Geospatial imagery "software" "specially designed" for training a Deep Convolutional Neural Network to automate the analysis of geospatial imagery and point clouds.  ECCN 0Y521 is a unilateral U.S. control; the U.S. has submitted a proposal for multilateral control of such software to the Wassenaar Arrangement (WA), but the WA has not considered acceptance of the proposal because it has not convened due to the pandemic.

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BIS Amended The Chemical Weapons Convention Regulations

January 7, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 936:  BIS amended the Chemical Weapons Convention Regulations (CWCR, 15 CFR Parts 710-722) and EAR Part 745 by adding three "Schedule 1" chemical families and one individual "Schedule 1" chemical to CWCR Part 712 and EAR Part 745, consistent with decisions adopted by the States Parties to the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) at their Conference in November 2019. The rule also amended the definition of "production" in CWCR Sec. 710.1.

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BIS Amended ECCN 1C991

January 7, 2021 -- 86 Fed. Reg. 944:  BIS amended ECCN 1C991 to clarify that it includes vaccines containing, or designed for use against, any item identified in ECCN 1C351, 1C353, or 1C354.  (Previously, it had indicated only that it controlled vaccines "against" such items.) This rule also expands the scope of medical products controlled under ECCN 1C991 to include those containing genetically modified organisms and genetic elements described in ECCN 1C353.a.3. In addition, this rule clarifies the definition of 'immunotoxin' that appears in ECCN 1C351 and ECCN 1C991 and removes the definition of 'subunit' from ECCN 1C351.

Finally, this rule renumbers ECCN 1C991.c and .d by listing medical products that are subject to chemical/biological (CB) controls, as well as antiterrorism (AT) controls, under ECCN 1C991.c and listing medical products that are subject only to AT controls under ECCN 1C991.d. A conforming amendment is made to § 742.2(a)(3) of the EAR to reflect this change in paragraph sequencing.

1C991 Vaccines, immunotoxins, medical products, diagnostic and food testing kits, as follows (see List of Items controlled). Medical products that contain any of the following:

c.1. Toxins controlled by ECCN 1C351.d (except for botulinum toxins controlled by ECCN 1C351.d.3, conotoxins controlled by ECCN 1C351.d.6, or items controlled for CW reasons under ECCN 1C351.d.11 or .d.12); or

c.2. Genetically modified organisms or genetic elements controlled by ECCN 1C353.a.3 (except for those that contain, or code for, botulinum toxins controlled by ECCN 1C351.d.3 or conotoxins controlled by ECCN 1C351.d.6);

d. Medical products not controlled by 1C991.c that contain any of the following:

d.1. Botulinum toxins controlled by ECCN 1C351.d.3;

d.2. Conotoxins controlled by ECCN 1C351.d.6.

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The Commerce Department Adjusted The Maximum Civil Monetary Penalties For Inflation

January 11, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 1764:  The Commerce Department issued its annual rule adjusting maximum civil monetary penalties (CMPs) for inflation.  Adjusted maximum CMPs for violations involving dual-use export controls include the following:

  • BIS: violations of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1705(b)) – maximum increased from $307,922 to $311,562;
  • BIS: violations of Export Control Reform Act of 2018 (ECRA, 50 USC Sec. 4819) – maximum increased from $305,292 to $308,901;
  • Census Bureau: violations of 13 USC Sec. 304 (Collection of Foreign Trade Statistics) – maximum per day increased from $1,419 to $1,436; maximum per violation increased from $14,194 to $14,362;
  • Census Bureau: violations of 13 USC Sec. 305(b) (Collection of Foreign Trade Statistics) – maximum increased from $14,194 to $14,362.

The new maximum CMPs will apply to violations assessed after January 15, 2021, including violations that occurred prior to that date.

