[Federal Register Volume 62, Number 31 (Friday, February 14, 1997)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 6896-6910]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 97-3537]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Foreign Assets Control
31 CFR Parts 500, 505 and 515
Foreign Assets Control Regulations; Regulations Prohibiting
Transactions Involving the Shipment of Certain Merchandise Between
Foreign Countries; Cuban Assets Control Regulations: Civil Penalty
Administrative Hearings
AGENCY: Office of Foreign Assets Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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SUMMARY: The Treasury Department proposes to amend the Foreign Assets
Control Regulations and the Cuban Asset Control Regulations to add
procedures for the conduct of administrative hearings in civil penalty
cases and for settlement of civil penalty cases in lieu of
administrative hearings. A conforming amendment is proposed to be made
to the Transaction Control Regulations.
DATES: Written comments must be received by March 17, 1997.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be mailed to the Director, Office of Foreign
Assets Control, U.S. Treasury Department, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW--Annex, Washington, DC 20220.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mrs. B.S. Scott, Chief, Civil
Penalties Program (tel.: 202/622-6140), or William B. Hoffman, Chief
Counsel (tel.: 202/622-2410), Office of Foreign Assets Control, U.S.
Treasury Department, Washington, DC 20220.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic and Facsimile Availability
This document is available as an electronic file on The Federal
Bulletin Board the day of publication in the Federal Register. By
modem, dial 202/512-1387 and type ``/GO FAC,'' or call 202/512-1530 for
disk or paper copies. This file is available for downloading without
charge in WordPerfect 5.1, ASCII, and Adobe AcrobatTM readable
(*.PDF) formats. For Internet access, the address for use with the
World Wide Web (Home Page), Telnet, or FTP protocol is:
fedbbs.access.gpo.gov. The document is also accessible for downloading
in ASCII format without charge from Treasury's Electronic Library
(``TEL'') in the ``Business, Trade and Labor Mall'' of the FedWorld
bulletin board. By modem, dial 703/321-3339, and select the appropriate
self-expanding file in TEL. For Internet access, use one of the
following protocols: Telnet = fedworld.gov (192.239.93.3); World Wide
Web (Home Page) = http://www.fedworld.gov; FTP = ftp.fedworld.gov
(192.239.92.205). Additional information concerning the programs of the
Office of Foreign Assets Control is available for downloading from the
Office's Internet Home Page: http://www.ustreas.gov/treasury/services/
fac/fac.html, or in fax form through the Office's 24-hour fax-on-demand
service: call 202/622-0077 using a fax machine, fax modem, or (within
the United States) a touch-tone telephone.
Background
The Foreign Assets Control Regulations, 31 CFR part 500, and the
Cuban Asset Control Regulations, 31 CFR part 515 (jointly, the
``Regulations''), are proposed to be amended to provide for detailed
procedures governing administrative hearings, as provided in section
1710(c) of the Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 (22 U.S.C. 6001-6010 -- the
``CDA''). A conforming amendment is proposed to be made to Sec. 505.50
of the Regulations Prohibiting Transactions Involving the Shipment of
Certain Merchandise Between Foreign Countries, 31 CFR part 505, which
incorporates by reference the penalty provisions of part 500. Because
the CDA amends section 16 of the Trading with the Enemy Act (50 U.S.C.
App. 16) to permit the imposition of civil monetary penalties and civil
forfeiture with opportunity for hearing and discovery, subpart G of the
Regulations is proposed to be revised to establish the procedures
governing administrative hearings.
Before this proposed rule is adopted as a final rule, consideration
will be given to written comments (a signed original and 2 copies) that
are timely submitted to the OFAC. All comments will be available for
public inspection and copying.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
It has been determined that this notice of proposed rulemaking is
not a ``significant regulatory action'' as defined in Executive Order
12866. Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not required. It is hereby
certified, pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
605(b)), that the proposed rule, if promulgated, will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities,
so that no regulatory flexibility analysis is required. The factual
basis for this certification is as follows: Since civil penalty
procedures under the Regulations were adopted (June 29, 1993, for part
515; April 8, 1994, for part 500), all recipients of a prepenalty
notice under the Regulations have been provided the opportunity to
request an administrative hearing, with prehearing discovery, prior to
imposition of a penalty. Secs. 500.702(b) & 515.702(b). As of December
20, 1996, the cumulative number of hearing requests pending was 27. Of
these, only 10 involved respondents that are small business entities
with fewer than 500 employees. A respondent's decision to use the
administrative hearing process is strictly voluntary, and any final
agency action imposing a civil penalty, with or without an
administrative hearing, remains appealable pursuant to section 702 of
the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553-596 -- the ``APA'').
The collection of information in the proposed rules arises in the
conduct of administrative actions or investigations by OFAC against
specific individuals or entities and is, therefore, not subject to the
requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act pursuant to 44 U.S.C.
3518(c)(1)(B)(ii).
List of Subjects
31 CFR Part 500
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Blocking of
assets, Cambodia, Currency, Estates, Exports, Finance, Foreign claims,
Foreign investment in the United States, Foreign trade, Imports,
Information and informational materials, International organizations,
North Korea, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Securities, Services, Specially designated nationals, Terrorism, Travel
restrictions, Trusts and trustees, Vessels, Vietnam.
31 CFR Part 505
Administrative practice and procedure, Arms and munitions, Banks,
banking, Communist countries, Exports, Finance, Foreign trade, Nuclear
materials, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
31 CFR Part 515
Administrative practice and procedure, Air carriers, Banks,
banking, Blocking of assets, Cuba, Currency,
[[Page 6897]]
Estates, Exports, Finance, Foreign investment in the United States,
Foreign trade, Imports, Information and informational materials,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities,
Shipping, Specially designated nationals, Terrorism, Travel
restrictions, Trusts and trustees, Vessels.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 31 CFR parts 500, 505
and 515 are proposed to be amended as set forth below:
PART 500--FOREIGN ASSETS CONTROL REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 500 is revised to read as
follows:
Authority: 50 U.S.C. App. 1-44; Pub. L. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214,
1254 (18 U.S.C. 2332d); Pub. L. 101-410, 104 Stat. 890 (28 U.S.C.
2461 note); E.O. 9193, 7 FR 5205, 3 CFR, 1938-1943 Comp., p. 1174;
E.O. 9989, 13 FR 4891, 3 CFR, 1943-1948 Comp., p. 748.
2. Subpart G is revised to read as follows:
Subpart G--Penalties
Secs.
500.701 Penalties.
500.702 Prepenalty notice; contents; service.
500.703 Response to prepenalty notice; right to hearing and
prehearing discovery; informal settlement.
500.704 Penalty imposition or withdrawal absent a hearing request.
500.705 Time and opportunity to request a hearing.
500.706 Hearing, discovery, and decision on the record.
500.707 Judicial review.
500.708 Referral to United States Department of Justice;
administrative collection measures.
Subpart G--Penalties
Sec. 500.701 Penalties.
(a) Attention is directed to section 16 of the Trading with the
Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. App. 16), as adjusted pursuant to the Federal
Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-410, as
amended, 28 U.S.C. 2461 note), which provides that:
(1) Persons who willfully violate any provision of that act or any
license, rule, or regulation issued thereunder, and persons who
willfully violate, neglect, or refuse to comply with any order of the
President issued in compliance with the provisions of that act shall,
upon conviction, be fined not more than $1,000,000 or, if an
individual, be fined not more than $100,000 or imprisoned for not more
than 10 years, or both; and an officer, director, or agent of any
corporation who knowingly participates in such violation shall, upon
conviction, be fined not more than $100,000 or imprisoned for not more
than 10 years, or both.
(2) Any property, funds, securities, paper, or other articles or
documents, or any vessel, together with its tackle, apparel, furniture,
and equipment, concerned in a violation of the act may upon conviction
be forfeited to the United States.
(3) The Secretary of the Treasury may impose a civil penalty of not
more than $55,000 per violation on any person who violates any license,
order, or regulation issued under that act.
(4) Any property, funds, securities, papers, or other articles or
documents, or any vessel, together with its tackle, apparel, furniture,
and equipment, that is the subject of a violation subject to a civil
penalty issued pursuant to the act shall, at the discretion of the
Secretary of the Treasury, be forfeited to the United States
Government.
(b) The criminal penalties provided in the Trading with the Enemy
Act are subject to increase pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3571.
(c) Attention is directed to 18 U.S.C. 1001, which provides that
whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or
agency of the United States, knowingly and willfully falsifies,
conceals or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact,
or makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or
representation or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing
the same to contain any false, fictitious or fraudulent statement or
entry, shall be fined under title 18, United States Code, or imprisoned
not more than five years, or both.
Sec. 500.702 Prepenalty notice; contents; service.
(a) When required. If the Director of the Office of Foreign Assets
Control has reasonable cause to believe that there has occurred a
violation of any provision of this part or a violation of the
provisions of any license, ruling, regulation, order, direction or
instruction issued by or pursuant to the direction or authorization of
the Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to this part or otherwise under
the Trading with the Enemy Act, and the Director determines that
further proceedings are warranted, he shall issue to the person
concerned a notice of his intent to impose a monetary penalty and/or
forfeiture. The prepenalty notice may be issued whether or not another
agency has taken any action with respect to this matter.
(b) Contents--(1) Facts of violation. The prepenalty notice shall
describe the violation, specify the laws and regulations allegedly
violated, and state the amount of the proposed monetary penalty and/or
forfeiture.
(2) Respondent's rights--(i) Right to respond. The prepenalty
notice shall also inform the respondent of respondent's right to
respond to the notice within 30 days of the mailing or other service of
the notice pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section, as to why a
monetary penalty and/or forfeiture should not be imposed, or, if
imposed, why it should be in a lesser amount than proposed.
(ii) Right to request a hearing. The prepenalty notice shall also
inform the respondent that, in the response provided for in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) of this section, the respondent may also request a hearing
conducted pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 554-557 to present the respondent's
defenses to the imposition of a penalty and/or forfeiture and to offer
any other information that the respondent believes should be included
in the agency record prior to a final determination concerning the
imposition of a penalty and/or forfeiture. Untimely response
constitutes a waiver of a hearing.
