strategies for managing and mitigating global trade ......1 strategies for managing and mitigating...
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Strategies for Managing and Mitigating Global
Trade Compliance Risk2014 CEI, 16 September 2014, 4:15-5:15pm
KENDRA COOK, OWNER / DIRECTOR OF COMPLIANCE, C2 INTERNATIONAL, LLCAND
GWEN HASSAN, MANAGING ATTORNEY – REGULATORY COMPLIANCE, CNH INDUSTRIAL AMERICA LLC
Overview
Speaker Backgrounds / Introductions
Primary Risk Areas and Associated Regulations Sanctions Programs
Anti-Boycott Regulations
Imports
Exports of Technology (Non-Military and Military)
Export Control Reform
Embargoes
Anti-Corruption Regulations
Training
Recordkeeping
Consequences for Violations
Recent Enforcement Examples
Putting it All Together
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Introduction / Backgrounds
Kendra Cook Currently NOAA’s Lead Systems Engineer on COSMIC-2 satellite program; Senior
Systems Engineer on NASA CPOD CubeSat program BS, Aerospace Engineering; MS, Astronautical Engineering; MS, Computer Engineering 11 years working for the U.S. Government (U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy, NGA, NOAA) on
satellite, UAV, and missile system programs in various engineering and Program Management roles Spent 2 years as Director of Corporate Compliance for a 600+ employee defense contractor
Lived in Taiwan for 2 years as the U.S. Government’s liaison to the Taiwanese Government on a joint satellite program
Certified Program Management Professional (PMP) Certified U.S. Export Compliance Officer (CUSECO)Certified Compliance and Ethics Professional (CCEP)
Introduction / Backgrounds
Gwen Hassan Currently Managing Attorney for Regulatory and Compliance matters for CNH
Industrial $32B company with over 70,000 employees worldwide and operations in over 180
countries Third largest capital goods manufacturer in the world (agricultural and construction
equipment, military vehicles, buses and engines).
Based in Chicago at Company’s North American Headquarters Responsible for providing counsel on all global trade and anti-corruption matters
as well as data privacy, immigration and environmental issues 17 years of in-house practice Certified Compliance and Ethics Professional (CCEP)
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Sanctions Programs
Many governments and regions of the world have enacted trade sanctions and embargos against other countries/regimes U.S. has two types
ITAR Section 126.1 Military Embargos (No military imports or exports to or from Belarus, Cuba, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Syria, Venezuela, Burma, China, and the Republic of the Sudan)
U.S. Department of Treasury, Office of Foreign Asset Controls (“OFAC”) trade sanction programs (most recently enacting sanctions against certain individuals and companies in Russia in response to President’s Executive Order requiring same)
United Nations Security Council also maintains other embargos in which the U.S. participates
Other international organizations, banks and regions have their own sanctions programs For example, Russian sanctions against U.S. and EU food products, EU sanctions against
Russia, World Bank sanctions
Sanctions
Key Compliance Risks “Know Your Customer/Supplier”
Who is the end-customer?
Where will your product be put into actual use?
Where are your purchased parts and supplies coming from?
Compliance Tips:
1. Screen all of your transactions for involvement of sanctioned countries and parties.
2. Obtain end-use certificates for all sales and prohibit re-export to sanctioned parties/locations.
3. Include trade compliance language in all purchase agreements.
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Sanctions
Risk Area: The “50% Rule” August 13, 2014 OFAC issued new guidance on how to handle entities owned 50% or more by
one or more sanctioned party Example: I Love Chocolate Company NOT on any sanction list
30% owned by Gladys
40% owned by Chuck
30% owned by Eric
Eric and Chuck on the sanctioned parties list
I Love Chocolate is now considered to be “sanctioned” even though not on a list
Compliance Tip: Conduct due diligence on all companies operating in sanctioned countries to ensure no ownership “ties” to sanctioned parties
Sanctions
Risk Area: Non-U.S. Affiliate Companies and Facilitation Risk
Example: Your French incorporated affiliate (under common ownership) wants to sell a product into Cuba.