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BIS Removed Three Entities From The Unverified List

January 11, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 1766:  BIS removed the following three entities from the Unverified List (UVL, EAR Part 744, Supp. No. 6) on the basis that BIS was able to verify their bona fides (i.e., legitimacy and reliability relating to the end-use and end-user of items subject to the EAR) through successful end-use checks:

  • DMA Logistics GmbH (Germany);
  • Halm Elektronik GmbH (Germany); and
  • Integrated Production and Test Engineering (Mexico).

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BIS Amended EAR Sec. 742.5(b)(1) To Change The Licensing Review Policy For Certain Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) That Are Controlled For Missile Technology (MT) Reasons

January 12, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 2252:   BIS amended EAR Sec. 742.5(b)(1) to change the licensing review policy for certain Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) that are controlled for Missile Technology (MT) reasons, specifically, UAS that have a range and payload capability equal to or greater than 300 km/500kg and a maximum true airspeed of less than 800 km/hr.  Applications to export these UAS, which are identified on the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) Annex as Category I items, will now be considered on a case-by-case basis under the more flexible review policy generally applied to MTCR Category II items, and MT items for the design, development, production, or use in such UAS will now also be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.  This action was consistent with a change in U.S. policy regarding the export of UAS announced by President Trump on July 24, 2020.  (See July 2020 Regulatory Update.)

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BIS Added One Entity In China To The Entity List, One Entity In China To The Military End-User List And Removed Two Russian Entities From The Military End User List

January 15, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 4862:  BIS amended the EAR by adding one entity in China to the Entity List (EAR Part 744, Supp. No. 4) based on a determination that this entity had acted contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the U.S.  A license requirement with a license review policy of presumption of denial and no license exceptions will be available for exports, reexports, or in-country transfers to this person of all items subject to the EAR.  The entity is:

  • China National Offshore Oil Corporation Ltd.

In the same action, BIS also added one entity in China to the Military End User (MEU) List pursuant to the criteria set forth in EAR Sec. 744.21.  A license requirement with a license review policy of a presumption of denial will apply to the export, reexport, or transfer (in-country) to this entity of any item subject to the EAR listed in Supplement No. 2 to Part 744.  Also, no license exceptions will be available for exports, reexports, or transfers (in-country) to this entity of such items.  The entity is:

  • Beijing Skyrizon Aviation Industry Investment Co., Ltd.

Finally, in this action, BIS also removed the following two Russian entities from the MEU List:

  • Korporatsiya Vsmpo Avisma OAO; and
  • Molot Oruzhie.

 

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BIS Issued New License Requirements For Transactions Involving Military-Intelligence End Users or Military-Intelligence End Use in China, Russia, Venezuela Or any Country Group E:1 Or E:2 Country

January 15, 2021 -- 86 Fed. Reg. 4865:  BIS issued an interim final rule creating a new license requirement for transactions involving a "military-intelligence end-user" (MIEU) or "military-intelligence end-use" in China, Russia, Venezuela, or any country in Country Group E:1 or E:2 (currently Cuba, Iran, North Korea, and Syria), including (in some circumstances) whether or not the underlying item(s) involved is subject to U.S. export controls. "MIEU" is defined as "any intelligence or reconnaissance organization of the armed services (army, navy, marine, air force, or coast guard); or national guard;" a "military-intelligence end use" is defined as "the design, 'development,' 'production,' use, operation, installation (including on-site installation), maintenance (checking), repair, overhaul, or refurbishing of, or incorporation into, items described on the U.S. Munitions List (USML) (22 CFR part 121, International Traffic in Arms Regulations), or classified under ECCNs ending in "A018" or under "600 series" ECCNs, which are intended to support

the actions or functions of a 'military-intelligence end-user'." The rule includes a non-exclusive list of MIEUs.  It is possible that this rule will be rejected or revised by the Biden administration, as it will not become effective until March 16, 2021.  The deadline for comments is March 1, 2021.  This rule is very complex.  Contact us if you believe that any proposed transaction may be subject to this rule.

