95-11492. International Trade Commission, Investigations Relating to Potential Breaches of Administrative Protective Orders, Sanctions Imposed for Actual Violations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 90 (Wednesday, May 10, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 24880-24884]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-11492]
    
    
    
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    INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION
    
    
    International Trade Commission, Investigations Relating to 
    Potential Breaches of Administrative Protective Orders, Sanctions 
    Imposed for Actual Violations
    
    AGENCY: U.S. International Trade Commission.
    
    ACTION: Summary of Commission practice relating to administrative 
    protective orders.
    
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    SUMMARY: This notice provides a summary by the International Trade 
    Commission (Commission) of its investigations of (1) breaches of 
    administrative protective orders (APOs) issued in connection with 
    investigations under Title VII and Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 
    1930, and (2) certain violations of the Commission's rules.
        This notice is intended to inform the public of the Commission's 
    experience with APO breaches. The Commission also intends that this 
    notice will educate and alert representatives of parties to Commission 
    proceedings as to some specific types of APO breaches encountered by 
    the Commission. This notice is illustrative only and does not limit the 
    Commission's rules or standard APO. The notice does not provide an 
    exclusive list of conduct that will be deemed to be a breach of the 
    Commission's APOs, and does not indicate how the Commission will rule 
    in future cases.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elizabeth C. Rose, Esq., Office of the 
    General Counsel, U.S. International Trade Commission, telephone 202-
    205-3113.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The discussion below illustrates APO breach 
    investigations that the Commission has completed including a 
    description of actions taken in response to breaches. The discussion 
    covers breach investigations completed during 1994 with respect to 
    antidumping and countervailing duty cases. Also discussed are the 
    Commission's investigations completed during 1994 of possible 
    violations of Commission rule 207.3, commonly known as the ``one day 
    rule.'' In the interest of providing as much information to 
    practitioners as possible on APO practice, this notice also discusses 
    breach investigations completed during 1994 with respect to 
    investigations under section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930.
        The Commission periodically reports a summary of its actions in 
    response to violations of Commission APOs in an effort to educate those 
    obtaining access to business proprietary information (BPI) under an APO 
    of the common problems encountered in handling BPI and confidential 
    business information (CBI). This is the fifth notice of its kind, the 
    previous ones having been published at 56 FR 4846 (Feb. 6, 1991), 57 FR 
    12335 (Apr. 9, 1992), 58 FR 21991 (Apr. 26, 1993), and 59 FR 16834 
    (Apr. 8, 1994). The Commission intends to publish summaries at least 
    annually, and more frequently as appropriate.
        As part of the effort to educate practitioners about APO practice, 
    the Commission's Secretary issued in September 1991 An Introduction to 
    Administrative Protective Order Practice in Antidumping and 
    Countervailing Duty Investigations. This document is available upon 
    request from the Office of the Secretary, U.S. International Trade 
    Commission, 500 E Street, SW, Washington, DC 20436, telephone 202-205-
    2000.
    