Is this allowed?
Facilitation Risk: No U.S. person can “facilitate” a transaction with a blocked party or country Are there U.S. persons working in or managing your French affiliate?
Does a U.S. person oversee or approve transactions of the French affiliate at a corporate headquarters?
Compliance Tip: Regularly monitor U.S. employees of your company working in other countries and for other affiliates to ensure they are not at risk for a facilitation problem.
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Recent Enforcement Example -Sanctions
BNP Paribas Case $9B fine in the U.S. for facilitating transactions by their customers with sanctioned parties
Alleged to have removed language from documents that would have identified the transactions as involving sanctioned countries or parties
Allegedly there was upper level management knowledge of this practice
Anti-Boycott Regulations
The Arab League has had a boycott of Israel and Israeli-origin products for many years
U.S. law makes it illegal for a U.S. person or company to comply with this boycott
Example: Arab customer asks you to please replace a component on your product so it is no longer
sourced from Israel
Arab customer uses letter of credit that prohibits involvement of Israeli persons
Compliance Tip: Check the anti-boycott regulations carefully, there are numerous exceptions to these rules (i.e. war risk exception)
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Imports
Key Risk Areas: Tariff Classifications
Valuation Assists
C-TPAT
Country of Origin
TPAs/APAs and duty impact
Free Trade Zones
Audit
Importer Security Filing
Imports
All products imported into the United States must be classified using the Harmonized Tariff Code System (Often referred to as the HTS Code)
Different codes are subject to different duties depending on their country of origin (COO) 8701 Tractors (other than tractors of heading 8709):
8701.90 Other: 8701.90.10 Suitable for agricultural use
Duty is calculated using the value of the goods being imported
Compliance Tip: Have an outside expert/broker/law firm audit your customs classifications on a regular cadence. Include country of origin marking requirements as part of your purchasing contracts and audit for same.
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Imports
Valuation
Most common method: Transaction Value (price actually paid)
Important valuation risk area – AssistsIs your business adequately “capturing” the additional value that comes from assists? Materials, components, parts incorporated into import
Merchandise consumed in producing the import
Tools, dies, molds etc…, used in producing the import
Engineering, design, development work performed outside of the United States
Compliance Tip: Conduct an audit of your assists and valuation methods to ensure these are being handled correctly. Incorporate regular “self-audit” as part of your compliance program.
Imports
Transactions Between Related Parties:
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”) Bulletin & Decisions Vol. 46, No. 23 on Transfer Pricing Policies as they relate to valuation for Customs purposes A Transfer Pricing Agreement (“TPA”) or Advanced Pricing Agreement (“APA”) between related companies can now be considered to be an “objective formula” for customs valuation purposes if:
1. A written TPA is in place prior to import 2. TPA is also used for tax purposes 3. TPA specifies how prices will be set and adjusted for all products covered by the TPA 4. Company provides accounting details to support any claimed adjustments 5. Transfer price must be an arm’s length price (must have documentation of same)
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Imports
BEWARE of other countries’ customs and tax regulations. The Customs and Tax authorities of other countries may not consider a TPA/APA to be an objective measure and may not accept it as the basis for proper valuation
There may be negative duty or tax impact in another country
Compliance Tip: Ensure you consult with customs experts before implementing any TPA or APA involving another country
Imports
Mill Certs
A Mill Test Certificate is required for imports of iron or steel classifiable in chapter 72, HTS, or in headings 7301, HTS, to 7307, HTS.
Importers are required to provide a statement of the internal chemistry of the metal that is being imported. Generally provided by the foundry that manufacturers the steel. Port of Pembina auditing for and requiring Mill Certs.
Compliance Tip: Include mill cert requirements in all purchasing contracts for iron or steel goods and train your purchasing group on what a mill cert is and why they are needed.