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BIS Issued Interim Final Rule To Implement "Securing The Information And Communications Technology And Services Supply Chain"

January 19, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 4909:  BIS issued an interim final rule to implement Executive Order 13873, "Securing the Information and Communications Technology and Services Supply Chain" (May 15, 2019).  It flows from a perception of the criticality of the Information and Communications Technology and Services (ICTS) Supply Chain in the U.S. and aims to protect it from any breach or interference by any "foreign adversaries" – defined as China (including Hong Kong), Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia, and Venezuelan politician Nicolas Maduro (Maduro Regime).  To accomplish this goal, the rule authorizes the Commerce Department to prohibit or restrict a broad but not universal range of U.S. transactions involving the ICTS supply chain that have a nexus with any foreign adversary.  The definitions of "ICTS" and "ICTS Transaction" that largely define the scope of the controls are detailed and sometimes difficult to apply. We recommend that you consult with us if you have questions about whether any proposed action involving a "foreign adversary" will be covered.  The rule will go into effect March 22, 2021; deadline for comments is March 1, 2021.   (This interim rule supersedes a proposed rule issued November 27, 2019 – 84 Fed. Reg. 65316.)

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BIS Amended The EAR To Remove Sudan From Country Group E:1

January 19, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 4929:  BIS amended the EAR to remove Sudan from Country Group E:1 (Terrorist supporting countries) and added Sudan to Country Group B, thereby removing the license requirement for the export and reexport to Sudan of items controlled only for AT reasons, moving Sudan's de minimis level from 10 percent to 25 percent, and potentially making Sudan eligible for several new license exceptions (but excluding License Exceptions Shipments to Country Group B Countries ("GBS") and Technology and Software under Restriction ("TSR")).  The change implemented the President's October 2020 decision to rescind Sudan's designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism (SSOT), based on the certification that Sudan had not provided any support for acts of international terrorism during the preceding six months and that it had provided assurances that it would not support acts of international terrorism in the future.

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BIS Submitted Its Annual Report To Congress For The Fiscal Year 2020

January 25, 2021:  BIS submitted its annual report for the Fiscal Year 2020 to Congress.  The report includes narrative descriptions of BIS' major actions and other activities, regulatory changes, enforcement actions, industrial base activities, and others, as well as a timeline and statistics on license processing, criminal convictions, administrative enforcement actions, end-use checks, and others.  See it at https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/pdfs/2711-2020-bis-annual-report-final/file.

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EAR Encryption

Editor's Note: EAR Semi-Annual Encryption reports were due February 1 to BIS and NSA.

 

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Federal Emergency Management Agency

FEMA Issued A Temporary Final Rule Extending, Modifying, And Clarifying Existing Requirements On Exports Of Certain Critical Health And Medical Supplies, Which Are Needed For Domestic Use In Fighting The COVID-19 Pandemic

December 31, 2020 – 85 Fed. Reg. 86835:  The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) issued a temporary final rule extending, modifying, and clarifying existing requirements on exports of certain critical health and medical supplies which are needed for domestic use in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.  Under the new rule, and subject to exemptions specified in the rule, explicit FEMA approval is required for exports of specifically described subcategories of Surgical N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirators, PPE surgical masks, PPE nitrile gloves, Level 3 and 4 Surgical Gowns and Surgical Isolation Gowns, and syringes and hypodermic needles.  Enforcement of this rule will be coordinated with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).  The rule is valid until June 30, 2021.

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Department of State

DDTC Name And Address Changes Posted To Website

Jan. 6, 12, and 26, 2021:  The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) posted the following name and/or address changes on its website at

https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public?id=ddtc_kb_article_page&sys_id=bd72ca0adbf8d30044f9ff621f961981:

