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Defense Trade Compliance Glenn E. Smith Chief, Enforcement Division

Defense Trade Compliance Glenn E. Smith Chief, Enforcement Division Office of Defense Trade Controls Compliance “Partnering for Compliance” East Coast Conference February 23-25, 2011 Orlando, Florida. Presentation Topics. Organization of Compliance at State Civil Enforcement Trends

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Defense Trade Compliance Glenn E. Smith Chief, Enforcement Division

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  1. Defense Trade Compliance Glenn E. Smith Chief, Enforcement Division Office of Defense Trade Controls Compliance “Partnering for Compliance” East Coast Conference February 23-25, 2011 Orlando, Florida

  2. Presentation Topics • Organization of Compliance at State • Civil Enforcement Trends • Consent Agreements • Voluntary Disclosures • Compliance Tips • How Industry can Assist

  3. Organization of Compliance at State Greg Slavens ICE Liaison Orlando Odom FBI Liaison Lisa Studtmann, Director Daniel Buzby, Deputy Director • Compliance & Registration • Division • Dan Cook, Chief • Registration of manufacturers, • exporters & brokers • Company Mergers & • Acquisitions • Company Visit Program • Consent Agreement • Monitoring • PM lead on CFIUS • Enforcement Division • Glenn Smith, Chief • Voluntary & directed • disclosures • Civil enforcement actions: • charging letters & consent • agreements, policies of denial, • debarments, transaction • exceptions and reinstatements • Support to the law enforcement • community for criminal • enforcement • Research & Analysis Division • Ed Peartree, Chief • ‘Blue Lantern’ end-use • monitoring program • Watch List screening & • maintenance • Compliance Report • Intelligence research projects • AECA Section 3 reports to • Congress

  4. Civil Enforcement Trends (FY10)Voluntary Disclosures • Over 1200 voluntary disclosures of civil violations by industry • Rate consistent with 2009 figures . 10% increase from FY08 and over a 100% increase from FY06 • industry more focused on compliance and willing to disclose • industry establishing internal auditing-but additional focus is needed • “due diligence” as part of mergers & acquisitions • effect of consent agreements & fines • expansion of USG compliance education & outreach efforts • “Company Visit Program” – DDTC • “Project Shield America” – DHS/ICE • “Domain Program” – FBI

  5. Civil Enforcement Trends (FY10)Directed Disclosures • 58 directed disclosures issued by DTCC • Approximately half of 2009 figures. • disclosures increasingly more focused and remedial actions imposed • better to disclose voluntarily than under direction

  6. Civil Enforcement Trends (FY10)Disclosure Violations • Nature or pattern of violations appears not to have changed from previous years: • unauthorized export of hardware, data or services • exceeding scope of license approval • foreign person employment (you and your sub-contractors) • improper use of exemptions • exceeding dollar value of agreements (TAAs and MLAs) • violating provisos and other conditions of approval • misclassification of hardware/technical data

  7. Civil Enforcement - Disclosure Review • Harm to U.S. foreign policy or national security • Adherence to law, regulations and DDTC’s licensing and compliance policies • Severity of violation (minor or substantive, procedural or judgmental, once or repeated, unique or systemic) • Company’s approach & commitment to compliance • Implementation of remedial measures • Improvement of company’s compliance program

  8. Civil Enforcement What violations prompt civil penalties? • Harm to U.S. National Security or Foreign Policy Interests • Undermine the integrity of the legal and regulatory system

  9. Civil Enforcement Trends (FY10) Consent Agreements Consent Agreements - Since 2003 • 25 consent agreements • Fines over $180 million • Remedial Measures • Reporting and Oversight

  10. Causes of Violations • Compliance program is not well established. • Program lacks organization and oversight. • Insufficient resources (human and financial) to insure effective compliance. • Training not systemic or tailored. • No internal audit or periodic review to assess program.

  11. Causes of Violations • Record-keeping of all elements of defense trade activity is insufficient or not centralized to track activity from beginning to end. • Program has not evolved to account for change or growth in company’s regulated business activity (e.g., mergers & acquisitions). • Compliance program is outdated and does not reflect current regulations and relevant procedures.

  12. Fines & Penalties Civil Violations of the AECA & ITAR • $500,000 for each violation • Extra compliance measures • Debarment (Remember: Successor liability applies after merger/acquisition.) Criminal Violations of the AECA & ITAR • $1 million for each violation • 20 years imprisonment (see latest Iranian Sanctions Legislation) Increase from 10 to 20 years • Debarment

  13. Consent AgreementsViolations Charged Common Violations in Consent Agreements • Omissions of material facts and false statements • Unauthorized exports of articles and services • Violating terms of an authorization • Classified exports in violation of the ITAR • Record-keeping • Unauthorized Proposals to §126.1 countries • Misclassification of hardware and technical data

  14. Consent AgreementsLessons Learned What drives these violations? • Lack of corporate commitment • Insufficient ITAR training • Unclear policies/procedures • Poor record keeping/tracking systems • Insufficient resources • Poor or non-existing audit procedures • Lax security – IT and classified handling Understanding the root causes of a violation is key to preventing future violations!

  15. Voluntary Disclosure: Areas of Increased Attention Voluntary Disclosures • Who was involved and how were decisions made. (Key focus for DTCC.) • Provide the who, what, when and how. • Follow ITAR §127.12(c)(2) and provide all the required information. • DTCC is as concerned about how a violation occurred as well as that it happened. • Use of passive voice and vague descriptions do not satisfy disclosure requirements in the ITAR.