(iii) Right to request discovery prior to hearing. The prepenalty
notice shall also inform the respondent of the right to discovery prior
to a requested hearing. Discovery must be requested in writing in the
response provided for in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, jointly
with respondent's request for a hearing. Untimely response constitutes
a waiver of prehearing discovery.
(c) Service. The prepenalty notice, or any amendment or supplement
thereto, shall be served upon the respondent. Service shall be presumed
completed:
(1) Upon mailing a copy by registered or certified mail, return
receipt requested, addressed to the respondent at the respondent's last
known address; or
(2) Upon presentment of a date-stamped postal receipt by the Office
of Foreign Assets Control with respect to any respondent who has
refused, avoided, or in any way attempted to decline delivery, tender,
or acceptance of the registered or certified letter or has refused to
recover a registered or certified letter served; or
(3) Upon leaving a copy with the respondent or an officer, a
managing or general agent, or any other agent authorized by appointment
or by law to accept or receive service for the respondent, evidenced by
a certificate of service signed by the individual making such service,
stating the method of service and the identity of the individual with
whom the prepenalty notice was left; or
[[Page 6898]]
(4) Upon proof of service on a respondent who is not resident in
the United States by any method of service permitted by the law of the
jurisdiction in which the respondent resides or is located, provided
the requirements of such foreign law satisfy due process requirements
under United States law with respect to notice of administrative
proceedings, and where applicable laws or intergovernmental agreements
or understandings make the methods of service set forth in paragraphs
(c)(1) through (3) of this section inappropriate or ineffective for
service upon the nonresident respondent.
Sec. 500.703 Response to prepenalty notice; right to hearing and
prehearing discovery; informal settlement.
(a) Deadline for response. The respondent shall have 30 days from
the date of mailing or other service of the prepenalty notice pursuant
to Sec. 500.702(c) to respond thereto.
(b) Form and contents of response--(1) In general. The written
response need not be in any particular form, but shall contain
information sufficient to indicate that it is in response to the
prepenalty notice. It should be responsive to the allegations contained
therein and set forth the nature of the respondent's defenses.
(i) The response must admit or deny specifically each separate
allegation of violation made in the prepenalty notice. If the
respondent is without knowledge as to an allegation, the response shall
so state, and such statement shall operate as a denial. Failure to
deny, controvert, or object to any allegation will be deemed an
admission of that allegation.
(ii) The response must also set forth any additional or new matter
or arguments the respondent seeks, or shall seek, to use in support of
all defenses or claims for mitigation. Any defense or partial defense
not specifically set forth in the response shall be deemed waived, and
evidence thereon may be refused, except for good cause shown.
(iii) The response must also accurately state, for each respondent,
the respondent's full name and address for future service, including
current telephone number and area code. Respondents are responsible for
providing timely written notice to all interested parties of any
subsequent changes in the information provided.
(2) Request for hearing. Any request for an administrative hearing
and prehearing discovery shall be made in the written response made
pursuant to this section and within the 30-day time period specified in
Sec. 500.705(a).
(3) Informal settlement. In addition or as an alternative to a
written response to a prepenalty notice pursuant to this section, the
respondent or respondent's representative may contact the Office of
Foreign Assets Control as advised in the prepenalty notice to propose
the settlement of allegations contained in the prepenalty notice and
related matters. In the event of settlement at the prepenalty stage,
the prepenalty notice will be withdrawn, the respondent is not required
to take a written position on allegations contained in the prepenalty
notice, and the Office of Foreign Assets Control will make no final
determination as to whether a violation occurred. The amount accepted
in settlement of allegations in a prepenalty notice may vary from the
civil penalty that might finally be imposed in the event of a formal
determination of violation. In the event no settlement is reached, the
30-day period specified in paragraph (a) of this section for written
response to the prepenalty notice remains in effect unless additional
time is granted by the Office of Foreign Assets Control. Untimely
response constitutes a waiver of a hearing and prehearing discovery.
Sec. 500.704 Penalty imposition or withdrawal absent a hearing
request.
(a) No violation. If, after considering any presentations made in
response to the prepenalty notice and any relevant facts, the Director
determines that there was no violation by the respondent named in the
prepenalty notice, the Director promptly shall notify the respondent in
writing of that determination and that no civil monetary penalty or
civil forfeiture pursuant to this subpart will be imposed.
(b) Violation. If, after considering any presentations made in
response to the prepenalty notice and any relevant facts, the Director
determines that there was a violation by the respondent named in the
prepenalty notice, the Director promptly shall issue a written notice
of the imposition by the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the civil
monetary penalty and/or civil forfeiture and/or other available
disposition on that respondent.
(1) The penalty/forfeiture notice shall inform the respondent that
payment of the assessed penalty must be made within 30 days of the
mailing of the penalty notice.
(2) The penalty/forfeiture notice shall inform the respondent of
the requirement to furnish respondent's taxpayer identification number
pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 7701 and that the Department intends to use such
number for the purposes of collecting and reporting on any delinquent
penalty amount in the event of a failure to pay the penalty imposed.
Sec. 500.705 Time and opportunity to request a hearing.
(a) Deadline for hearing request. Within 30 days of the date of
mailing or other service of the prepenalty notice pursuant to
Sec. 500.702(c), the respondent may file a written request for an
agency hearing conducted pursuant to this section, to present the
respondent's defenses to the imposition of a penalty and/or forfeiture,
and to offer any other information found to be admissible into the
agency record prior to a final determination concerning the imposition
of a penalty and/or forfeiture.
(b) Content of written response. If an agency hearing is requested
by the respondent or by the respondent's counsel, the written hearing
request must be accompanied by a written response to the prepenalty
notice containing the information required by Sec. 500.703(b)(1)(i)
through (iii). An untimely hearing request or written response to the
prepenalty notice constitutes a waiver of a hearing.
(c) Signature of filings. All hearing requests, motions, responses,
interrogatories, requests for deposition transcripts, requests for
protective orders, and all other filings relating to requests for and
responses to discovery or pertaining to the hearing process, must be
signed by each requesting party and, if represented, by each party's
counsel.
Sec. 500.706 Hearing, discovery, and decision on the record.
(a) Notice of hearing. (1) Any respondent requesting a hearing
shall receive notice of the time and place of the hearing at the
service address provided pursuant to Sec. 500.703(b)(1)(iii). Requests
to change the time and place of a hearing may be submitted to the
Administrative Law Judge, who may modify the original notice or
subsequently set hearing dates. All requests for any change in time and
place of a hearing must be received in the Administrative Law Judge's
chambers and served upon all interested parties no later than 10
working days before the scheduled hearing date.
(2) The hearing shall be conducted in a manner consistent with 5
U.S.C. 554-557, pursuant to section 1710(c) of the Cuban Democracy Act
of 1992 (22 U.S.C. 6001-6010), and section 16 of the Trading with the
Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. App. 16).
(b) Powers. The Administrative Law Judge shall have all powers
necessary to conduct the hearing, consistent with 5
[[Page 6899]]
U.S.C. 554-557, including the following powers:
(1) To administer oaths and affirmations;
(2) To require production of records or any information relative to
any act or transaction subject to this part, including the imposition
of sanctions available under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2)
(Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2), 28 U.S.C.) for a party's failure to comply
with discovery requests;
(3) To receive relevant and material evidence and to rule upon the
admission of evidence and offers of proof;
(4) To take or cause depositions to be taken as authorized by this
part;
(5) To regulate the course of the hearing and the conduct of the
parties and their counsel;
(6) To hold scheduling or prehearing conferences as deemed
necessary;
(7) To consider and rule upon all procedural and other motions
appropriate in an adjudicatory proceeding, provided that only the
Secretary or the Secretary's designee shall have the power to grant any
motion to dismiss the proceeding or to decide any other motion that
results in a final determination of the merits of the proceeding;
(8) To prepare and present to the Secretary or to the Secretary's
designee a recommended decision as provided in paragraph (s) of this
section;
(9) To recuse himself on motion made by a party or on the
Administrative Law Judge's own motion;
(10) To establish time, place and manner limitations on the
attendance of the public and the media for any public hearing;
(11) To perform all necessary or appropriate measures to discharge
the duties of an Administrative Law Judge; and
(12) To set fees and expenses for witnesses, including expert
witnesses.
(c) Appearance and practice in a civil penalty hearing--(1)
Appearance before an Administrative Law Judge by counsel. Any member in
good standing of the bar of the highest court of any state,
commonwealth, possession, or territory of the United States, or the
District of Columbia may represent respondents upon written request in
a civil penalty hearing. A copy of the document appointing the counsel
shall be presented to the Administrative Law Judge upon the first
appearance of counsel.
(2) Appearance before an Administrative Law Judge by a non-lawyer.
A respondent may appear on his own behalf; a member of a partnership
may represent the partnership; a duly authorized officer, director, or
employee of any corporation may represent that corporation in a civil
penalty hearing.
(3) Office of Foreign Assets Control representation. The Office of
Foreign Assets Control shall be represented by the Chief Counsel of the
Office of Foreign Assets Control or by the Chief Counsel's designee.
(d) Conflicts of interest--(1) Conflict of interest in
representation. No individual shall appear as counsel for a party in a
proceeding conducted pursuant to this subpart if it reasonably appears
that such representation may be materially limited by that counsel's
responsibilities to a third person, or by counsel's own interests.
(2) Corrective Measures. The Administrative Law Judge may take
corrective measures at any stage of a proceeding to cure a conflict of
interest in representation, including the issuance of an order limiting
the scope of representation or disqualifying an individual from
appearing in a representative capacity for the duration of the
proceeding.
(e) Ex parte communications--(1) Definition. The term ex parte
communication means any material oral or written communication not on
the public record concerning the merits of an adjudicatory proceeding
with respect to which reasonable prior notice to all parties is not
given, on any material matter or proceeding covered by these
regulations that takes place between:
(i) A party to the proceeding, a party's counsel, or any other
individual; and
(ii) The Administrative Law Judge handling that proceeding, or the
Secretary, or the Secretary's designee.
(2) Exceptions. (i) A request for the status of the proceeding does
not constitute an ex parte communication; and
(ii) Settlement inquiries and discussions do not constitute ex
parte communications.