  • Change in Name from L3 Oceania PTY LTD and L3 Communications Systems-Australia to Mission Systems Australia PTY LTD (a subsidiary of L3 Harris Technologies, Inc.) due to corporate reorganization;
  • Change in Name from CMI Defence SAS to John Cockerill Defense France due to corporate rebranding;
  • Change in Name from Patria Land Services Oy and Patria Land Systems Oy to Patria Land Oy due to corporate reorganization;
  • Change in Name from Aero Parts Australia to Gentex Australia Pty Ltd. due to acquisition of Aero Parts by Gentex;
  • Change in Name from Research Electro Optics, Inc., to Excelitas Technologies Corp. due to acquisition of Research Electro by Excelitas;
  • Change in Name from The Ellison Group, Inc., and Ellison Surface Technologies, Inc. (both wholly-owned U.S. subsidiaries of Bodycote USA, Inc.), to Bodycote Surface Technology Group, Inc., and Bodycote Surface Technology, Inc., respectively, due to corporate rebranding;
  • Change in Name from Broadspectrum (Australia) Pty Ltd. to Ventia Australia Pty Ltd. due to acquisition of Broadspectrum by Ventia; and
  • Change in Address for BAE Systems (International) Limited-Malaysia.

 

Each announcement includes a link to a notice detailing the change and its effects on pending and currently approved authorizations involving the listed entity.

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DDTC Updated The List Of Restricted Entities And Subentities Associated With Cuba

January 8, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 1561:  DDTC published an updated List of Restricted Entities and Subentities Associated With Cuba (Cuba Restricted List) with which direct financial transactions are generally prohibited under the Cuban Assets Control Regulations (CACR, 31 CFR Part 515).  The announcement noted that the Department of Commerce's BIS will generally deny applications to export or reexport items for use by entities or subentities on the Cuba Restricted List.  The Cuba Restricted List and additional information concerning it are on the Department of State website at https://www.state.gov/cuba-sanctions/cuba-restricted-list/.

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DDTC Undertook A Comprehensive Review Of The Criteria Used To Adjudicate Proposed Direct Commercial Sale Transfers Of Precision-Guided Munitions

January 19, 2021: DDTC announced that as part of fulfilling its responsibility to ensure that exports of defense articles and defense services are consistent with all aspects of the Conventional Arms Transfer (CAT) Policy (https://www.state.gov/conventional-arms-transfer-cat-policy/) it had undertaken a comprehensive review of the criteria used to adjudicate proposed direct commercial sale transfers of precision-guided munitions (PGMs), their critical components, and/or related technical data and defense services against the criteria of a partner's advanced targeting infrastructure.  The announcement details the PGMs that are subject to this policy (classes of PGMs, crucial components, technical data, and defense services).  To ensure that these items are used in a manner consistent with U.S. intent when approving the transfer, the review will specifically include a partner's complete targeting infrastructure, including ability to properly mitigate the risk of civilian casualties and advanced target development capabilities including weaponeering, collateral damage estimation, and target coordinate mensuration.  This announcement is on the DDTC home page, https://www.pmddtc.state.gov/ddtc_public.

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The Department Of State Declared Cuba A State Sponsor Of Terrorism

January 22, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 6731 (signed January 12, 2021):  In an order signed January 12, 2020, Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo determined that the Republic of Cuba had repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism.  Accordingly, pursuant to the Export Administration Act of 1979 (as continued in effect by Executive Order 13222 of August 17, 2001) and other legislation, Cuba is now deemed a State Sponsor of Terrorism.

 

Department Of State Editor's Reminder:

 

Annual sales reports for Manufacturing License Agreements and Warehousing Distribution Agreements are due to DDTC.

 

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Department of the Treasury

OFAC Issued Venezuela General License No. 31A

January 5, 2021:  The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued Venezuela General License No. 31A titled, "Certain Transactions Involving the IV Venezuelan National Assembly, the Interim President of Venezuela, and Certain Other Persons Authorized," authorizing transactions and activities involving the current interim president of Venezuela, Juan Gerardo Guaidó Marquez (Guaidó), his staff, many of his appointees, members and staff of the IV Venezuelan National Assembly, and many other domestic and foreign officials.  GL 31A, which replaces GL 31, issued on August 6, 2019 (see August 2019 Regulatory Update) is on the OFAC website at https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/679.  Related FAQ No. 679 is on the OFAC website at https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/679.