    I. Title VII Administrative Protective Orders
    
    A. In General
    
        APOs are issued in Commission investigations under Title VII of the 
    Tariff Act of 1930 to provide access to BPI to certain party 
    representatives under conditions designed to protect the 
    confidentiality of such information. The [[Page 24881]] Commission is 
    required to disclose under APO to the authorized representatives of 
    interested parties who are parties to an investigation BPI collected by 
    the Commission in the course of such investigations. 19 U.S.C. 1677f. 
    The Commission has implemented procedures governing this disclosure, 
    which is accomplished under an APO issued by the Secretary to the 
    Commission. 19 CFR 207.7. An important provision of the Commission's 
    rules relating to APOs is the ``one day rule'' that provides parties 
    with an extra day in which to file the public version of certain 
    submissions containing BPI. 19 CFR 207.3. The one day rule, which also 
    permits correction of the bracketing of BPI during that extra day, was 
    intended to reduce the incidence of APO breaches caused by inadequate 
    bracketing and improper placement of BPI. The Commission urges parties 
    to make use of the rule.
        The Commission Secretary provides BPI only to ``authorized 
    applicants'' who agree to be bound by the terms and conditions of an 
    APO. The Commission is currently revising its standard APO forms for 
    antidumping and countervailing duty investigations to reflect recent 
    regulatory changes and Commission practice. The Commission has also 
    created a new APO form for use in section 201 investigations. The 
    standard APO form for antidumping and countervailing duty 
    investigations issued by the Commission in 1994 required the applicant 
    to swear that he or she would:
        (1) Not divulge any of the BPI obtained under the APO and not 
    otherwise available to him, to any person other than
        (i) Personnel of the Commission concerned with the investigation,
        (ii) The person or agency from whom the BPI was obtained,
        (iii) A person whose application for disclosure of BPI under the 
    APO has been granted by the Secretary, and
        (iv) Other persons, such as paralegals and clerical staff, who (a) 
    are employed or supervised by and under the direction and control of 
    the authorized applicant or another authorized applicant in the same 
    firm whose application has been granted; (b) have a need thereof in 
    connection with the investigation; (c) are not involved in competitive 
    decision-making for an interested party which is a party to the 
    investigation; and (d) have submitted to the Secretary a signed 
    Acknowledgment for Clerical Personnel in the form attached hereto (the 
    authorized applicant shall also sign such acknowledgment and will be 
    deemed responsible for such persons' compliance with the APO);
        (2) Use such BPI solely for the purposes of the above-captioned 
    Commission investigation or for judicial or binational panel review of 
    such Commission investigation;
        (3) Not consult with any person not described in paragraph (1) 
    concerning BPI disclosed under the APO without first having received 
    the written consent of the Secretary and the party or the attorney of 
    the party from whom such BPI was obtained;
        (4) Whenever materials (e.g., documents, computer disks, etc.) 
    containing such BPI are not being used, store such material in a locked 
    file cabinet, vault, safe, or other suitable container (N.B.: storage 
    of BPI on so-called hard disk computer media is to be avoided, because 
    mere erasure of data from such media may not irrecoverably destroy the 
    BPI and may result in violation of paragraph C of the APO);
        (5) Serve all materials containing BPI disclosed under the APO as 
    directed by the Secretary and pursuant to section 207.7(f) of the 
    Commission's rules;
        (6) Transmit each document containing BPI disclosed under the APO:
        (i) with a cover sheet identifying the document as containing BPI,
        (ii) with all BPI enclosed in brackets and each page warning that 
    the document contains BPI,
        (iii) if the document is to be filed by a deadline, with each page 
    marked ``Bracketing of BPI not final for one business day after date of 
    filing,'' and
        (iv) if by mail, within two envelopes, the inner one sealed and 
    marked ``Business Proprietary Information--To be opened only by [name 
    of recipient]'', and the outer one sealed and not marked as containing 
    BPI;
        (7) Comply with the provisions of the APO and section 207.7 of the 
    Commission's rules;
        (8) Make true and accurate representations in the authorized 
    applicant's application and promptly notify the Secretary of any 
    changes that occur after the submission of the application and that 
    affect the representations made in the application (e.g., change in 
    personnel assigned to the investigation);
        (9) Report promptly and confirm in writing to the Secretary any 
    possible breach of the APO; and
        (10) Acknowledge that breach of the APO may subject the authorized 
    applicant and other persons to such sanctions as the Commission deems 
    appropriate, including the administrative sanctions set out in the APO.
        The APO further provides that breach of the protective order may 
    subject an applicant to:
        (1) Disbarment from practice in any capacity before the Commission 
    along with such person's partners, associates, employer, and employees, 
    for up to seven years following publication of a determination that the 
    order has been breached;
        (2) Referral to the United States Attorney;
        (3) In the case of an attorney, accountant, or other professional, 
    referral to the ethics panel of the appropriate professional 
    association; and
        (4) Such other administrative sanctions as the Commission 
    determines to be appropriate, including public release of or striking 
    from the record any information or briefs submitted by, or on behalf 
    of, the offender or the party represented by the offender, and denial 
    of further access to business proprietary information in the current or 
    any future investigations before the Commission. In addition, as noted 
    in its December 28, 1994 Notice of Final Rulemaking (59 FR 66719, 
    66720-21), the Commission may take actions other than sanctions, such 
    as the issuance of letters of warning.
        Commission employees are not signatories to the Commission's APOs 
    and do not obtain access to BPI through the APO procedure. 
    Consequently, they are not subject to the APOs' requirements with 
    respect to the handling of BPI. However, Commission employees are 
    subject to strict statutory and regulatory constraints concerning BPI, 
    and face potentially severe penalties for noncompliance. See 18 U.S.C. 
    1905; Title 5, U.S. Code; and Commission personnel policies 
    implementing the statutes. Although the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) 
    limits the Commission's authority to disclose any personnel action 
    against agency employees, this should not lead the public to conclude 
    that no such actions have been taken; during 1994, such action was 
    taken.
    