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Recent Enforcement Examples -Imports
Otterbox Case Whistleblower came forward to the government Alleged Otterbox purposely failing to properly include “assists” in the value of their imported products Resulted in artificially low import value and lower duty payments Settled for $4.3M dollars Whistleblower receives $830,000 for reporting this case to the government
Compliance Tips: 1. Encourage whistleblowers to report violations/suspected violations internally. 2. Train your managers on how to handle whistleblower employees internally.3. Implement a zero tolerance policy on retaliation so employees feel they can report issues internally.
Exports
EVERY item or commodity exported from the U.S. is subject to some form of export control. Associated software, services and technology are also controlled at the same level
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Exports
What is considered an “export”? The movement of an item The sending of information The delivery of a service The disclosure of information Outside of the United States or within the United States to a person who is not a U.S.
Citizen or Permanent Resident
“Deemed Export” Example: A U.S. citizen employee in New York travels to Chicago and shares technical drawings for a product with another company employee who is a citizen of India working here on an H-1B VISA The U.S. employee has just “exported” technical data to India
Compliance Tip: Review all potential new hires in advance for U.S. citizenship/green card status to determine whether a license or agreement will be needed for them to have access to technical information
Non-Military Exports
Exports of items or information that is not considered “military” technology are controlled by the Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) responsible for administering the Export Administration Regulations (EAR)
EAR controls are delineated into 5 product groups (ECCNs): Systems, Equipment, Assemblies and Components
Test, Inspection and Production Equipment
Materials
Software
Technology
Depends on ultimate destination, end use, and end user.
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Non-Military Exports
Commerce Control List (CCL) Categories within the Export Administration Regulations (“EAR”) provide the associated Export Control Classification Number (“ECCN”): Nuclear Materials, Facilities, and Equipment (and misc. items) Materials, Chemicals, Microorganisms, and Toxins Materials Processing Electronics Computers Telecommunications Information Security Sensors and Lasers Navigation and Avionics Marine Propulsion Systems, Space Vehicles, and Related Equipment
Exports
Using the ECCN for the item in question, you then need to check the Country Chart for the level of export control for the destination country
Example: 9A990 Diesel engines and tractors and “specially designed” “parts” and “components” therefor, n.e.s. (see List of Items Controlled) Reason for Control: AT
Control(s) Country Chart (See Supp. No. 1 to part 738). AT applies to entire entry except 9A990.a
If the ECCN of the product you wish to export is controlled for the destination it’s going to, you will need an export licenseCompliance Tip: Audit your products to check for proper ECCN numbers and require vendors of “purchased parts” to supply the correct ECCN for you
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Military Technology Exports
Exports of military technology are controlled by the Department of State (DoS), Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC), with responsibility for administering the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR)
The ITAR controls: Defense Articles
Defense Services
Technical Data
Regardless of ultimate destination, end use, or end user.
What’s Considered an Export?
Disclosing (including oral or visual disclosure) or transferring technical data to a foreign person, whether in the U.S. or abroad; or
Performing a defense service on behalf of, or for the benefit of, a foreign person, whether in the U.S. or abroad; or
Sending or taking a defense article out of the U.S. in any manner, except by mere travel outside of the U.S. by a person whose personal knowledge includes technical data; or
Transferring registration, control or ownership to a foreign person of any aircraft, vessel or satellite covered by the USML, whether in the U.S. or abroad; or
Disclosing (including oral or visual disclosure) or transferring in the U.S. any defense article to an embassy, any agency or subdivision of a foreign gov’t (e.g. diplomatic missions).
Visual and oral disclosure, or the application of personal knowledge or technical experience can be considered an export!