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OFAC Issued Two New FAQs Relating To Ukraine And Russia Related Sanctions

January 5, 2021:  OFAC issued two new FAQs relating to Ukraine and Russia Related Sanctions under the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act of 2017 (CAATSA, 22 USC 9201 et seq.):  FAQ 869, about whether the non-blocking menu-based sanctions described in CAATSA Sec. 235(a) apply to entities owned 50 percent or more by a listed person and FAQ 870, about what is prohibited by the loan and credit-related sanction described in CAATSA Sec. 235(a)(3) (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/869 and https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/870     ).  OFAC also amended two FAQs related to CAATSA:  FAQ 545, defining several terms used in CAATSA (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/545), and FAQ 546 (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/546), about the coverage of the law.

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OFAC Issued The Hong Kong Related Sanctions Regulations

 

January 15, 2021 – 86 Fed. Reg. 3793:  OFAC issued the Hong Kong Related Sanctions Regulations (HKSR, 31 CFR Part 585) to implement Executive Order EO 13936 of July 14, 2020, "The President's Executive Order 13936 on Hong Kong Normalization." OFAC stated that it intends to supplement the HKSR with a more comprehensive set of regulations, possibly including additional interpretive and definitional guidance, general licenses, and statements of licensing policy.  The HKSR became effective immediately.

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OFAC Issued Four General Licenses In Support Of The U.S. Commitment To Supporting The Provision Of Humanitarian Assistance To The Yemeni People

January 19, 2021: OFAC issued four General Licenses in support of the U.S. commitment to supporting the provision of humanitarian assistance to the Yemeni people:  GL 9, "Official Business of the United States Government" (https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/ct_gl9.pdf), GL 10, "Official Activities of Certain International Organizations" (https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/ct_gl10.pdf),   GL 11, "Certain Transactions in Support of Nongovernmental Organizations' Activities in Yemen" (https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/ct_gl11.pdf), and GL 12, "Transactions Related to the Exportation or Reexportation of Agricultural Commodities, Medicine, Medical Devices, Replacement Parts, and Components or Software Updates" (https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/126/ct_gl12.pdf).  In a further effort to help facilitate the uninterrupted flow of humanitarian assistance, including COVID-19-related assistance, and certain other critical commodities to the people of Yemen, OFAC also issued three FAQs:   FAQ 875, about humanitarian efforts involving Ansarallah (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/875), FAQ 876, about the exposure of non-U.S. persons in efforts involving Ansarallah (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/876), and FAQ 877, about assistance in response to the COVID-19 outbreak in Yemen (https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/financial-sanctions/faqs/877).

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OFAC Upgraded Its Sanctions List Search Tool To Utilize Fuzzy Logic

January 25, 2021:  OFAC announced that it had upgraded its Sanctions List Search tool (https://sanctionssearch.ofac.treas.gov/) with fuzzy logic.  Questions about this change can be addressed to OFAC technical support at 1-800-540-6322 Option #8 or O_F_A_C@treasury.gov.

LATEST SANCTIONS FINES & PENALTIES

 

This section of our newsletter provides information on the latest sanctions, fines, and penalties for export violations or matters of non-compliance with the ITAR or EAR issued by the US government enforcement agencies. It is provided as a service to exporters and associates of FD Associates to remind them of the importance of extreme due diligence in all international trade and export compliance matters, particularly those involving exports subject to the ITAR or the EAR. Don't let this happen to you or your company! Call us with questions or concerns at 703-847-5801 or email info@fdassociates.net.