(3) Prohibition on ex parte communications. From the time a
respondent requests a hearing until the date that the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee issues a final decision, no party, interested
person, or counsel therefor shall knowingly make or cause to be made an
ex parte communication. The Administrative Law Judge, the Secretary,
and the Secretary's designee shall not knowingly make or cause to be
made to a party, or to any interested person or counsel therefor, any
ex parte communication.
(4) Procedure upon occurrence of ex parte communication. If an ex
parte communication is received by the Administrative Law Judge, the
Administrative Law Judge shall cause all such written communication
(or, if the communication is oral, a memorandum stating the substance
of the communication) to be placed on the record of the proceeding and
served on all parties. All parties to the proceeding shall have an
opportunity, within 10 days of the receipt of service of the notice or
of receipt of a memorandum of the ex parte communication, to file
responses thereto and to recommend any sanctions, in accordance with
paragraph (e)(5) of this section, appropriate under the circumstances,
or may file an interlocutory appeal with the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee.
(5) Sanctions. Any respondent, respondent's counsel, or other party
who makes a prohibited ex parte communication, or who encourages or
solicits another to make any such communication, may be subject to any
appropriate sanction or sanctions imposed by the Administrative Law
Judge for good cause shown, or that may be imposed upon interlocutory
appeal taken to the Secretary or the Secretary's designee, including,
but not limited to, exclusion from the hearing and an adverse ruling on
the issue which is the subject of the prohibited communication.
(f) Time limits. Except as provided elsewhere in this subpart, the
Administrative Law Judge shall establish all time limits for filings
with regard to hearings conducted pursuant to this subpart, except for
decisions on interlocutory appeals filed with the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee.
(g) Interlocutory Appeal. When exceptions, requests for extensions,
or motions, including motions for summary disposition, are denied by
the Administrative Law Judge, interlocutory appeals may be taken to the
Secretary or to the Secretary's designee for a decision.
(1) Interlocutory appeals must be filed no later than 10 working
days after the matter being appealed has been decided in writing by the
Administrative Law Judge.
(2) Interlocutory appeals must be filed with the Secretary's
Office, U.S. Treasury Department, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20220, with certified copies served upon the
Administrative Law Judge and the Office of Chief Counsel for the Office
of Foreign Assets Control.
(h) Opportunity for settlement. Any party may, at any time during
the hearing, unilaterally submit written offers or proposals for
settlement of a proceeding to the Secretary or the Secretary's
designee, at the address listed in paragraph (g)(2) of this section.
[[Page 6900]]
Submission of a written settlement offer does not provide a basis for
adjourning or otherwise delaying all or any portion of a hearing. No
settlement offer or proposal, or any subsequent negotiation or
resolution, is admissible as evidence in any hearing before this
tribunal.
(i) Failure to appear. The unexcused failure of a respondent to
appear in person at a hearing or to have duly authorized counsel appear
in respondent's place, constitutes a waiver of the respondent's right
to a hearing and is deemed an admission of the violation alleged.
Without further proceedings or notice to the respondent, the
Administrative Law Judge shall file with the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee a recommended decision finding a violation and the
amount of penalty as indicated in the prepenalty notice.
(j) Motions--(1) Written motions. Except as otherwise specifically
provided herein, an application or request for an order or ruling must
be made by written motion, in typed format.
(i) All written motions must state with particularity the relief
sought and must be accompanied by a proposed order.
(ii) No oral argument may be held on written motions unless
directed by the Administrative Law Judge. Written memoranda, briefs,
affidavits, and other relevant material and documents may be filed in
support of or in opposition to a motion.
(2) Oral motions. A motion may be made orally on the record unless
the Administrative Law Judge directs that such motion be made in
writing.
(3) Filing of motions--(i) In general. Motions must be filed with
the Administrative Law Judge, and with the Office of Chief Counsel,
Office of Foreign Assets Control, U.S. Treasury Department, 1500
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20220, with the envelope
prominently marked, ``Urgent: Annex--Room 3133,'' unless otherwise
directed by the Administrative Law Judge, or agreed to by Chief
Counsel.
(ii) Interlocutory appeals. Motions related to interlocutory
appeals to the Secretary or the Secretary's designee must be sent by
fax (fax number: 202/622-1188) and filed with the Secretary, U.S.
Treasury Department, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC
20220, marked ``Attention: OFAC Interlocutory Appeal.''
(4) Responses. (i) Any interested party may file a written response
to a motion within 20 days of the date of mailing, by registered or
certified letter service and pursuant to these regulations. If directed
by the Administrative Law Judge response time may be shortened or
extended. The Administrative Law Judge may allow each party to file a
response before finally ruling upon any oral or written motion. The
Administrative Law Judge may allow a rejoinder to responses for good
cause shown. If a rejoinder is permitted, it must be filed within 15
days of the date the response was filed and served upon all parties.
(ii) The failure of a party to oppose a written motion or an oral
motion made on the record is deemed to be consent by that party to the
entry of an order substantially in the form of the order accompanying
the motion.
(5) Dilatory motions. Frivolous, dilatory, or repetitive motions
are prohibited. The filing of such motions may form the basis for
sanctions.
(k) Discovery--(1) In general. The availability of information and
documents through discovery is subject to the agency's assertion of
privileges available to OFAC and/or to the Treasury and to the
application of all exemptions afforded the agency pursuant to the
Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(1) through (9)) and the
Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) to all facets of discovery, including
interrogatories, depositions that seek the release of trade secrets,
proprietary materials, third party confidential and/or commercially
sensitive material, placement of information, documents and/or
materials under seal and/or protective order, and interlocutory appeal
to the Secretary or the Secretary's designee from any decision of the
Administrative Law Judge.
(2) Types of discovery. Parties may obtain discovery by one or more
of the following methods: depositions upon oral examination or written
questions; written interrogatories; production of documents or other
evidence for inspection; and requests for admission. All depositions of
federal employees must take place in Washington, DC, at the U.S.
Treasury Department or at the location where the federal employee to be
deposed performs his duties, whichever the federal employee's
supervisor or Chief Counsel shall deem appropriate. All depositions of
federal employees shall be held at a mutually agreed upon date and
time, and for a mutually agreed upon length of time.
(3) Interrogatories. Respondent's interrogatories must be served
upon the Chief Counsel within 20 days of respondent's written request
for a hearing. Chief Counsel must serve Chief Counsel's interrogatories
within 30 days of the receipt of service of respondent's
interrogatories or within 30 days of the receipt of respondent's
written request for a hearing if no interrogatories are filed by
respondent by that time. Parties have 30 days to respond to
interrogatories from the date interrogatories are received.
Interrogatories shall be limited to 20 questions only. Each subpart,
section, or other designation of a part of a question shall be counted
as one complete question in computing the permitted 20 question total.
Where more than 20 questions are served upon a party, the receiving
party may determine which of the 20 questions the receiving party shall
answer.
(4) Scope. Parties may obtain discovery regarding any matter not
privileged, which has material relevance to the merits of the pending
action. It is not a ground for objection that the information sought
will be inadmissible at the hearing if the information sought appears
reasonably calculated to lead to discovery of admissible evidence. The
Administrative Law Judge may make any order which justice requires to
ensure that requests are not unreasonable, oppressive, excessive in
scope or unduly burdensome, including the issuance of an order to show
cause why a particular discovery request is justified upon the motion
of the objecting party.
(5) Privileged matter. Privileged documents are not discoverable.
Privileges include, inter alia, the attorney-client privilege, attorney
work-product privilege, any government's or government agency's
deliberative-process or classified information privilege, including
materials classified pursuant to Executive Order 12958 (3 CFR, 1995
Comp., p. 333) and any future Executive orders that may be issued
relating to the treatment of national security information, and all
materials and information exempted from release to the public pursuant
to the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) and the Freedom of Information Act
(5 U.S.C. 552(b)(1) through (9)).
(6) Updating discovery. Whenever a party receives new or additional
information or documentation, all information produced, and all
information required to be provided pursuant to the discovery and
hearing process, must automatically be updated. The Administrative Law
Judge may impose sanctions for failure to update, including prohibiting
opposition to claims or defenses raised, striking pleadings or staying
proceedings, dismissing the action or any part thereof, rendering a
judgment by default, and holding a party in contempt.
[[Page 6901]]
(7) Time limits. All discovery, including all responses to
discovery requests, shall be completed no later than 20 days prior to
the date scheduled for the commencement of the hearing. No exceptions
to this time limit shall be permitted, unless the Administrative Law
Judge finds on the record that good cause exists for waiving the
requirements of this paragraph (k)(7).
(l) Summary disposition--(1) In general. The Administrative Law
Judge shall recommend that the Secretary or the Secretary's designee
issue a final order granting a motion for summary disposition if the
facts of the record show that:
(i) There is no genuine issue as to any material fact; and
(ii) The moving party is entitled to a decision in its favor as a
matter of law.
(2) Filing of motions and responses. (i) Any party who believes
that there is no genuine issue of material fact to be determined and
that he or she is entitled to a decision as a matter of law may move at
any time for summary disposition in its favor of all or any part of the
proceeding. Any party, within 20 days after service of such a motion,
or within such time period as allowed by the Administrative Law Judge,
may file a response to such motion.
(ii) A motion for summary disposition must be accompanied by a
statement of the material facts as to which the moving party contends
there is no genuine issue. Such motion must be supported by documentary
evidence, which may take the form of admissions in pleadings,
stipulations, depositions, transcripts, affidavits, and any other
evidentiary materials that the moving party contends support his
position. The motion must also be accompanied by a brief containing the
points and authorities in support of the moving party's arguments. Any
party opposing a motion for summary disposition must file a statement
setting forth those material facts as to which he or she contends a
genuine dispute exists. Such opposition must be supported by evidence
of the same type as that submitted with the motion for summary
disposition and a brief containing the points and authorities in
support of the contention that summary disposition would be
inappropriate.
(3) Hearing on motion. At the request of any party or on his own
motion, the Administrative Law Judge may hear oral argument on the
motion for summary disposition.
(4) Decision on motion. Following receipt of a motion for summary
disposition and all responses thereto, the Administrative Law Judge
shall determine whether the moving party is entitled to summary
disposition. If the Administrative Law Judge determines that summary
disposition is warranted, the Administrative Law Judge shall submit a
recommended decision to that effect to the Secretary. If the
Administrative Law Judge finds that no party is entitled to summary
disposition, he or she shall make a ruling denying the motion.
