The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/all/20060325095656/http://www.velaw.com/practices/practices_detail.asp?pracid=000320819501
Highlights
1/18/2006 V&E; Adds New Partner, Forms New Alliance to Expand Public Policy Team
11/11/2005 Robert Schick Named Fellow of American College of Trial Lawyers
Why Choose V&E;? | Areas of Practice | Representative Clients and Matters

Why Choose V&E;?
Vinson & Elkins has one of the most comprehensive export control and international sanctions practices in the United States. V&E; attorneys have over a century of collective experience representing clients in counseling, administrative, litigation, and public policy issues arising across the full range of U.S., foreign and international export controls and trade sanctions.  Our lawyers are well known in academic circles, in export-oriented trade groups and industry coalitions, and among government regulators responsible for enforcing U.S. export and sanctions laws.  In the last decade, our lawyers have provided training to hundreds of corporate and government export control specialists through seminars and law school instruction.

Our lawyers have experience in representing clients before all of the federal agencies involved in the control of exports, including the Departments of State, Defense, Commerce, Treasury, Justice and Energy, as well as numerous independent agencies including NASA, and the various agencies of the intelligence community.

Our clients have ranged from individuals contemplating leisure travel in embargoed destinations to multinational corporations involved in highly regulated exports and technology exchanges of highly sensitive data, materials and products.  We have represented hundreds of clients in the defense, intelligence, aerospace, electronics, computer hardware and software and telecommunications industries in export control matters, and also have substantial experience in the energy, heavy equipment, food and agriculture, and alcoholic beverage industries.

Areas of Practice
Export Controls
The Departments of Commerce, State, and Treasury and other federal agencies administer a wide range of export control regulations, including rules governing re-exports of U.S. origin commodities, technical data, and software from third countries to other foreign destinations. In recent years these regulations have been frequently revised, generally resulting in broadly reduced controls on exports to the former Soviet Bloc countries while increasing emphasis on controls of items potentially related to the production or deployment of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, and missile technologies.

We advise foreign and domestic clients on these controls and assist them in obtaining necessary licenses and rulings from the appropriate agencies. We also represent companies and individuals faced with enforcement proceedings, and assist companies and trade associations to provide effective input to the public policy-making process both at the legislative and administrative levels.

Economic Sanctions
We frequently counsel clients concerning the application of various economic sanctions programs, administered primarily by the Departments of the Treasury, State, and Commerce, to the activities of U.S. and foreign companies.  Economic sanctions programs as of mid-2000 target countries such as Afghanistan (the Taliban), Angola (the UNITA movement), Burma, Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Syria, Sudan, Yugoslavia, and various persons and organizations, including certain designated narcotics traffickers and terrorists. Arms embargoes target a number of additional countries.

In addition to counseling, we have obtained numerous licenses or other authorizations for transactions covered by sanctions regulations, and represented clients subject to civil and criminal enforcement proceedings arising under these rules.