 

Fines and Penalties

January 12, 2021:  The U.S. Department of Justice announced the indictment of Arash Yousefi Jam, a/k/a Arash Yousefijam of Ontario, Canada, Aminn Yousefi Jam, a/k/a Amin Yousefija of Ontario, Canada, and Abdollah Momeni Roustani, a/k/a Abdollah Momeni, Ab Momeni, and Amir Amiri, thought to live in Iran, all citizens of Iran, for conspiracy to export U.S. goods to Iran in violation of IEEPA and the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations (ITSR, 31 CFR Part 560), conspiracy to smuggle goods from the U.S., and conspiracy to engage in international money laundering.  The three men allegedly conspired to export and send goods including nine electrical discharge boards, one CPU board, two servo motors, and two railroad crankshafts from the U.S. to Iran via the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in violation of the U.S. sanctions, using third parties to arrange for payment and transportation of the goods, intentionally concealing information about their destinations from the U.S. sellers, and exporting the items without obtaining the required licenses.

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January 13, 2021:  Mediterranean Shipping Company (USA) Inc. (Chicago) agreed to pay a civil penalty of $81,000 and undergo a 12-month internal audit of all transactions subject to EAR Part 760 (including recordkeeping requirements and an assessment of the company's compliance therewith) to settle charges by BIS of 8 violations of 15 CFR Sec. 760.2(d) (Furnishing Information about Business Relationships with Boycotted Countries or Blacklisted Persons) and two violations of 15 CFR Sec. 760.5 (Failing to Report the Receipt of a Request to Engage in a Restrictive Trade Practice or Foreign Boycott against a Country Friendly to the U.S.).  The boycotting countries involved in these violations were Libya and Oman.

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January 22, 2021:  Lionel Chan, previously a resident of Brighton, Mass., and Muhammad Mohd Radzi, previously a resident of Brooklyn, NY, both Malaysian nationals, both pleaded guilty in federal court in Boston to conspiracy to violate the Arms Export Control Act (AECA, 22 USC 2778 et seq.) for a buyer located in Hong Kong. Chan, later joined by Radzi, purchased a variety of U.S.-origin firearm parts, including parts used to assemble AR-15 assault rifles and 9MM semi-automatic handguns online and shipped them via Federal Express to the Hong Kong purchaser without first obtaining the required export licenses, intentionally concealing the contents of the shipments by providing false information about the shipments and concealing the parts inside of each package.  The violations were discovered when Hong Kong authorities interdicted two packages, which were found to contain numerous export-controlled firearms parts, including a firing pin and gun sight.

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January 27, 2021:  Julian Demurjian of San Francisco, CA, agreed to pay an administrative settlement of $540,000 (of which $480,000 will be suspended for a two-year probationary period) to BIS and accept a two-year suspended denial of export privileges under the Export Administration Regulations (EAR, 15 CFR Parts 730-774) to resolve allegations that he and CIS Project, a company owned and operated by Demurjian, caused, aided, or abetted 7 violations of the EAR.  In 6 of the violations, Demurjian/CIS provided a freight forwarder with invoices that vastly understated the value of the items, causing the forwarder to subsequently file Electronic Export Information (EEI) containing these false values in the Automated Export System.  The settlement also included a seventh violation in which Demurjian/CIS falsely undervalued the items to be exported so that the stated value did not exceed $2,500 and thus did not trigger an EEI filing requirement.

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January 29, 2021:  The U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia announced the indictment of Cheng Bo, a/k/a Joe Cheng, a Chinese citizen, for criminal conspiracy to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA, 50 USC Sec. 1701 -1707) by shipping export-controlled U.S. power amplifiers from the U.S. to Hong Kong knowing that the goods were intended for subsequent shipment to China. Cheng's former employer, Avnet Asia Pte., Ltd., a Singapore company, admitted responsibility and agreed to pay a penalty of $1,508,000 to the U.S. to settle a criminal liability for the conduct of Cheng and a Singapore-based foreign employee who illegally caused U.S. goods to be shipped to China and Iran without the required license.

At the same time, BIS announced that Avnet Asia had agreed to pay $1,721,000 as part of a $3,229,000 administrative penalty (partially suspended) to settle civil charges alleging that its employees had illegally exported various electronic components, many of which were classified under ECCN 3A001, through Singapore to China and Iran, including to a company on the BIS Entity List.

 

 

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