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Ensure You Are Exporting Legally
Export License
Agreement Technical Assistance Agreement (TAA)
Manufacturing License Agreement (MLA)
Distribution Agreement (DA)
Exemption / Exception (a.k.a. waiver)
Compliance Tip: Have an expert, broker or law firm audit your exports for compliance with export laws and regulations
Military Technology Exports
Defense Articles are specifically designed, developed, configured, adapted, or modified for a military application, and Do not have predominant civil applications, and
Do not have performance equivalent (defined by form, fit and function) to those of an article or service used for civil applications
Defense Services include: The furnishing of assistance (including training) to foreign persons, whether in the United
States or abroad The furnishing to foreign persons of any technical data Military training of foreign units and forces
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Military Technology Exports
Technical Data controlled under the ITAR is defined as information which is required for the design, development, production, manufacture, assembly, operation, repair, testing, maintenance or modification of defense articles
Examples from the ITAR
Blueprints Drawings Photographs Plans Instructions Documentation Classified information relating to defense
articles or defense services Software directly related to defense articles Information covered by an invention
secrecy order
Design Methodology
Engineering methods or design philosophy (i.e., the “why” or rationale and lessons learned) Test Requirements Interface Control Drawings Build-to-Print Specifications Program Technical Documents Failure Analysis Factors that establish Operational Requirements Maintenance/Repair Manuals Top-Level and Detailed Design Information Component Life Predictions
Software and its Documentation
Design or details of the software or software source code
Engineering Analysis
Analytical methods and tools (e.g., mock-ups, computer models and simulations, and test facilities) used to design or evaluate performance against the operational requirements
Manufacturing Know-How
Information that provides detailed manufacturing processes and techniques needed to translate a detailed design into a qualified, finished article, such as:
Discoveries Formulas Materials Inventions Processes Approaches
Concepts Techniques Devices Apparatus Machines
Military Technology Exports
Firearms, Close Assault Weapons, Combat Shotguns
Guns and Armament
Ammunition/Ordnance
Launch Vehicles, Guided Missiles, Ballistic Missiles, Rockets, Torpedoes, Bombs and Mines
Explosives and Energetic Materials, Propellants, incendiary Agents and Their Constituents
Vessels of War and Special Naval Equipment
Tanks and Military Vehicles
Aircraft and Associated Equipment
Military Training Equipment and Training
Protective Personnel Equipment and Shelters
Fire Control, Range Finder, Optical and Guidance and Control Equipment
Auxiliary Military Equipment
Toxicological Agents, Including Chemical Agents, Biological Agents, and Associated Equipment
Spacecraft Systems and Associated Equipment
Nuclear Weapons, Design and Testing Related Items
Classified Articles, Technical Data, and Defense Services Not Otherwise Enumerated
Directed Energy Weapons
Submersible Vessels, Oceanographic and Associated Equipment
Miscellaneous Articles
U.S. Munitions List (USML) Categories within the ITAR:
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Recordkeeping
Records must be maintained for ALL exports for a period of 5 years from the expiration of the license or other approval (to include exports using an exemption), or from the date of the transaction (whichever is later).
The records to be maintained include, but are not limited to: Licenses, agreements, exceptions/exemptions
All correspondence with the State Department or Department of Commerce
Emails and typed or hand-written notes indicating the types and frequency of exports/transfers
Contracts
A database of all technical data that was exported should be maintained, that includes: Name of exporter, date of export
Document control number and document title
Method of export
Recipient of information
Export authorization
Copy of the document/briefing/etc.
Consequences for Violations
Entity (Your Company)
Criminal*: Fines up to $1M or 5x the value of
the export (whichever is greater)
Debarment
Civil: Fines up to $500K
Debarment
Loss of right to contract with the Government
Loss of contracts, award fees, and stockholders
*Generally the outcome of a violation that is committed intentionally, with knowledge, or willfully
EACH PENALTY IS PER OFFENSE
Individual (You)
Criminal*: Fines up to $1M or 5x the value of
the export (whichever is greater)
Debarment
10 years in prison
Civil: Fines up to $500K
Debarment
Loss of right to contract with the Government
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Recent Enforcement Examples -Exports
2012 – United Technologies Corporation and its subsidiary Pratt & Whitney Canada Corporation and other subsidiaries Charged with 576 violations of the ITAR in connection with the unauthorized export and transfer of defense
articles and technical data, and unauthorized provision of defense services to various countries, including proscribed destinations
Fined $55M and assessed $20M to implement significant additional remedial compliance actions
“Had the Department not taken into consideration Respondent’s voluntary disclosures and remedial compliance measures as significant mitigating factors, the Department would have charged Respondent with many additional violations and imposed a more severe penalty.”