(5) Interlocutory appeal. Following receipt of the Administrative
Law Judge's recommended decision relating to summary disposition, each
party has the right to an interlocutory appeal to the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee, within 20 days immediately following the
Administrative Law Judge's decision.
(m) Partial summary disposition. If the Administrative Law Judge
determines that a party is entitled to summary disposition as to
certain claims only, the Administrative Law Judge shall defer
submission of a recommended decision as to those claims. A hearing on
the remaining issues must be ordered and those claims for which the
Administrative Law Judge has determined that summary disposition is
warranted will be addressed in the recommended decision filed at the
conclusion of the hearing.
(n) Prehearing conferences and submissions--(1) Prehearing
conferences. The Administrative Law Judge may, on his own motion, or at
the request of any party for good cause shown, direct counsel for the
parties to meet with him (in person, by telephone, or by
teleconference) at a prehearing conference to address any or all of the
following:
(i) Simplification and clarification of the issues;
(ii) Stipulations, admissions of fact, and the contents,
authenticity and admissibility into evidence of documents;
(iii) Matters of which official notice may be taken;
(iv) Limitation of the number of witnesses;
(v) Summary disposition of any or all issues;
(vi) Resolution of discovery issues or disputes; and
(vii) Such other matters as may aid in the orderly disposition of
the proceeding.
(2) Prehearing orders. At, or within a reasonable time following
the conclusion of, any prehearing conference, the Administrative Law
Judge shall serve on each party an order setting forth any agreements
reached and any procedural determinations made.
(3) Prehearing submissions. Within 40 days of the receipt of
respondent's request for a hearing or at a time set by the
Administrative Law Judge, the Office of Foreign Assets Control shall
serve on the respondent and upon the Administrative Law Judge, the
following:
(i) Stipulations of fact, if any;
(ii) A list of the exhibits to be introduced at the hearing along
with a copy of each exhibit; and
(iii) A list of witnesses to be called to testify at the hearing,
including name and address of each witness and a short summary of the
expected testimony of each witness.
(4) Deadline for respondent's and other interested parties'
submissions. Unless for good cause shown the Administrative Law Judge
permits an extension of time to file, the respondent and other
interested parties shall have 20 days from the date of the submission
by the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the items set forth in
paragraph (n)(3) of this section, and/or of another interested party's
service of items set forth in this paragraph (n)(4), to serve upon the
Administrative Law Judge and all parties, the following:
(i) Its response to stipulations of fact, if any;
(ii) A list of the exhibits to be introduced at the hearing along
with a copy of each exhibit; and
(iii) A list of witnesses to be called to testify at the hearing,
including the name and address of each witness and a short summary of
the expected testimony of each witness.
(5) Effect of failure to comply. No witness may testify and no
exhibits may be introduced at the hearing if such witness or exhibit is
not listed in the prehearing submissions pursuant to paragraphs (n)(3)
and (n)(4) of this section, except for good cause shown.
(o) Public hearings--(1) In general. All hearings shall be open to
the public, unless the Administrative Law Judge, at his discretion,
determines at any time prior to or during the hearing, that holding an
open hearing would be contrary to the public interest. Within 20 days
of service of the notice, any party may file with the Administrative
Law Judge a request for a closed hearing, and any party may file a
pleading in reply to such a request. Failure to file a request or a
reply is deemed a waiver of any objections regarding whether the
hearing will be public or closed.
(2) Filing document under seal. (i) The Office of Foreign Assets
Control may file any documents or any part of a document under seal if
disclosure of the document would be inconsistent
[[Page 6902]]
with the protection of the public interest or if justice requires
protection of any person, including a source or a party, from
annoyance, threat, oppression, or undue burden or expense, or the
disclosure of the information would be, or might reasonably lead to a
disclosure, contrary to Executive Order 12958 or other Executive orders
concerning disclosure of information, U.S. Treasury Department
regulations, the Privacy Act, or the Freedom of Information Act.
(ii) The Administrative Law Judge shall also safeguard the security
and integrity of any documents under seal and shall take all
appropriate steps to preserve the confidentiality of such documents or
any parts thereof, including closing portions of the hearing to the
public. Release of any information under seal, in any form, or in any
manner, is subject to the same sanctions and the exercise of the same
authorities provided with respect to ex parte communications under
paragraph (e)(5) of this section.
(iii) Should the Administrative Law Judge deny placement of any
documents under seal or under protective order, any interested party,
and any person whose documents or materials are at issue, may file an
interlocutory appeal to the Secretary or the Secretary's designee. In
such cases the Administrative Law Judge must not release or expose any
of the records or documents in question to the public or to any other
parties for a period of 20 days from the date of the Administrative Law
Judge's ruling, in order to permit a petitioner the opportunity to
either withdraw the records and documents or to file an interlocutory
appeal with the Secretary or the Secretary's designee requesting an
order that the records be placed under seal.
(iv) Upon settlement, final decision, or motion to the
Administrative Law Judge for good cause shown, all materials (including
all copies) under seal or protective order shall be returned to the
respective parties, except when it may be necessary to retain a record
until the judicial process is completed.
(v) Written notice of all requests for release of protected
documents or materials shall be given to all interested parties
registered with the Administrative Law Judge at least 20 days prior to
any permitted release and prior to any access not specifically
authorized under the protective order. A copy of all requests for
information, including the name, address, and telephone number of the
requester, shall be provided to the petitioner. Each request for access
to protected material must also provide the names, addresses, and
telephone numbers of all persons represented by the requester,
including those on whose behalf the requester seeks access to protected
information. The Administrative Law Judge shall impose sanctions
provided under paragraphs (e)(4) and (5) of this section for failure to
provide this information.
(p) Conduct of hearings--(1) In general--(i) Overview. Hearings
shall be conducted to provide a fair and expeditious presentation of
the relevant disputed issues and facts. Each party has the right to
present its case or defense by oral and documentary evidence and to
conduct such cross examination as may be required for full disclosure
of the relevant facts.
(ii) Order of hearing. The Office of Foreign Assets Control shall
present its case-in-chief first, unless otherwise ordered in advance by
the Administrative Law Judge or otherwise expressly specified by law or
regulation. The Office of Foreign Assets Control shall be the first
party to present an opening statement and a closing statement and may
make a rebuttal statement after the respondent's closing statement.
(iii) Stipulations. Unless the Administrative Law Judge directs
otherwise, all stipulations of fact and law previously agreed upon by
the parties, and all documents, the admissibility of which has been
previously stipulated, will be admitted into evidence upon commencement
of the hearing.
(2) Transcript. A record of the hearing shall be made by manual or
electronic means, including through the use of audio recorded diskettes
or audio-visual cassettes, and transcribed unless the Administrative
Law Judge rules otherwise. The transcript shall be made available to
any party upon payment of the cost thereof. The Administrative Law
Judge shall have authority to order the record corrected, either upon a
motion to correct, upon a motion to stipulate by the parties for good
cause shown, or following notice to the parties upon the Administrative
Law Judge's own motion. The Administrative Law Judge shall serve notice
upon all parties, at the addresses provided by the parties pursuant to
Sec. 500.703(b)(1)(iii), that the certified transcript, together with
all hearing exhibits and exhibits introduced but not admitted into
evidence at the hearing, has been filed with the Administrative Law
Judge.
(q) Evidence--(1) Admissibility. (i) Except as is otherwise set
forth in this section, evidence that is relevant and material is
admissible to the fullest extent authorized by the Administrative
Procedure Act and other applicable law.
(ii) Evidence may be excluded if it is misleading or its probative
value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice or
confusion of the issues, considerations of undue delay or waste of
time, or of needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
(iii) Evidence that would be inadmissible under the Federal Rules
of Evidence need not be deemed or ruled to be inadmissible in a
proceeding conducted pursuant to this subpart if such evidence is
relevant and material, and not unduly repetitive.
(2) Official notice. (i) Official notice may be taken of any
material fact which may be judicially noticed by a United States
district court.
(ii) All matters officially noticed by the Administrative Law Judge
shall appear on the record.
(iii) If official notice is requested or taken of any material
fact, the parties, upon timely request, shall be afforded an
opportunity to object.
(3) Duplicate copies. A duplicate copy of a document is admissible
to the same extent as the original, unless a genuine issue is raised as
to whether the copy is in some material respect not a true and legible
copy of the original.
(4) Admissibility of evidence. Objections to the admissibility of
evidence must be timely made and rulings on all objections must appear
on the record. Failure to object to admission of evidence or to any
ruling constitutes a waiver of the objection.
(5) Rejected exhibits. The Administrative Law Judge shall retain
rejected exhibits, adequately marked for identification, in the event
of an interlocutory appeal.
(6) Stipulations. The parties may stipulate as to any relevant
matters of fact or to the authenticity of any relevant documents. Such
stipulations may be received into evidence at a hearing and are binding
on the parties with respect to the matters therein stipulated.
(7) Depositions of unavailable witnesses. If a witness is
unavailable to testify at a hearing, and that witness has testified in
a deposition within the United States to which all parties to the
proceeding have received timely notice and an opportunity to
participate, a party may offer as evidence all or any part of the
transcript of the deposition, including deposition exhibits. All costs
of depositions shall be borne by the party requesting the deposition.
(r) Proposed decision and supporting briefs--(1) Proposed
decisions. Any party may file with the Administrative Law Judge a
proposed decision within 30 days after the parties have received notice
that the transcript has been filed
[[Page 6903]]
with the Administrative Law Judge, unless otherwise ordered by the
Administrative Law Judge.
(2) Reliance on relevant authorities. The proposed decision must be
supported by citation to relevant authorities and by transcript page
references to any relevant portions of the record. At the same time the
proposed decision is filed, a post-hearing brief may be filed in
support. The post-hearing brief shall be filed either as part of the
same document or in a separate document.
(3) Reply briefs. Reply briefs may be filed within 15 days after
the date on which the parties' proposed decision is due. Reply briefs
must be strictly limited to responding to new matters, issues, or
arguments raised in another party's papers. A party who has not filed a
proposed decision or a post-hearing brief may not file a reply brief.