    B. Investigations of Alleged APO Breaches
    
        In an antidumping or countervailing duty investigation, the 
    investigation of an alleged APO breach generally proceeds as follows. 
    The Secretary, acting under delegated authority, issues to the alleged 
    breacher a letter of inquiry to ascertain the alleged breacher's views 
    on whether a breach has occurred. If, based on the response made to 
    such a letter of inquiry, the Commission determines that a breach has 
    occurred, [[Page 24882]] the Commission often issues a second letter 
    asking the breacher to address the questions of mitigating 
    circumstances and possible sanctions or other actions. The Commission 
    then determines what action to take in response to the breach. However, 
    in some cases, the Commission has determined that although a breach has 
    occurred sanctions are not warranted, and therefore has found it 
    unnecessary to issue a second letter concerning what sanctions might be 
    appropriate, and has waived the rule requiring issuance of the second 
    letter. The Commission's December 28, 1994 Notice of Final Rulemaking 
    formally codifies this procedure. See 59 FR 66719, 66721. The 
    Commission retains sole authority to make final determinations 
    regarding the existence of a breach and the appropriate action to be 
    taken if a breach has occurred.
        The records of Commission investigations of alleged APO breaches in 
    antidumping and countervailing duty cases are not publicly available 
    and are exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 
    U.S.C. 552. Section 135(b) of the Customs and Trade Act of 1990, 19 
    U.S.C. 1677f(g).
        The breach most frequently investigated by the Commission involves 
    the APO's prohibition on the dissemination of BPI to unauthorized 
    persons. Such dissemination usually occurs as the result of failure to 
    delete BPI from public versions of documents filed with the Commission 
    or of transmission of proprietary versions of documents to unauthorized 
    recipients. Other breaches have involved: the failure to properly 
    bracket BPI in proprietary documents filed with the Commission; the 
    failure to immediately report known violations of an APO; and the 
    failure to adequately supervise non-legal personnel in the handling of 
    BPI in certain circumstances.
        Sanctions for APO violations serve two basic interests: (a) 
    Preserving the confidence of submitters of BPI in the Commission as a 
    reliable protector of BPI, and (b) disciplining breachers and deterring 
    future violations. As the Conference Report to the Omnibus Trade and 
    Competitiveness Act of 1988 observed, ``the effective enforcement of 
    limited disclosure under administrative protective order depends in 
    part on the extent to which private parties have confidence that there 
    are effective sanctions against violation.'' H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 576, 
    100th Cong., 1st Sess. 623 (1988).
        The Commission has worked to develop consistent jurisprudence, not 
    only in determining whether a breach has occurred, but also in 
    selecting an appropriate response. In determining the appropriate 
    response, the Commission generally considers mitigating factors such as 
    whether the breach was unintentional, lack of prior breaches committed 
    by the breaching party, the corrective measures taken by the breaching 
    party, the promptness with which the breaching party reported the 
    violation to the Commission, and any relevant circumstances peculiar to 
    the situation. The Commission also considers aggravating circumstances, 
    especially whether persons not under the APO actually read the BPI.
        The Commission notes that Commission rules permit economists or 
    consultants to obtain access to BPI under the APO under the direction 
    and control of an attorney under the APO, or upon their own 
    responsibility, if the economist or consultant appears regularly before 
    the Commission and represents an interested party who is a party to the 
    investigation. See 19 C.F.R. 207.7(a)(3) (B) and (C). The Commission 
    cautions that economists or consultants who obtain access to BPI under 
    the APO under the direction and control of an attorney nonetheless 
    remain individually responsible for complying with the APO. In 
    appropriate circumstances, for example, an economist under the 
    direction and control of an attorney may be held responsible for a 
    breach of the APO by failing to redact APO information from a document 
    that is subsequently filed with the Commission and served as a public 
    document. This is so even though the attorney exercising direction or 
    control over the economist or consultant may also be held responsible 
    for the breach of the APO.
    
