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Export Controls: Ear, Itar, and Sanctions Defense



Export controls regulate the transfer of dual-use commodities, defense articles, software, and technology to foreign persons through Bureau of Industry and Security and Directorate of Defense Trade Controls oversight.

The October 2022 and October 2023 BIS rules dramatically expanded restrictions on advanced computing and semiconductor manufacturing equipment exports to China. Russia sanctions implemented after the 2022 invasion produced expanded Foreign Direct Product Rule applications. Counsel experienced in export controls matters evaluates classification questions, prepares Voluntary Self-Disclosures, and defends BIS, OFAC, and DDTC investigations against exporters and technology companies.

Question Exporters and Compliance Teams AskQuick Answer
What are export controls?Federal regulations restricting transfer of commodities, technology, and defense articles to foreign persons.
What is EAR?Export Administration Regulations covering dual-use items administered by Bureau of Industry and Security.
What is ITAR?International Traffic in Arms Regulations covering defense articles administered by State Department.
What is the Entity List?BIS list of foreign parties subject to specific license requirements for restricted exports.
What is FDPR?Foreign Direct Product Rule extending United States controls to foreign-made items using American technology.

Contents


1. Export Controls Reality and Cross-Agency Regulatory Framework


Most companies discover export controls obligations only after compliance failures surface during audits or government inquiries. Engineers traveling abroad with laptops containing controlled technology trigger deemed export concerns. Cloud servers hosting controlled software in foreign data centers raise classification questions. Mergers involving foreign acquirers require extensive technology transfer analysis. The cumulative compliance burden often catches companies at moments of operational change rather than steady state.



What Federal Frameworks Apply to Export Controls?


Export Administration Regulations administered by Bureau of Industry and Security cover dual-use commodities, software, and technology under 15 C.F.R. § 730. International Traffic in Arms Regulations administered by Directorate of Defense Trade Controls cover defense articles and defense services. The State Department maintains the United States Munitions List spanning 21 categories of military equipment.

Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctions programs operate through separate framework restricting financial transactions and property dealings with sanctioned parties and countries. Antiboycott regulations administered by Commerce Department prohibit cooperation with unsanctioned foreign boycotts. Each framework operates through different procedures and produces different penalty exposure. Counsel coordinating multi-agency export defense often handles administrative case work across BIS, OFAC, and DDTC simultaneously when violations span multiple frameworks.



Ear Versus Itar Jurisdictional Analysis


Commodity jurisdiction determinations resolve whether items fall under EAR or ITAR jurisdiction. Items appearing on the United States Munitions List automatically face ITAR controls. Items not specifically listed on USML face EAR analysis. Dual-use items with both civilian and military applications face EAR controls under specific Export Control Classification Numbers within the Commerce Control List.

The 2014 Export Control Reform initiative shifted many items from ITAR to EAR jurisdiction, particularly aircraft components and similar dual-use technology. Subsequent rulemaking continued reclassifying specific items between frameworks. Companies handling complex products often pursue commodity jurisdiction determinations through formal DDTC requests addressing classification ambiguity. Misclassification carries substantial penalty exposure since ITAR violations frequently produce criminal exposure exceeding parallel EAR violations.



2. How Do Ear, Itar, and Technology Transfer Restrictions Apply?


Export classification drives every subsequent compliance decision. Items classified under restrictive ECCNs face license requirements for shipments to most destinations. EAR99 catch-all classification allows broader export with specific destination restrictions. ITAR-controlled defense articles face strict license requirements regardless of destination. Cloud computing and SaaS arrangements produce classification questions that traditional export frameworks did not contemplate.



What Foreign Direct Product Rule Expansions Apply?


Foreign Direct Product Rule extends United States export controls to foreign-made items produced using American-origin software, technology, or production equipment. The rule had limited application until 2020 expansions targeting Huawei. Russia sanctions implemented February 2022 substantially expanded FDPR application to Russian end users. October 7, 2022 BIS rules applied FDPR to advanced computing items destined for China.

October 17, 2023 expansions added semiconductor manufacturing equipment, expanded geographic scope, and tightened parameters for advanced computing controls. The cumulative effect substantially restricted China access to advanced semiconductor technology through global supply chains. Foreign companies producing items with American technology now face direct United States enforcement exposure regardless of physical proximity to domestic jurisdiction. Counsel handling FDPR analysis often coordinates with foreign investment compliance work when foreign suppliers face downstream United States export restrictions.



Deemed Exports and Foreign National Access


Deemed export rules treat technology release to foreign nationals within United States borders as exports to the foreign national's country of citizenship or last permanent residence. Foreign engineer hires require export license analysis for access to controlled technology. Visiting researcher relationships face similar requirements depending on technology category and citizenship.

Universities and research institutions face complex deemed export analysis when foreign researchers access controlled technology in laboratory or computational settings. Technology transfer through routine business meetings can trigger deemed export concerns when foreign visitors access technical specifications, prototypes, or source code. Companies typically address deemed export risks through technology control plans, access restrictions, and visitor screening procedures rather than waiting for compliance failures to identify violations.