(4) Simultaneous filing required. Absent a showing of good cause
for the use of another procedure, the Administrative Law Judge shall
not order the filing by any party of any brief or reply brief in
advance of the other party's filing of its brief.
(s) Recommended decision and filing of record. Within 45 days after
expiration of the time allowed for filing reply briefs, the
Administrative Law Judge shall file with and certify to the Secretary
or the Secretary's designee the record of the proceeding and the
decision. The record must include the Administrative Law Judge's
recommended decision, including a determination either that there was
no violation by the person named in the prepenalty notice, or that
there was a violation by the person named in the prepenalty notice, and
the recommended monetary penalty and/or civil forfeiture and/or other
disposition available to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. In
addition to the proposed decision, the record must include all
prehearing and hearing transcripts, exhibits, and rulings, and the
motions, briefs, memoranda, and other supporting papers filed in
connection with the hearing. The Administrative Law Judge shall have
the recommended decision served upon each party.
(t) Exceptions to the recommended decision. When the Administrative
Law Judge has issued his recommended decision, the Administrative Law
Judge or his representative shall contact each party by telephone at
the telephone number provided by each party pursuant to
Sec. 500.703(b)(1)(iii). Within 3 days of telephoning the parties, the
recommended decision shall be mailed by the Administrative Law Judge to
the parties. A party may file written exceptions to the recommended
decision with the Secretary or the Secretary's designee within 30 days
of the date the telephone call is placed by the Administrative Law
Judge or his representative. A supporting brief may be filed at the
time the exceptions are filed.
(u) Final decision. The final decision of the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee shall be based on a review of the proposed
decision and the entire record of the proceeding. The final written
decision shall be provided to all parties.
Sec. 500.707 Judicial review.
Any person may seek judicial review as provided under 5 U.S.C. 702
for a penalty and/or forfeiture imposed pursuant to this part.
Sec. 500.708 Referral to United States Department of Justice;
administrative collection measures.
In the event that the respondent does not pay the penalty imposed
pursuant to this part within 30 days of the mailing of the written
notice of the imposition of the penalty, the matter may be referred for
administrative collection measures or to the United States Department
of Justice for appropriate action to recover the penalty in a civil
suit in a Federal district court.
PART 505--REGULATIONS PROHIBITING TRANSACTIONS INVOLVING THE
SHIPMENT OF CERTAIN MERCHANDISE BETWEEN FOREIGN COUNTRIES
1. The authority citation for part 505 is revised to read as
follows:
Authority: 50 U.S.C. App. 1-44; Pub. L. 101-410, 104 Stat. 890
(28 U.S.C. 2461 note); E.O. 9193, 7 FR 5205, 3 CFR, 1938-1943 Comp.,
p. 1174; E.O. 9989, 13 FR 4891, 3 CFR, 1943-1948 Comp., p. 748.
2. Section 505.50 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 505.50 Penalties.
For provisions relating to civil penalties and civil forfeiture,
see subpart G of part 500 of this chapter.
PART 515--CUBAN ASSETS CONTROL REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 515 is revised to read as
follows:
Authority: 50 U.S.C. App. 1-44; 22 U.S.C. 6001-6010; 22 U.S.C.
6021-6091; 22 U.S.C. 2370(a); Pub. L. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214, 1254
(18 U.S.C. 2332d); Pub. L. 101-410, 104 Stat. 890 (28 U.S.C. 2461
note); E.O. 9193, 7 FR 5205, 3 CFR, 1938-1943 Comp., p. 1174; E.O.
9989, 13 FR 4891, 3 CFR, 1943-1948 Comp., p. 748; Proc. 3447, 27 FR
1085, 3 CFR, 1959-1963 Comp., p. 157; E.O. 12854, 58 FR 36587, 3
CFR, 1993 Comp., p. 614.
2. Subpart G is revised to read as follows:
Subpart G--Penalties
Secs.
515.701 Penalties.
515.702 Prepenalty notice; contents; service.
515.703 Response to prepenalty notice; right to hearing and
prehearing discovery; informal settlement.
515.704 Penalty imposition or withdrawal absent a hearing request.
515.705 Time and opportunity to request a hearing.
515.706 Hearing, discovery, and decision on the record.
515.707 Judicial review.
515.708 Referral to United States Department of Justice;
administrative collection measures.
Subpart G--Penalties
Sec. 515.701 Penalties.
(a) Attention is directed to section 16 of the Trading with the
Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. App. 16), as adjusted pursuant to the Federal
Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-410, as
amended, 28 U.S.C. 2461 note), which provides that:
(1) Persons who willfully violate any provision of that act or any
license, rule, or regulation issued thereunder, and persons who
willfully violate, neglect, or refuse to comply with any order of the
President issued in compliance with the provisions of that act shall,
upon conviction, be fined not more than $1,000,000 or, if an
individual, be fined not more than $100,000 or imprisoned for not more
than 10 years, or both; and an officer, director, or agent of any
corporation who knowingly participates in such violation shall, upon
conviction, be fined not more than $100,000 or imprisoned for not more
than 10 years, or both.
(2) Any property, funds, securities, paper, or other articles or
documents, or any vessel, together with its tackle, apparel, furniture,
and equipment, concerned in a violation of the act may upon conviction
be forfeited to the United States.
(3) The Secretary of the Treasury may impose a civil penalty of not
more than $55,000 per violation on any person who violates any license,
order, or regulation issued under that act.
(4) Any property, funds, securities, papers, or other articles or
documents, or any vessel, together with its tackle, apparel, furniture,
and equipment, that is the subject of a violation subject to a civil
penalty issued pursuant to the act shall, at the discretion of the
Secretary of the Treasury, be forfeited to the United States
Government.
[[Page 6904]]
(b) The criminal penalties provided in the Trading with the Enemy
Act are subject to increase pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3571.
(c) Attention is directed to 18 U.S.C. 1001, which provides that
whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any department or
agency of the United States, knowingly and willfully falsifies,
conceals or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact,
or makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or
representation or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing
the same to contain any false, fictitious or fraudulent statement or
entry, shall be fined under title 18, United States Code, or imprisoned
not more than five years, or both.
Sec. 515.702 Prepenalty notice; contents; service.
(a) When required. If the Director of the Office of Foreign Assets
Control has reasonable cause to believe that there has occurred a
violation of any provision of this part or a violation of the
provisions of any license, ruling, regulation, order, direction or
instruction issued by or pursuant to the direction or authorization of
the Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to this part or otherwise under
the Trading with the Enemy Act, and the Director determines that
further proceedings are warranted, he shall issue to the person
concerned a notice of his intent to impose a monetary penalty and/or
forfeiture. The prepenalty notice may be issued whether or not another
agency has taken any action with respect to this matter.
(b) Contents--(1) Facts of violation. The prepenalty notice shall
describe the violation, specify the laws and regulations allegedly
violated, and state the amount of the proposed monetary penalty and/or
forfeiture.
(2) Respondent's rights--(i) Right to respond. The prepenalty
notice shall also inform the respondent of respondent's right to
respond to the notice within 30 days of the mailing or other service of
the notice pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section, as to why a
monetary penalty and/or forfeiture should not be imposed, or, if
imposed, why it should be in a lesser amount than proposed.
(ii) Right to request a hearing. The prepenalty notice shall also
inform the respondent that, in the response provided for in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) of this section, the respondent may also request a hearing
conducted pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 554-557 to present the respondent's
defenses to the imposition of a penalty and/or forfeiture and to offer
any other information that the respondent believes should be included
in the agency record prior to a final determination concerning the
imposition of a penalty and/or forfeiture. Untimely response
constitutes a waiver of a hearing.
(iii) Right to request discovery prior to hearing. The prepenalty
notice shall also inform the respondent of the right to discovery prior
to a requested hearing. Discovery must be requested in writing in the
response provided for in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, jointly
with respondent's request for a hearing. Untimely response constitutes
a waiver of prehearing discovery.
(c) Service. The prepenalty notice, or any amendment or supplement
thereto, shall be served upon the respondent. Service shall be presumed
completed:
(1) Upon mailing a copy by registered or certified mail, return
receipt requested, addressed to the respondent at the respondent's last
known address; or
(2) Upon presentment of a date-stamped postal receipt by the Office
of Foreign Assets Control with respect to any respondent who has
refused, avoided, or in any way attempted to decline delivery, tender,
or acceptance of the registered or certified letter or has refused to
recover a registered or certified letter served; or
(3) Upon leaving a copy with the respondent or an officer, a
managing or general agent, or any other agent authorized by appointment
or by law to accept or receive service for the respondent, evidenced by
a certificate of service signed by the individual making such service,
stating the method of service and the identity of the individual with
whom the prepenalty notice was left; or
(4) Upon proof of service on a respondent who is not resident in
the United States by any method of service permitted by the law of the
jurisdiction in which the respondent resides or is located, provided
the requirements of such foreign law satisfy due process requirements
under United States law with respect to notice of administrative
proceedings, and where applicable laws or intergovernmental agreements
or understandings make the methods of service set forth in paragraphs
(c)(1) through (3) of this section inappropriate or ineffective for
service upon the nonresident respondent.
Sec. 515.703 Response to prepenalty notice; right to hearing and
prehearing discovery; informal settlement.
(a) Deadline for response. The respondent shall have 30 days from
the date of mailing or other service of the prepenalty notice pursuant
to Sec. 515.702(c) to respond thereto.
(b) Form and contents of response--(1) In general. The written
response need not be in any particular form, but shall contain
information sufficient to indicate that it is in response to the
prepenalty notice. It should be responsive to the allegations contained
therein and set forth the nature of the respondent's defenses.
(i) The response must admit or deny specifically each separate
allegation of violation made in the prepenalty notice. If the
respondent is without knowledge as to an allegation, the response shall
so state, and such statement shall operate as a denial. Failure to
deny, controvert, or object to any allegation will be deemed an
admission of that allegation.
(ii) The response must also set forth any additional or new matter
or arguments the respondent seeks, or shall seek, to use in support of
all defenses or claims for mitigation. Any defense or partial defense
not specifically set forth in the response shall be deemed waived, and
evidence thereon may be refused, except for good cause shown.