    C. Specific Investigations in Which Breaches Were Found
    
        The following case studies are presented to educate users about the 
    types of APO breaches found by the Commission and the sanctions imposed 
    and other actions taken by the Commission. In addition, the case 
    studies discuss the factors considered by the Commission as mitigating 
    the sanctions imposed in particular instances. The Commission has not 
    included some of the specific facts in the descriptions of 
    investigations where disclosure could reveal the identity of a 
    particular breacher. Thus, in some cases, apparent inconsistencies in 
    the facts set forth in this notice result from the Commission's 
    inability to disclose particular facts more fully.
        The following discussion covers the 8 instances in which breaches 
    of APOs in antidumping and countervailing duty investigations were 
    found in 1994:
        Case 1: An attorney (1) failed to redact BPI in the public version 
    of a brief, and (2) subsequently served that version on persons not 
    subject to the APO. The public version of the brief filed with the 
    Commission was placed in the public file and was signed out and 
    reviewed by a person not subject to the APO. The failure to redact the 
    BPI from the brief was not discovered by the attorney but was found by 
    the Secretary to the Commission. After being notified, counsel 
    retrieved copies of the document containing the confidential 
    information and sent replacement pages to the Commission. The 
    Commission found that the attorney had breached the APO, but that 
    mitigating circumstances existed because the attorney had committed no 
    prior breaches and the breaches were unintentional. The attorney was 
    given a private letter of reprimand.
        Case 2: An attorney failed to redact BPI in the public version of a 
    brief. The Commission was informed of the incident the next day and the 
    attorney filed corrected pages of the brief with the Commission. The 
    public version of the brief was immediately removed from the Commission 
    files. No one other than the Commission staff had seen the public 
    version. The defective public version of the brief was only sent to the 
    attorneys subject to the APO and was recovered without being 
    disseminated to anyone not subject to the protective order. The 
    Commission found that the attorney had breached the APO, but did not 
    sanction the attorney because of the following mitigating 
    circumstances: the breach was not intentional; the attorney had 
    committed no prior breaches; when notified of the defective brief the 
    attorney promptly retrieved the defective documents so no BPI was 
    actually released to any unauthorized persons; and the firm immediately 
    revised and strengthened its previously established procedures for 
    safeguarding against the unintentional release of BPI. Two colleagues 
    were found not to have breached, because they were not directly 
    involved in the preparation of the public version of the brief. The 
    breaching attorney received a warning letter.
        Case 3: An attorney filed with the Commission and served upon 
    parties a copy of the public version of a brief in which certain 
    bracketed BPI was not deleted and other BPI was neither bracketed nor 
    deleted. The public version of the brief filed with the Commission was 
    placed in the public file and was signed out and reviewed by persons 
    not subject to the APO. The failure to redact the BPI from the brief 
    was brought to the attorney's attention [[Page 24883]] by the Secretary 
    of the Commission. The Commission found that a breach of the APO had 
    occurred, but that mitigating circumstances existed because the 
    breaches were unintentional, the attorney had not previously been 
    charged by the Commission with an APO violation, and the attorney acted 
    promptly to mitigate the breach when notified by the Commission that 
    the breach had occurred. However, aggravating circumstances included 
    the fact that members of the public actually reviewed the improperly 
    redacted documents on several occasions, the breach was not discovered 
    by the attorney or by the attorney's firm, but by the Commission, and 
    the attorney appeared not to have reviewed the work of a paralegal who 
    created the public version of the brief. With respect to this last 
    item, we note that the Commission has no specific requirement that 
    attorneys review the work of paralegals, but attorneys are held 
    responsible for APO breaches by their staff who are APO signatories. 
    The attorney was given a private letter of reprimand.
        Case 4: An attorney served the public version of a brief on persons 
    on the public service list and filed it with the Commission. However, 
    BPI was contained in an appendix to the brief. The public version of 
    the brief was not placed in the Commission's public files and the 
    copies of the brief that were served on attorneys on the public service 
    list were destroyed before dissemination to the attorneys' clients. The 
    Commission found that a breach had occurred, but mitigating 
    circumstances were found in that the attorney had committed no prior 
    APO violation, the attorney took immediate steps to ``cure'' the breach 
    by seeking the removal of the brief from the Commission's public file 
    before it could be reviewed by members of the public (although the 
    brief had not yet been placed in the public file), and the attorney 
    notified other counsel participating in the investigations of the 
    problem before they released the information to their clients. The 
    breaching attorney was not sanctioned but received a warning letter.
        Case 5: An attorney filed the public version of a brief in which 
    bracketed BPI was not redacted. The brief was filed with the Commission 
    and served on persons on the public service list, several of whom were 
    not signatories to the APO. The attorney learned of the error that same 
    day and immediately retrieved all copies of the defective public 
    version of the brief from the parties on whom it had been served. The 
    brief was retrieved before it was viewed by any non-signatories to the 
    APO. The brief was never placed in the Commission's public file. The 
    Commission found that the attorney had breached the APO, but decided 
    not to sanction the attorney because of mitigating circumstances 
    including that the breach was inadvertent, the attorney had never been 
    sanctioned by the Commission in the past for APO breaches, immediate 
    steps were taken to mitigate any harm arising from the breach, and no 
    non-APO signatories viewed the confidential information. The breaching 
    attorney received a warning letter. Three colleagues were found not to 
    have breached the APO because they did not participate in the 
    preparation of the public version of the brief.
        Case 6: A paralegal assigned to remove bracketed BPI from the 
    public version of a brief failed to do so, and the brief was submitted 
    to the Commission, and served on a signatory to the APO. The error was 
    discovered and reported to the Commission before the brief was placed 
    in the public file. The Commission found that two attorneys responsible 
    for supervising the paralegal breached the APO, but that there were 
    mitigating circumstances including the facts the breach was 
    inadvertent, none of the persons involved had been previously 
    sanctioned by the Commission for APO breaches, steps were taken to 
    mitigate any harm arising from the breach, and no BPI was disclosed. 
    The attorneys were not sanctioned, but received warning letters. Two 
    colleagues were found not to have breached the APO because they were 
    not directly involved with the production of the document in question.
        Case 7: Two attorneys served the business proprietary version of a 
    brief on a non-APO signatory due to an error in the certificate of 
    service. Two non-APO signatories actually viewed the defective brief 
    before the attorneys could retrieve it. In a related incident, three 
    attorneys also disclosed information in the public version of a brief 
    from which BPI could be derived, but retrieved it before service was 
    complete. That brief also was filed with the Commission's Secretary, 
    but had not yet been placed in the public file when the attorneys 
    reported the incident. The Commission found breaches in both incidents, 
    but determined not to sanction the attorneys. Mitigating circumstances 
    included the facts that the breaches were unintentional, none of the 
    attorneys involved had been previously sanctioned by the Commission for 
    an APO breach, the attorneys promptly reported both breaches to the 
    Commission and took immediate action to mitigate the breaches, and no 
    non-APO signatories viewed the brief in the second incident. The 
    attorneys received warning letters.
        Case 8: Two attorneys mistakenly served replacement pages 
    containing BPI for the confidential version of a brief on an attorney 
    at another law firm. Neither the law firm to which the APO material was 
    sent, nor any of its attorneys, was included in the APO service list. 
    The attorneys waited several days to inform the Commission of the 
    breach. The Commission found that a breach had occurred, but that 
    mitigating circumstances included the following: the breach was 
    unintentional; the attorneys had no prior APO sanctions; prompt and 
    effective measures were taken to minimize any harm resulting from the 
    breach; and the firm conducted more training of its personnel and 
    instituted new procedures to guard against future breaches. Aggravating 
    circumstances included the fact that non-APO signatories of the law 
    firm that received the misdirected copies viewed the information. The 
    breaching attorneys received private letters of reprimand.
    