  16. Voluntary Disclosure: Areas of Increased Attention Voluntary Disclosures • Corrective actions implemented or to be implemented to ensure the violations do not occur again. • Provide copies of manuals and or procedures. • Provide evidence of training. • Provide evidence that procedures are being implemented effectively.

  17. Voluntary Disclosure: Areas of Increased Attention Remember: • Technology derived from U.S. technology remains controlled under the ITAR. • Disclosures involving repeat violations where “remediation” already claimed to have been implemented needs explanation. • Disclosures are not data dumps – submissions should be organized and tell the story.

  18. Key Elements of Compliance Manual Internal compliance document should address: • Organizational structure • Resources dedicated to export control • Contracts/marketing screening • Non-U.S. person employment • Physical security of the ITAR facility • Network security • License preparation • Use of exemptions • Foreign travel • 10. Foreign visitors • 11. Record keeping • 12. Reporting • 13. License maintenance • 14. Actual shipping processes • 15. ITAR training • 16. Internal monitoring and • audits • 17. Voluntary disclosures and discovery of export violations • 18. Violations and penalties

  19. Compliance Tips • Establish senior level commitment to strict adherence to all export control laws and regulations • Establish and maintain and effective export compliance program • Involve all elements of the business – legal, marketing, travel, personnel, etc… all play a role • Establish a “culture of compliance” to ensure these procedures are followed

  20. Compliance Tips • Self-audit to identify problems and correct weaknesses • Keep your program up to date with regulatory changes and changes in your business • Establish training requirements tailored to job responsibilities and risk • Recognize that there are no shortcuts • Network with others in the industry to learn from them

  21. Compliance Tips • Establish Clear and Open Communication with Partners • Before and After License Approvals: • Ensure complete and accurate information • Ensure changes in use/retransfers are authorized • Understand limitations of authorizations • Due diligence on foreign parties is not difficult • Identify and resolve “warning flags” before submitting • application • Knowing your foreign parties is in your best interest

  22. Compliance Tips • An inventory control system to track whereabouts of • defense articles through final delivery • Remind and educate the end-user of their obligations under the ITAR • Notify the State Department if you receive derogatory information on end-user or foreign consignees after license approval

  23. Compliance Tips • Vet parties using public lists of the regulatory agencies: State, Commerce, and OFAC. Refer to the Excluded Parties List System administered by the General Services Administration • Enhance IT security. Prevent cyber attacks by implementing the appropriate encryption and firewall systems. Report events to DTCC in voluntary disclosure

  24. Management Should Remember • The importance of export compliance to our national security and foreign policy interest is great • Enforcement is improving - more information on violations coming in as leads and tips have grown • Government’s ability to investigate and use information is improving – cooperation is real. • Claims of ignorance or surprise at violations is harder to argue with any credibility. • Strict liability applies - a heavy burden and cost when not done correctly. Licensor is responsible for nearly all aspects of export transactions.

  25. How Industry Can Assist Enforcement Efforts • Good compliance means self-enforcement • Industry has more eyes and ears available to uncover suspected violations • Industry has greater access to useful information regarding compliance issues • Industry has been instrumental in sensitizing and educating suppliers and vendors • Willingness by industry to share and publish best practices with other members of the community

  26. Why Share Information with DTCC • It’s the right thing to do • To protect and secure our national security • Maintain level playing field and prevent unfair advantage • Protect proprietary information and maintain competitive technology lead

  27. How Leads and Information are Provided to DTCC • Phone calls • Letters (to include anonymous) • Emails • Fax • Conversations (including conferences) • Hand written note on 3x5 cards

  28. How is the Information Used? • Used within DTCC to support administrative/civil investigations • If warranted, we will share with DHS/ICE, FBI or the Department of Justice for potential criminal investigation or intelligence reporting.

  29. How is the Information Handled? How is the information handled? -We will only share internally within the U.S. Government.

  30. Examples of Leads Provided to DTCC • Fabrication of TAA and approval letter. • Deliberately deleting export control statement and company logo on technical drawings-then exporting w/o authorization. • Deliberately allowing foreign persons access to facility, technical data and exporting hardware w/o a license. • Deliberately conducting technical discussions with foreign person while license was pending with DDTC. • Competitor shipping identical hardware to proscribed destination.

  31. Leads, tips or questionson compliance and enforcement • Glenn Smith Chief, Enforcement Division 202-632-2799

  32. Suggested Reading • Arms Export Control Act (AECA), Sections 38-40 (22 U.S.C. 2778-2780) (P.L. 90-629) • International Traffic in Arms Regulations (22 CFR 120-130) • Definitions 120 • U.S. Munitions List 121 • Registration 122 • Licenses 123 • Agreements 124 • Technical Data 125 • Policies & Provisions 126 • Compliance 127 & 128 • Brokering 129 • Contributions, Fees & 130 Commissions • DDTC’s website: www.pmddtc.state.gov

  33. Useful Information • U.S. Department of State • Directorate of Defense Trade Controls • Website: • www.pmddtc.state.gov • Response Team Telephone Number: • 202-663-1282 • Response Team E-mail: • DDTCResponseTeam@state.gov

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