2011 – BAE Systems, plc (UK) and its subsidiaries (other than BAE Systems, Inc. and its subsidiaries) Charged with 2,591 violations of the ITAR in connection with the unauthorized brokering of US defense articles
and services, and the failure to maintain records involving ITAR-controlled transactions
Fined $79M and required to implement significant additional remedial compliance actions
Export Control Reform (ECR)
In August 2009, President Obama directed a review of the U.S. export control system with the goal of strengthening national security and the competitiveness of key U.S. manufacturing and technology sectors by focusing on current threats and adapting to the changing economic and technological landscape.
The goal is to move to: Single Control List
Single Primary Enforcement Coordination Agency
Single IT System
Single Licensing Agency
DoS has already begun transferring less sensitive technology to DOC’s EAR and re-writing the ITAR to become more “positively controlled” New “600 series” ECCNs were created on the CCL for items previously ITAR-controlled
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Export Control Reform (ECR)
Implementation Status:
Anti-Corruption Regulations
Most countries now have Anti-Corruption Laws and Regulations in place U.S. Law: The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (“FCPA”)
UK Law: The UK Bribery Act
New Brazilian Law: Law to Combat Corruption
India: Lokpal Bill
United Nations: Convention Against Corruption
Some differences between regions and countries
All prohibit bribery of government officials, most prohibit “private” bribery as well
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Anti-Corruption
Global Trade creates many opportunities for corruption Be aware of the potential for corruption with:
Customs brokers/agents/officials
Freight Forwarders
Logistics/transportation providers
Compliance Tips: 1. Perform due diligence on third party providers throughout your trade flows 2. Require anti-corruption certification and indemnification in all agreements with annual renewals3. Train your third parties as to what you expect4. Keep careful records of all of the above!
Recent Enforcement Examples –Anti-Corruption
Glaxo Smith Kline case Employees of China operations of Glaxo Smith Kline allegedly using a travel agency to funnel bribes to
government officials
GSK corporate office hires local investigators to see what they can find out
Local investigators jailed by China officials without trial
Local GSK Manager jailed
New allegations related to bribery of government employed doctors in Syria
Compliance Tip: Conduct anti-corruption training everywhere in the local language and document it carefully. See the Morgan Stanley case for a great example of how to do this.
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Recent Enforcement Examples –Anti-Corruption
Siemens case (2008) $1.9 Billion dollars in fines and disgorgement of profit
$800M to U.S. government
$800M to German government
$300M to Greek government
KBR/Halliburton (2009) $579M in fines and disgorgement
Total S.A. (2013) $398M in fines and disgorgement
Alcoa (2014) $384M in fines and disgorgement
Training
Annual training for ALL employees is recommended
Agenda should include topics such as: What is considered an export or import, how to accomplish legally
What products does your company sell that are controlled
Corporate policies/procedures for trade compliance
WHO TO CONTACT WITH QUESTIONS
Process for disclosing violations or potential violations
Consequences for not following laws/regulations
Examples of non-compliance / penalties
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Putting it All Together
Do your due diligence and keep careful records of having done so!
Document, document, document!
Train your employees on corporate policies/procedures
Maintain records
If you have questions, ask! There are people who can help!
EAR Decision Tree
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ITAR Decision Tree
Resources
Dept. of State: www.pmddtc.state.gov
Dept. of Commerce: www.bis.doc.gov
www.export.gov
http://www.fcpablog.com/
http://www.fcpaprofessor.com/
http://www.cbp.gov/xp/cgov/newsroom/news_releases/national/
http://www.grcustomslaw.com/