Specific Experience
  • Classification and Licensing.  We provide initial evaluations of new or existing products or technologies to determine which agencies may have jurisdiction to regulate their export or transfer of related technology. We prepare and submit commodity jurisdiction ("CJ") determinations and classification requests. We provide evaluation of eligibility for various license exceptions based on the nature of the item or technology, the proposed end-use and the end-user.  We have successfully used various agency advisory opinion procedures to obtain favorable licensing treatment from regulatory agencies.  Where a license or other permit is necessary, we have substantial expertise in selecting among available licensing mechanisms (e.g. temporary or permanent import or export licenses, technical assistance agreements, manufacturing license agreements, encryption licensing arrangements, distribution agreements, etc.) and crafting applications to achieve desired flexibility for our clients.  We have frequently arranged meetings with policy or technical staff at appropriate agencies to discuss license applications and assist in arranging mutually satisfactory conditions or provisos.
  • Compliance.  Our attorneys have substantial experience in assisting clients in complying with export controls and embargo regulations, including the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), the Export Administration Regulations (EAR) and the many embargo regulations issued by the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).  We provide advice on the interpretation and interaction of various regulations, and on the license conditions and provisos which often accompany licenses granted by the government. We frequently conduct export compliance audits for our clients, and have extensive experience in providing seminars and training programs tailored to our client's individual export control issues and to the effect of various arms or economic embargoes on their particular business relationships and models. 
  • Enforcement and Litigation.  We have substantial experience in conducting internal investigations for our clients related to alleged export control or sanctions violations, and have defended companies involved in investigations and enforcement proceedings before all of the major regulatory agencies.  We frequently assist in the preparation of voluntary disclosures to the government of potential regulatory violations, assist in preparing corrective action plans, and take the lead in negotiating agreements between our clients and the government regarding penalties and pending and future export authorizations.  We have also defended companies in both civil and criminal enforcement actions conducted by the Department of Justice and other agencies, and in U.S. Customs Service seizures.
  • Public Policy.  We have represented clients before various agencies in rulemaking proceedings, and have frequently assisted in submitting comments on behalf of our clients during agency notice and comment proceedings.  We have participated in several industry advisory panels which provide regulators with ongoing insight into industry concerns.  Our legislative team includes former members of Congress and several former staff members of the committees with responsibility for international trade and export controls.  We have lobbied relevant committees on behalf of individual clients and industry associations with an interest in export control and sanctions issues.
  • Foreign and Multilateral Controls.  V&E; lawyers are available to track changes in the export control and licensing laws of foreign countries in a number of sensitive areas including encryption and software controls. Our attorneys have substantial experience in dealing with and tracking the effect of decisions in multilateral agencies and organizations, including the U.N.'s 661 Committee, which regulates trade with Iraq, and the various informal arrangements for coordinating export control policies such as the Wassenaar arrangement, the Nuclear Suppliers Group, and Missile Technology Control Regime.
Representative Clients and Matters
  • Represented a major aerospace company in a DOJ investigation of potential ITAR violations in a joint venture with Russian companies, and freeze on processing of company's further export license applications for the project.
  • Represented a large U.S. oil field service company in connection with criminal and civil investigations and settlements of multiple alleged violations of U.S. re-export control regulations and the Libyan Sanctions Regulations.
  • Testified as an expert witness for the accused in a case arising under an indictment for various alleged violations of the Arms Export Control Act.  The same attorney was later appointed by the court to monitor the company’s export compliance.
  • Served as expert witness in litigation in which interpretations of the Burma (Myanmar) Sanctions Regulations and Yugoslavia Sanctions Regulations were at issue.
  • Investigated and presented numerous voluntary disclosures under the Export Administration Regulations and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations.
  • Defended a major aerospace company against a multi-million dollar civil sanctions charge brought by the Department of State’s Office of Defense Trade Controls (ODTC).
  • Represented both individuals and a company in export denial proceedings brought before the International Trade Administration (ITA).  After an emergency hearing which we requested, we negotiated a settlement in which all charges were dropped against both an individual and the company who were charged as related parties.  As a result, the company was able to continue conducting business without threat of a denial order.
  • Prepared Commodity Jurisdiction Determination requests to ODTC, which have resulted in the removal of ITAR controls over our clients’ products and technology.
  • Prepared or assisted in the preparation of Technical Assistance Agreements (TAAs), Manufacturing License Agreements (MLAs), and other licenses for the export of controlled equipment and technology.
  • Represented a U.S. aviation company in connection with allegations that it had violated the Yugoslavia sanctions regulations.  Following our internal investigation and response to the initial claims, the Treasury Department terminated its investigation without filing charges.
  • For a major European telecommunications company in what apparently was a first request, obtained authorization from the Department of Commerce under certain de minimis U.S. content rules of Export Administration Regulations for the commingling of U.S.-origin and foreign software integrated into European-made products destined potentially for re-export to countries that remain subject to U.S. embargoes.
  • Represented several companies before the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Department of the Treasury in civil enforcement proceedings involving alleged violations of various economic sanctions regulations.  All matters were either terminated without action or settled on favorable terms for our clients.
  • Represented two individuals in administrative proceedings brought under the Export Administration Regulations following the settlement of criminal charges against them.  The charges arose out of their involvement in allegedly unlawful exports of U.S.-origin aircraft parts to Libyan end users.  Despite the guilty pleas previously entered by our clients, we successfully presented facts and arguments leading to a settlement that included only minor civil penalties against one individual and none against the other.
  • Represented the U.S. branch of a Middle East trading company in proceedings before the U.S. Department of Commerce involving alleged violations of the antiboycott regulations.  The charges were settled on a favorable basis for our client.
  • Prepared new or revised international business corporate compliance programs for numerous clients, and assisted in internal training of management and employers concerning relevant U.S. trade laws.
  • Advised internet clients on the application of U.S. sanctions and export controls to international transactions on-line.

Publications
1/27/2006 Legislative Update
"Eminent Domain — Public Information Act Expanded to Affect Certain Private Entities"
8/1/2003 "The United States Imposes Additional Sanctions Against Burma (Myanmar)"
2/1/2003 "OFAC Publishes Proposed Economic Sanctions Enforcement Guidelines"


>> Back to Top

Practice Contacts
Kathleen C. Little
202.639.6663
Washington
klittle@velaw.com  

View All Practice Lawyers

All Practice Areas
All Industries

Senior Export Consultant

Sandra R. Cross 202.639.6725
Washington
scross@velaw.com