3. Deemed Export Rules Treat Technology Release to Foreign Nationals within United States Borders As Exports to the Foreign National'S Country of Citizenship or Last Permanent Residence. Foreign Engineer Hires Require Export License Analysis for Access to Controlled Technology. Visiting Researcher Relationships Face Similar Requirements Depending on Technology Category and Citizenship. Universities and Research Institutions Face Complex Deemed Export Analysis When Foreign Researchers Access Controlled Technology in Laboratory or Computational Settings. Technology Transfer through Routine Business Meetings Can Trigger Deemed Export Concerns When Foreign Visitors Access Technical Specifications, Prototypes, or Source Code. Companies Typically Address Deemed Export Risks through Technology Control Plans, Access Restrictions, and Visitor Screening Procedures Rather Than Waiting for Compliance Failures to Identify Violations.


OFAC sanctions screening operates parallel to export controls through Specially Designated Nationals list and country-based sanctions programs. Real-time screening must address counterparties, suppliers, customers, and beneficial owners through documented investigation procedures. License applications address specific transactions when sanctions otherwise prohibit otherwise legitimate business. The 50% Rule extends sanctions to entities owned 50% or more by sanctioned parties even when not directly listed.



What Sanctions Screening and License Procedures Apply?


OFAC screening must occur at customer onboarding and continue through transaction-level review. Specially Designated Nationals list updates occur frequently producing new compliance obligations across customer bases. Sectoral Sanctions Identifications list addresses limited transactions with specifically designated entities. Country-based programs address Iran, Cuba, North Korea, Venezuela, Russia, and similar comprehensive sanctions targets.

License applications address transactions otherwise prohibited under applicable sanctions programs. OFAC processes license applications based on policy considerations and humanitarian or strategic factors. BIS license applications address EAR-controlled exports requiring specific authorization. DDTC license applications address ITAR-controlled exports of defense articles and services. Processing times vary substantially based on application complexity and current workload, with some applications taking 9-12 months for resolution.



Voluntary Self-Disclosure and Compliance Program Requirements


BIS, OFAC, and DDTC operate Voluntary Self-Disclosure programs producing substantial penalty mitigation when companies identify and report violations before government detection. The 2023 Tri-Seal Compliance Note from DOJ, Commerce, and Treasury reinforced VSD incentives across multiple enforcement frameworks. VSD timing matters substantially since whistleblower disclosure to government before company self-reporting eliminates VSD benefits.

Effective compliance programs include written policies, designated trade compliance officer, ongoing training, screening procedures, recordkeeping, and audit functions. Recent enforcement actions during 2024 highlighted compliance program inadequacies producing penalties despite voluntary disclosure. Counsel handling export compliance often documents business compliance program effectiveness through regular audits supporting both proactive risk management and subsequent regulatory defense when violations are discovered.



4. How Are Government Investigations and Export Enforcement Actions Resolved?


Resolution paths for export controls enforcement extend across BIS administrative proceedings, OFAC settlement negotiations, DDTC consent agreements, and DOJ criminal prosecutions. Most matters resolve through negotiated settlements before formal proceedings begin. Penalty exposure varies dramatically based on willfulness analysis, cooperation credit, and cumulative violation count. Recent enforcement priorities through 2024 included China semiconductor evasion, Russia sanctions circumvention, and Iran sanctions enforcement.



What Civil and Criminal Penalty Exposure Applies?


Civil monetary penalties under International Emergency Economic Powers Act reach $358,924 per violation through 2024 inflation adjustments. Cumulative penalties across multiple violations frequently produce settlement demands in tens of millions of dollars. Criminal penalties under IEEPA reach 20 years imprisonment plus $1 million fines per violation for willful conduct. Parallel federal smuggling charges under 18 U.S.C. § 554 add separate exposure when exports cross borders.

The 2017 ZTE settlement of $1.19 billion remained the largest export controls penalty for several years. Subsequent enforcement against Huawei, Microsoft, Seagate, and similar major exporters produced substantial penalties addressing China-related violations. Asset forfeiture under criminal forfeiture statutes can reach all proceeds and instrumentalities of unlawful exports. Sentencing Guidelines calculations incorporate value of exported items producing exposure that frequently exceeds initial expectations based solely on transaction values.



Recent Enforcement Trends and 2024 Major Settlements


BIS enforcement during 2024 targeted Chinese semiconductor evasion through indirect supply chain routes. Multiple settlements addressed transshipment patterns where Chinese end users obtained restricted technology through intermediary jurisdictions. Russia sanctions enforcement produced parallel actions against companies failing to implement post-2022 invasion compliance updates.

OFAC enforcement priorities during 2024 included continuing Russia, Iran, and North Korea programs alongside emerging crypto-related sanctions enforcement. Coordinated enforcement between BIS, OFAC, and DDTC produced settlement frameworks addressing violations spanning multiple frameworks simultaneously. Counsel handling export enforcement often coordinates federal court trial preparation when criminal exposure accompanies civil proceedings, since DOJ frequently pursues parallel criminal cases for serious violations.


08 May, 2026


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