(iii) The response must also accurately state, for each respondent,
the respondent's full name and address for future service, including
current telephone number and area code. Respondents are responsible for
providing timely written notice to all interested parties of any
subsequent changes in the information provided.
(2) Request for hearing. Any request for an administrative hearing
and prehearing discovery shall be made in the written response made
pursuant to this section and within the 30-day time period specified in
Sec. 515.705(a).
(3) Informal settlement. In addition or as an alternative to a
written response to a prepenalty notice pursuant to this section, the
respondent or respondent's representative may contact the Office of
Foreign Assets Control as advised in the prepenalty notice to propose
the settlement of allegations contained in the prepenalty notice and
related matters. In the event of settlement at the prepenalty stage,
the prepenalty notice will be withdrawn, the respondent is not required
to take a written position on allegations contained in the prepenalty
notice, and the Office of Foreign Assets Control will make no final
determination as to whether a violation occurred. The amount accepted
in settlement of allegations in a prepenalty notice may vary from the
civil penalty that might finally be imposed in the event of a formal
determination of violation. In the event no settlement is reached, the
30-day period specified in paragraph (a) of this
[[Page 6905]]
section for written response to the prepenalty notice remains in effect
unless additional time is granted by the Office of Foreign Assets
Control. Untimely response constitutes a waiver of a hearing and
prehearing discovery.
Sec. 515.704 Penalty imposition or withdrawal absent a hearing
request.
(a) No violation. If, after considering any presentations made in
response to the prepenalty notice and any relevant facts, the Director
determines that there was no violation by the respondent named in the
prepenalty notice, the Director promptly shall notify the respondent in
writing of that determination and that no civil monetary penalty or
civil forfeiture pursuant to this subpart will be imposed.
(b) Violation. If, after considering any presentations made in
response to the prepenalty notice and any relevant facts, the Director
determines that there was a violation by the respondent named in the
prepenalty notice, the Director promptly shall issue a written notice
of the imposition by the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the civil
monetary penalty and/or civil forfeiture and/or other available
disposition on that respondent.
(1) The penalty/forfeiture notice shall inform the respondent that
payment of the assessed penalty must be made within 30 days of the
mailing of the penalty notice.
(2) The penalty/forfeiture notice shall inform the respondent of
the requirement to furnish respondent's taxpayer identification number
pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 7701 and that the Department intends to use such
number for the purposes of collecting and reporting on any delinquent
penalty amount in the event of a failure to pay the penalty imposed.
Sec. 515.705 Time and opportunity to request a hearing.
(a) Deadline for hearing request. Within 30 days of the date of
mailing or other service of the prepenalty notice pursuant to
Sec. 515.702(c), the respondent may file a written request for an
agency hearing conducted pursuant to this section, to present the
respondent's defenses to the imposition of a penalty and/or forfeiture,
and to offer any other information found to be admissible into the
agency record prior to a final determination concerning the imposition
of a penalty and/or forfeiture.
(b) Content of written response. If an agency hearing is requested
by the respondent or by the respondent's counsel, the written hearing
request must be accompanied by a written response to the prepenalty
notice containing the information required by Sec. 515.703(b)(1)(i)
through (iii). An untimely hearing request or written response to the
prepenalty notice constitutes a waiver of a hearing.
(c) Signature of filings. All hearing requests, motions, responses,
interrogatories, requests for deposition transcripts, requests for
protective orders, and all other filings relating to requests for and
responses to discovery or pertaining to the hearing process, must be
signed by each requesting party and, if represented, by each party's
counsel.
Sec. 515.706 Hearing, discovery, and decision on the record.
(a) Notice of hearing. (1) Any respondent requesting a hearing
shall receive notice of the time and place of the hearing at the
service address provided pursuant to Sec. 515.703(b)(1)(iii). Requests
to change the time and place of a hearing may be submitted to the
Administrative Law Judge, who may modify the original notice or
subsequently set hearing dates. All requests for any change in time and
place of a hearing must be received in the Administrative Law Judge's
chambers and served upon all interested parties no later than 10
working days before the scheduled hearing date.
(2) The hearing shall be conducted in a manner consistent with 5
U.S.C. 554-557, pursuant to section 1710(c) of the Cuban Democracy Act
of 1992 (22 U.S.C. 6001-6010), and section 16 of the Trading with the
Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. App. 16).
(b) Powers. The Administrative Law Judge shall have all powers
necessary to conduct the hearing, consistent with 5 U.S.C. 554-557,
including the following powers:
(1) To administer oaths and affirmations;
(2) To require production of records or any information relative to
any act or transaction subject to this part, including the imposition
of sanctions available under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2)
(Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2), 28 U.S.C.) for a party's failure to comply
with discovery requests;
(3) To receive relevant and material evidence and to rule upon the
admission of evidence and offers of proof;
(4) To take or cause depositions to be taken as authorized by this
part;
(5) To regulate the course of the hearing and the conduct of the
parties and their counsel;
(6) To hold scheduling or prehearing conferences as deemed
necessary;
(7) To consider and rule upon all procedural and other motions
appropriate in an adjudicatory proceeding, provided that only the
Secretary or the Secretary's designee shall have the power to grant any
motion to dismiss the proceeding or to decide any other motion that
results in a final determination of the merits of the proceeding;
(8) To prepare and present to the Secretary or to the Secretary's
designee a recommended decision as provided in paragraph (s) of this
section;
(9) To recuse himself on motion made by a party or on the
Administrative Law Judge's own motion;
(10) To establish time, place and manner limitations on the
attendance of the public and the media for any public hearing;
(11) To perform all necessary or appropriate measures to discharge
the duties of an Administrative Law Judge; and
(12) To set fees and expenses for witnesses, including expert
witnesses.
(c) Appearance and practice in a civil penalty hearing--(1)
Appearance before an Administrative Law Judge by counsel. Any member in
good standing of the bar of the highest court of any state,
commonwealth, possession, or territory of the United States, or the
District of Columbia may represent respondents upon written request in
a civil penalty hearing. A copy of the document appointing the counsel
shall be presented to the Administrative Law Judge upon the first
appearance of counsel.
(2) Appearance before an Administrative Law Judge by a non-lawyer.
A respondent may appear on his own behalf; a member of a partnership
may represent the partnership; a duly authorized officer, director, or
employee of any corporation may represent that corporation in a civil
penalty hearing.
(3) Office of Foreign Assets Control representation. The Office of
Foreign Assets Control shall be represented by the Chief Counsel of the
Office of Foreign Assets Control or by the Chief Counsel's designee.
(d) Conflicts of interest--(1) Conflict of interest in
representation. No individual shall appear as counsel for a party in a
proceeding conducted pursuant to this subpart if it reasonably appears
that such representation may be materially limited by that counsel's
responsibilities to a third person, or by counsel's own interests.
(2) Corrective Measures. The Administrative Law Judge may take
corrective measures at any stage of a proceeding to cure a conflict of
interest in representation, including the
[[Page 6906]]
issuance of an order limiting the scope of representation or
disqualifying an individual from appearing in a representative capacity
for the duration of the proceeding.
(e) Ex parte communications--(1) Definition. The term ex parte
communication means any material oral or written communication not on
the public record concerning the merits of an adjudicatory proceeding
with respect to which reasonable prior notice to all parties is not
given, on any material matter or proceeding covered by these
regulations that takes place between:
(i) A party to the proceeding, a party's counsel, or any other
individual; and
(ii) The Administrative Law Judge handling that proceeding, or the
Secretary, or the Secretary's designee.
(2) Exceptions. (i) A request for the status of the proceeding does
not constitute an ex parte communication; and
(ii) Settlement inquiries and discussions do not constitute ex
parte communications.
(3) Prohibition on ex parte communications. From the time a
respondent requests a hearing until the date that the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee issues a final decision, no party, interested
person, or counsel therefor shall knowingly make or cause to be made an
ex parte communication. The Administrative Law Judge, the Secretary,
and the Secretary's designee shall not knowingly make or cause to be
made to a party, or to any interested person or counsel therefor, any
ex parte communication.
(4) Procedure upon occurrence of ex parte communication. If an ex
parte communication is received by the Administrative Law Judge, the
Administrative Law Judge shall cause all such written communication
(or, if the communication is oral, a memorandum stating the substance
of the communication) to be placed on the record of the proceeding and
served on all parties. All parties to the proceeding shall have an
opportunity, within 10 days of the receipt of service of the notice or
of receipt of a memorandum of the ex parte communication, to file
responses thereto and to recommend any sanctions, in accordance with
paragraph (e)(5) of this section, appropriate under the circumstances,
or may file an interlocutory appeal with the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee.
(5) Sanctions. Any respondent, respondent's counsel, or other party
who makes a prohibited ex parte communication, or who encourages or
solicits another to make any such communication, may be subject to any
appropriate sanction or sanctions imposed by the Administrative Law
Judge for good cause shown, or that may be imposed upon interlocutory
appeal taken to the Secretary or the Secretary's designee, including,
but not limited to, exclusion from the hearing and an adverse ruling on
the issue which is the subject of the prohibited communication.
(f) Time limits. Except as provided elsewhere in this subpart, the
Administrative Law Judge shall establish all time limits for filings
with regard to hearings conducted pursuant to this subpart, except for
decisions on interlocutory appeals filed with the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee.
(g) Interlocutory Appeal. When exceptions, requests for extensions,
or motions, including motions for summary disposition, are denied by
the Administrative Law Judge, interlocutory appeals may be taken to the
Secretary or to the Secretary's designee for a decision.
(1) Interlocutory appeals must be filed no later than 10 working
days after the matter being appealed has been decided in writing by the
Administrative Law Judge.
(2) Interlocutory appeals must be filed with the Secretary's
Office, U.S. Treasury Department, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20220, with certified copies served upon the
Administrative Law Judge and the Office of Chief Counsel for the Office
of Foreign Assets Control.
(h) Opportunity for settlement. Any party may, at any time during
the hearing, unilaterally submit written offers or proposals for
settlement of a proceeding to the Secretary or the Secretary's
designee, at the address listed in paragraph (g)(2) of this section.
Submission of a written settlement offer does not provide a basis for
adjourning or otherwise delaying all or any portion of a hearing. No
settlement offer or proposal, or any subsequent negotiation or
resolution, is admissible as evidence in any hearing before this
tribunal.
