contact us

Copyright SJKP LLP Law Firm all rights reserved

How Does a Trade Sanctions Lawyer Protect Your Company from Export Control Violations?

Practice Area:Corporate

Trade sanctions and export control violations occur when a company ships goods, technology, or services to prohibited destinations, end-users, or for restricted purposes without proper authorization, triggering civil penalties, criminal prosecution, and operational shutdown.



The U.S. Department of Commerce, Treasury Department, and State Department enforce overlapping regulatory frameworks that impose strict liability in many cases, meaning intent to violate is not always required for liability to attach. Procedural defenses depend on demonstrating adequate compliance infrastructure, accurate classification of controlled items, and timely licensing applications before shipment. This article covers regulatory agency jurisdiction, classification pitfalls, license application timing, and how corporate counsel can structure a defensible compliance posture.


1. Understanding Export Control Frameworks and Corporate Exposure


Export controls restrict the movement of items deemed sensitive to national security, foreign policy, or nonproliferation goals. The Commerce Control List, the International Traffic in Arms Regulations, and Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control maintain overlapping lists of restricted destinations and end-users. A company may face civil penalties ranging from warnings to substantial monetary assessments, license revocation, and criminal referral if compliance gaps are discovered during audits or after-the-fact investigations.

Classification errors represent a common exposure vector. Determining whether a product or technology falls under export control jurisdiction requires technical analysis and regulatory interpretation. Misclassification can occur even when a company acts in good faith, because the standards involve technical specifications and intended use that may not be immediately apparent. Once a violation is identified, regulators may conduct document reviews, employee interviews, and shipment audits that extend over months or years.

Corporate counsel should evaluate whether items in current or planned inventory trigger licensing obligations. This assessment includes reviewing end-user certifications, destination country restrictions, and any dual-use implications. Proactive classification requests to the relevant agency can create a contemporaneous record of diligence and reduce exposure to after-the-fact enforcement action based on reclassification.



2. Regulatory Agency Jurisdiction and Enforcement Posture


The Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security, the State Department's Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, and Treasury's OFAC each maintain independent enforcement authority and penalty structures. A single transaction may implicate multiple agencies, each with different statutory frameworks and investigation timelines. Understanding which agency has primary jurisdiction over your company's products and destinations is essential for structuring a compliance and response strategy.

When regulators detect potential violations, they typically initiate with civil investigative demands or voluntary disclosure opportunities. Some agencies offer penalty mitigation or settlement pathways if a company self-reports violations and demonstrates corrective action. The decision to pursue voluntary disclosure versus waiting for agency contact carries significant strategic weight and depends on the scope, duration, and nature of the compliance gap. Counsel experienced in international sanctions and trade tariffs can evaluate whether the company's circumstances favor proactive disclosure or a more defensive posture.

Criminal referral occurs in cases involving willful violations, false statements to regulators, or transactions with sanctioned parties. The threshold for criminal prosecution is higher than civil liability, but once criminal exposure is identified, the company must coordinate with external counsel and prepare for document preservation, witness interviews, and potential indictment. Civil and criminal investigations may proceed in parallel, creating complex coordination challenges for in-house and external counsel.



3. Classification, Licensing, and Timing Defenses


Export control violations often hinge on whether an item required a license at the time of shipment. If the company obtained a license before export, regulatory burden shifts to whether the license application contained accurate information and whether the shipment complied with license terms. If no license was obtained, the company must establish that the item fell outside the control list or qualified for a statutory exemption.

Timing of license applications creates a procedural vulnerability. Regulators may argue that a company's delay in seeking classification or licensing constitutes willful blindness or negligent compliance. A company that ships first and applies for licensing retroactively faces stronger enforcement exposure than one that seeks pre-shipment classification. Documentation of the company's compliance decision-making process, including emails, classification worksheets, and communications with the licensing agency, becomes critical evidence in any investigation or enforcement proceeding.

Exemptions and de minimis thresholds offer potential defenses if the company can demonstrate that the controlled content fell below regulatory thresholds or qualified for a specific statutory carve-out. These defenses require precise technical and factual support. Regulators often dispute exemption claims, particularly when the company lacks contemporaneous documentation of how the exemption applied at the time of the transaction.



4. New York and Federal Procedural Considerations in Enforcement Actions


If a company receives a civil investigative demand or subpoena from federal agencies, the company must comply within statutory timeframes, typically 14 to 30 days depending on the agency. Delayed or incomplete document production can trigger additional penalties and undermine any subsequent settlement negotiations. In the Southern District of New York, federal prosecutors and agency counsel coordinate closely on complex export control matters, and procedural delays in document response can signal to investigators that the company lacks institutional compliance controls.

When enforcement escalates to administrative or criminal proceedings, the company may face depositions, document requests, and expert testimony regarding product classification and intended use. The burden of proof in civil enforcement cases is preponderance of the evidence, while criminal cases require proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Both standards require the company to maintain and produce contemporaneous records that establish the company's understanding of regulatory requirements and its compliance efforts at the time of the transaction.



5. Building Defensible Compliance Infrastructure and Response Strategy


A defensible compliance program includes written policies, employee training, pre-shipment classification procedures, and audit trails documenting compliance decisions. Regulators view companies with documented compliance efforts more favorably than those lacking institutional controls, even if violations occurred. The existence of a compliance program does not eliminate liability, but it may reduce penalties and support arguments for mitigation in settlement discussions.

The following table outlines key compliance components and their enforcement relevance:

Compliance ComponentRegulatory RelevanceEnforcement Implication
Written export control policyDemonstrates institutional awareness of regulatory requirementsSupports mitigation argument; shows intent to comply
Pre-shipment classification reviewCreates contemporaneous record of compliance analysisDefends against willfulness arguments; supports good faith defense
Denied Party ScreeningVerifies end-users against sanctioned party listsDemonstrates effort to avoid restricted transactions
Audit and testing proceduresShows ongoing monitoring and internal controlsSupports penalty reduction if violations are self-identified

In parallel with compliance infrastructure, counsel should prepare a response protocol for agency contact. This includes designating a compliance officer, preserving relevant documents, and coordinating with external counsel before making substantive statements to investigators. Premature or uncoordinated responses to agency inquiries can waive privilege, create inconsistencies, and complicate settlement negotiations.

Companies should also evaluate whether their products or services implicate intellectual property or trade secret protections. If controlled technology is involved, regulators may require technical affidavits or expert analysis to establish the scope and sensitivity of the controlled content. Coordination with brand protection and trademark law counsel may be necessary if product identifiers, logos, or proprietary marks are associated with controlled items or restricted end-users.

Moving forward, corporate counsel should prioritize three concrete steps:

First, conduct an inventory audit of current products and shipment destinations to identify potential licensing gaps;

Second, formalize a pre-shipment classification protocol that creates documented evidence of compliance analysis before transactions occur; and

Third, establish a regulatory monitoring process that tracks changes to control lists and sanctioned party designations.

These actions create a defensible record and reduce the window of vulnerability if agency investigations commence.


22 Apr, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

Online Consultation
Phone Consultation