(i) Failure to appear. The unexcused failure of a respondent to
appear in person at a hearing or to have duly authorized counsel appear
in respondent's place, constitutes a waiver of the respondent's right
to a hearing and is deemed an admission of the violation alleged.
Without further proceedings or notice to the respondent, the
Administrative Law Judge shall file with the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee a recommended decision finding a violation and the
amount of penalty as indicated in the prepenalty notice.
(j) Motions--(1) Written motions. Except as otherwise specifically
provided herein, an application or request for an order or ruling must
be made by written motion, in typed format.
(i) All written motions must state with particularity the relief
sought and must be accompanied by a proposed order.
(ii) No oral argument may be held on written motions unless
directed by the Administrative Law Judge. Written memoranda, briefs,
affidavits, and other relevant material and documents may be filed in
support of or in opposition to a motion.
(2) Oral motions. A motion may be made orally on the record unless
the Administrative Law Judge directs that such motion be made in
writing.
(3) Filing of motions--(i) In general. Motions must be filed with
the Administrative Law Judge, and with the Office of Chief Counsel,
Office of Foreign Assets Control, U.S. Treasury Department, 1500
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20220, with the envelope
prominently marked, ``Urgent: Annex--Room 3133,'' unless otherwise
directed by the Administrative Law Judge, or agreed to by Chief
Counsel.
(ii) Interlocutory appeals. Motions related to interlocutory
appeals to the Secretary or the Secretary's designee must be sent by
fax (fax number: 202/622-1188) and filed with the Secretary, U.S.
Treasury Department, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC
20220, marked ``Attention: OFAC Interlocutory Appeal.''
(4) Responses. (i) Any interested party may file a written response
to a motion within 20 days of the date of mailing, by registered or
certified letter service and pursuant to these regulations. If directed
by the Administrative Law Judge response time may be shortened or
extended. The Administrative Law Judge may allow each party to file a
response before finally ruling upon any oral or written motion. The
Administrative Law Judge may allow a rejoinder to responses for good
cause shown. If a rejoinder is permitted, it must be filed within 15
days of the date the response was filed and served upon all parties.
(ii) The failure of a party to oppose a written motion or an oral
motion made on the record is deemed to be consent by that party to the
entry of an order substantially in the form of the order accompanying
the motion.
(5) Dilatory motions. Frivolous, dilatory, or repetitive motions
are prohibited. The filing of such motions may form the basis for
sanctions.
[[Page 6907]]
(k) Discovery--(1) In general. The availability of information and
documents through discovery is subject to the agency's assertion of
privileges available to OFAC and/or to the Treasury and to the
application of all exemptions afforded the agency pursuant to the
Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(1) through (9)) and the
Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) to all facets of discovery, including
interrogatories, depositions that seek the release of trade secrets,
proprietary materials, third party confidential and/or commercially
sensitive material, placement of information, documents and/or
materials under seal and/or protective order, and interlocutory appeal
to the Secretary or the Secretary's designee from any decision of the
Administrative Law Judge.
(2) Types of discovery. Parties may obtain discovery by one or more
of the following methods: depositions upon oral examination or written
questions; written interrogatories; production of documents or other
evidence for inspection; and requests for admission. All depositions of
federal employees must take place in Washington, DC, at the U.S.
Treasury Department or at the location where the federal employee to be
deposed performs his duties, whichever the federal employee's
supervisor or Chief Counsel shall deem appropriate. All depositions of
federal employees shall be held at a mutually agreed upon date and
time, and for a mutually agreed upon length of time.
(3) Interrogatories. Respondent's interrogatories must be served
upon the Chief Counsel within 20 days of respondent's written request
for a hearing. Chief Counsel must serve Chief Counsel's interrogatories
within 30 days of the receipt of service of respondent's
interrogatories or within 30 days of the receipt of respondent's
written request for a hearing if no interrogatories are filed by
respondent by that time. Parties have 30 days to respond to
interrogatories from the date interrogatories are received.
Interrogatories shall be limited to 20 questions only. Each subpart,
section, or other designation of a part of a question shall be counted
as one complete question in computing the permitted 20 question total.
Where more than 20 questions are served upon a party, the receiving
party may determine which of the 20 questions the receiving party shall
answer.
(4) Scope. Parties may obtain discovery regarding any matter not
privileged, which has material relevance to the merits of the pending
action. It is not a ground for objection that the information sought
will be inadmissible at the hearing if the information sought appears
reasonably calculated to lead to discovery of admissible evidence. The
Administrative Law Judge may make any order which justice requires to
ensure that requests are not unreasonable, oppressive, excessive in
scope or unduly burdensome, including the issuance of an order to show
cause why a particular discovery request is justified upon the motion
of the objecting party.
(5) Privileged matter. Privileged documents are not discoverable.
Privileges include, inter alia, the attorney-client privilege, attorney
work-product privilege, any government's or government agency's
deliberative-process or classified information privilege, including
materials classified pursuant to Executive Order 12958 (3 CFR, 1995
Comp., p. 333) and any future Executive orders that may be issued
relating to the treatment of national security information, and all
materials and information exempted from release to the public pursuant
to the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) and the Freedom of Information Act
(5 U.S.C. 552(b)(1) through (9)).
(6) Updating discovery. Whenever a party receives new or additional
information or documentation, all information produced, and all
information required to be provided pursuant to the discovery and
hearing process, must automatically be updated. The Administrative Law
Judge may impose sanctions for failure to update, including prohibiting
opposition to claims or defenses raised, striking pleadings or staying
proceedings, dismissing the action or any part thereof, rendering a
judgment by default, and holding a party in contempt.
(7) Time limits. All discovery, including all responses to
discovery requests, shall be completed no later than 20 days prior to
the date scheduled for the commencement of the hearing. No exceptions
to this time limit shall be permitted, unless the Administrative Law
Judge finds on the record that good cause exists for waiving the
requirements of this paragraph (k)(7).
(l) Summary disposition--(1) In general. The Administrative Law
Judge shall recommend that the Secretary or the Secretary's designee
issue a final order granting a motion for summary disposition if the
facts of the record show that:
(i) There is no genuine issue as to any material fact; and
(ii) The moving party is entitled to a decision in its favor as a
matter of law.
(2) Filing of motions and responses. (i) Any party who believes
that there is no genuine issue of material fact to be determined and
that he or she is entitled to a decision as a matter of law may move at
any time for summary disposition in its favor of all or any part of the
proceeding. Any party, within 20 days after service of such a motion,
or within such time period as allowed by the Administrative Law Judge,
may file a response to such motion.
(ii) A motion for summary disposition must be accompanied by a
statement of the material facts as to which the moving party contends
there is no genuine issue. Such motion must be supported by documentary
evidence, which may take the form of admissions in pleadings,
stipulations, depositions, transcripts, affidavits, and any other
evidentiary materials that the moving party contends support his
position. The motion must also be accompanied by a brief containing the
points and authorities in support of the moving party's arguments. Any
party opposing a motion for summary disposition must file a statement
setting forth those material facts as to which he or she contends a
genuine dispute exists. Such opposition must be supported by evidence
of the same type as that submitted with the motion for summary
disposition and a brief containing the points and authorities in
support of the contention that summary disposition would be
inappropriate.
(3) Hearing on motion. At the request of any party or on his own
motion, the Administrative Law Judge may hear oral argument on the
motion for summary disposition.
(4) Decision on motion. Following receipt of a motion for summary
disposition and all responses thereto, the Administrative Law Judge
shall determine whether the moving party is entitled to summary
disposition. If the Administrative Law Judge determines that summary
disposition is warranted, the Administrative Law Judge shall submit a
recommended decision to that effect to the Secretary. If the
Administrative Law Judge finds that no party is entitled to summary
disposition, he or she shall make a ruling denying the motion.
(5) Interlocutory appeal. Following receipt of the Administrative
Law Judge's recommended decision relating to summary disposition, each
party has the right to an interlocutory appeal to the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee, within 20 days immediately following the
Administrative Law Judge's decision.
(m) Partial summary disposition. If the Administrative Law Judge
[[Page 6908]]
determines that a party is entitled to summary disposition as to
certain claims only, the Administrative Law Judge shall defer
submission of a recommended decision as to those claims. A hearing on
the remaining issues must be ordered and those claims for which the
Administrative Law Judge has determined that summary disposition is
warranted will be addressed in the recommended decision filed at the
conclusion of the hearing.
(n) Prehearing conferences and submissions--(1) Prehearing
conferences. The Administrative Law Judge may, on his own motion, or at
the request of any party for good cause shown, direct counsel for the
parties to meet with him (in person, by telephone, or by
teleconference) at a prehearing conference to address any or all of the
following:
(i) Simplification and clarification of the issues;
(ii) Stipulations, admissions of fact, and the contents,
authenticity and admissibility into evidence of documents;
(iii) Matters of which official notice may be taken;
(iv) Limitation of the number of witnesses;
(v) Summary disposition of any or all issues;
(vi) Resolution of discovery issues or disputes; and
(vii) Such other matters as may aid in the orderly disposition of
the proceeding.
(2) Prehearing orders. At, or within a reasonable time following
the conclusion of, any prehearing conference, the Administrative Law
Judge shall serve on each party an order setting forth any agreements
reached and any procedural determinations made.
(3) Prehearing submissions. Within 40 days of the receipt of
respondent's request for a hearing or at a time set by the
Administrative Law Judge, the Office of Foreign Assets Control shall
serve on the respondent and upon the Administrative Law Judge, the
following:
(i) Stipulations of fact, if any;
(ii) A list of the exhibits to be introduced at the hearing along
with a copy of each exhibit; and
(iii) A list of witnesses to be called to testify at the hearing,
including name and address of each witness and a short summary of the
expected testimony of each witness.
(4) Deadline for respondent's and other interested parties'
submissions. Unless for good cause shown the Administrative Law Judge
permits an extension of time to file, the respondent and other
interested parties shall have 20 days from the date of the submission
by the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the items set forth in
paragraph (n)(3) of this section, and/or of another interested party's
service of items set forth in this paragraph (n)(4), to serve upon the
Administrative Law Judge and all parties, the following:
(i) Its response to stipulations of fact, if any;
(ii) A list of the exhibits to be introduced at the hearing along
with a copy of each exhibit; and
(iii) A list of witnesses to be called to testify at the hearing,
including the name and address of each witness and a short summary of
the expected testimony of each witness.
(5) Effect of failure to comply. No witness may testify and no
exhibits may be introduced at the hearing if such witness or exhibit is
not listed in the prehearing submissions pursuant to paragraphs (n)(3)
and (n)(4) of this section, except for good cause shown.
(o) Public hearings--(1) In general. All hearings shall be open to
the public, unless the Administrative Law Judge, at his discretion,
determines at any time prior to or during the hearing, that holding an
open hearing would be contrary to the public interest. Within 20 days
of service of the notice, any party may file with the Administrative
Law Judge a request for a closed hearing, and any party may file a
pleading in reply to such a request. Failure to file a request or a
reply is deemed a waiver of any objections regarding whether the
hearing will be public or closed.
(2) Filing document under seal. (i) The Office of Foreign Assets
Control may file any documents or any part of a document under seal if
disclosure of the document would be inconsistent with the protection of
the public interest or if justice requires protection of any person,
including a source or a party, from annoyance, threat, oppression, or
undue burden or expense, or the disclosure of the information would be,
or might reasonably lead to a disclosure, contrary to Executive Order
12958 or other Executive orders concerning disclosure of information,
U.S. Treasury Department regulations, the Privacy Act, or the Freedom
of Information Act.
(ii) The Administrative Law Judge shall also safeguard the security
and integrity of any documents under seal and shall take all
appropriate steps to preserve the confidentiality of such documents or
any parts thereof, including closing portions of the hearing to the
public. Release of any information under seal, in any form, or in any
manner, is subject to the same sanctions and the exercise of the same
authorities provided with respect to ex parte communications under
paragraph (e)(5) of this section.
(iii) Should the Administrative Law Judge deny placement of any
documents under seal or under protective order, any interested party,
and any person whose documents or materials are at issue, may file an
interlocutory appeal to the Secretary or the Secretary's designee. In
such cases the Administrative Law Judge must not release or expose any
of the records or documents in question to the public or to any other
parties for a period of 20 days from the date of the Administrative Law
Judge's ruling, in order to permit a petitioner the opportunity to
either withdraw the records and documents or to file an interlocutory
appeal with the Secretary or the Secretary's designee requesting an
order that the records be placed under seal.
(iv) Upon settlement, final decision, or motion to the
Administrative Law Judge for good cause shown, all materials (including
all copies) under seal or protective order shall be returned to the
respective parties, except when it may be necessary to retain a record
until the judicial process is completed.
(v) Written notice of all requests for release of protected
documents or materials shall be given to all interested parties
registered with the Administrative Law Judge at least 20 days prior to
any permitted release and prior to any access not specifically
authorized under the protective order. A copy of all requests for
information, including the name, address, and telephone number of the
requester, shall be provided to the petitioner. Each request for access
to protected material must also provide the names, addresses, and
telephone numbers of all persons represented by the requester,
including those on whose behalf the requester seeks access to protected
information. The Administrative Law Judge shall impose sanctions
provided under paragraphs (e)(4) and (5) of this section for failure to
provide this information.
(p) Conduct of hearings--(1) In general--(i) Overview. Hearings
shall be conducted to provide a fair and expeditious presentation of
the relevant disputed issues and facts. Each party has the right to
present its case or defense by oral and documentary evidence and to
conduct such cross examination as may be required for full disclosure
of the relevant facts.
(ii) Order of hearing. The Office of Foreign Assets Control shall
present its case-in-chief first, unless otherwise ordered in advance by
the Administrative Law Judge or otherwise
[[Page 6909]]
expressly specified by law or regulation. The Office of Foreign Assets
Control shall be the first party to present an opening statement and a
closing statement and may make a rebuttal statement after the
respondent's closing statement.
(iii) Stipulations. Unless the Administrative Law Judge directs
otherwise, all stipulations of fact and law previously agreed upon by
the parties, and all documents, the admissibility of which has been
previously stipulated, will be admitted into evidence upon commencement
of the hearing.
(2) Transcript. A record of the hearing shall be made by manual or
electronic means, including through the use of audio recorded diskettes
or audio-visual cassettes, and transcribed unless the Administrative
Law Judge rules otherwise. The transcript shall be made available to
any party upon payment of the cost thereof. The Administrative Law
Judge shall have authority to order the record corrected, either upon a
motion to correct, upon a motion to stipulate by the parties for good
cause shown, or following notice to the parties upon the Administrative
Law Judge's own motion. The Administrative Law Judge shall serve notice
upon all parties, at the addresses provided by the parties pursuant to
Sec. 515.703(b)(1)(iii), that the certified transcript, together with
all hearing exhibits and exhibits introduced but not admitted into
evidence at the hearing, has been filed with the Administrative Law
Judge.
(q) Evidence--(1) Admissibility. (i) Except as is otherwise set
forth in this section, evidence that is relevant and material is
admissible to the fullest extent authorized by the Administrative
Procedure Act and other applicable law.
(ii) Evidence may be excluded if it is misleading or its probative
value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice or
confusion of the issues, considerations of undue delay or waste of
time, or of needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
(iii) Evidence that would be inadmissible under the Federal Rules
of Evidence need not be deemed or ruled to be inadmissible in a
proceeding conducted pursuant to this subpart if such evidence is
relevant and material, and not unduly repetitive.
(2) Official notice. (i) Official notice may be taken of any
material fact which may be judicially noticed by a United States
district court.
(ii) All matters officially noticed by the Administrative Law Judge
shall appear on the record.
(iii) If official notice is requested or taken of any material
fact, the parties, upon timely request, shall be afforded an
opportunity to object.
(3) Duplicate copies. A duplicate copy of a document is admissible
to the same extent as the original, unless a genuine issue is raised as
to whether the copy is in some material respect not a true and legible
copy of the original.
(4) Admissibility of evidence. Objections to the admissibility of
evidence must be timely made and rulings on all objections must appear
on the record. Failure to object to admission of evidence or to any
ruling constitutes a waiver of the objection.
(5) Rejected exhibits. The Administrative Law Judge shall retain
rejected exhibits, adequately marked for identification, in the event
of an interlocutory appeal.
(6) Stipulations. The parties may stipulate as to any relevant
matters of fact or to the authenticity of any relevant documents. Such
stipulations may be received into evidence at a hearing and are binding
on the parties with respect to the matters therein stipulated.
(7) Depositions of unavailable witnesses. If a witness is
unavailable to testify at a hearing, and that witness has testified in
a deposition within the United States to which all parties to the
proceeding have received timely notice and an opportunity to
participate, a party may offer as evidence all or any part of the
transcript of the deposition, including deposition exhibits. All costs
of depositions shall be borne by the party requesting the deposition.
(r) Proposed decision and supporting briefs--(1) Proposed
decisions. Any party may file with the Administrative Law Judge a
proposed decision within 30 days after the parties have received notice
that the transcript has been filed with the Administrative Law Judge,
unless otherwise ordered by the Administrative Law Judge.
(2) Reliance on relevant authorities. The proposed decision must be
supported by citation to relevant authorities and by transcript page
references to any relevant portions of the record. At the same time the
proposed decision is filed, a post-hearing brief may be filed in
support. The post-hearing brief shall be filed either as part of the
same document or in a separate document.
(3) Reply briefs. Reply briefs may be filed within 15 days after
the date on which the parties' proposed decision is due. Reply briefs
must be strictly limited to responding to new matters, issues, or
arguments raised in another party's papers. A party who has not filed a
proposed decision or a post-hearing brief may not file a reply brief.
(4) Simultaneous filing required. Absent a showing of good cause
for the use of another procedure, the Administrative Law Judge shall
not order the filing by any party of any brief or reply brief in
advance of the other party's filing of its brief.
(s) Recommended decision and filing of record. Within 45 days after
expiration of the time allowed for filing reply briefs, the
Administrative Law Judge shall file with and certify to the Secretary
or the Secretary's designee the record of the proceeding and the
decision. The record must include the Administrative Law Judge's
recommended decision, including a determination either that there was
no violation by the person named in the prepenalty notice, or that
there was a violation by the person named in the prepenalty notice, and
the recommended monetary penalty and/or civil forfeiture and/or other
disposition available to the Office of Foreign Assets Control. In
addition to the proposed decision, the record must include all
prehearing and hearing transcripts, exhibits, and rulings, and the
motions, briefs, memoranda, and other supporting papers filed in
connection with the hearing. The Administrative Law Judge shall have
the recommended decision served upon each party.
(t) Exceptions to the recommended decision. When the Administrative
Law Judge has issued his recommended decision, the Administrative Law
Judge or his representative shall contact each party by telephone at
the telephone number provided by each party pursuant to
Sec. 515.703(b)(1)(iii). Within 3 days of telephoning the parties, the
recommended decision shall be mailed by the Administrative Law Judge to
the parties. A party may file written exceptions to the recommended
decision with the Secretary or the Secretary's designee within 30 days
of the date the telephone call is placed by the Administrative Law
Judge or his representative. A supporting brief may be filed at the
time the exceptions are filed.
(u) Final decision. The final decision of the Secretary or the
Secretary's designee shall be based on a review of the proposed
decision and the entire record of the proceeding. The final written
decision shall be provided to all parties.
Sec. 515.707 Judicial review.
Any person may seek judicial review as provided under 5 U.S.C. 702
for a penalty and/or forfeiture imposed pursuant to this part.
[[Page 6910]]
Sec. 515.708 Referral to United States Department of Justice;
administrative collection measures.
In the event that the respondent does not pay the penalty imposed
pursuant to this part within 30 days of the mailing of the written
notice of the imposition of the penalty, the matter may be referred for
administrative collection measures or to the United States Department
of Justice for appropriate action to recover the penalty in a civil
suit in a Federal district court.
Dated: December 23, 1996.
R. Richard Newcomb,
Director, Office of Foreign Assets Control.
Approved: December 31, 1996.
James E. Johnson,
Assistant Secretary (Enforcement).
[FR Doc. 97-3537 Filed 2-13-97; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-25-F