    D. Investigations Involving the ``One Day Rule''
    
        During 1994, the Commission completed the following investigations 
    of changes to briefs that were not in compliance with the one day rule. 
    The Commission found no violations in these investigations. The reasons 
    for finding no violation include:
        (1) Attorneys representing two parties in the same investigation 
    made and submitted substantive corrections to their briefs along with 
    bracketing corrections. The attorneys were found not to be in violation 
    because a representative of the Commission had suggested that the 
    corrections be made and there was a misunderstanding as to the 
    appropriate means to make such changes; and
        (2) An attorney submitted bracketing changes to a brief in one 
    letter and correction of a typographical error in the brief in a 
    separate letter. The Commission determined that because the correction 
    was filed separately, and not along with the bracketing changes, there 
    was no violation of the one day rule.
    
    E. Investigations in Which No Breach Was Found
    
        During 1994, the Commission completed 4 additional investigations 
    in which no breach was found. The reasons for a finding of no breach 
    included:
        (1) The information allegedly mishandled was not BPI; 
    [[Page 24884]] 
        (2) Partially redacted BPI was largely illegible; and
        (3) The information allegedly mishandled by the alleged breacher 
    consisted entirely of information pertaining to the alleged breacher's 
    own client.
    
    II. Section 337 Administrative Protective Orders
    
        APOs are issued in section 337 investigations pursuant to the 
    statute and the Commission's rules. 19 U.S.C. Sec. 1337(n); 19 CFR 
    210.37. APO practice in section 337 investigations differs in important 
    respects from APO practice in title VII investigations. Notably, in the 
    section 337 context, it is the presiding Administrative Law Judge 
    rather than the Secretary who issues the APO. The terms of the APO may 
    differ from case to case. Further, the one day rule does not apply.
        In a section 337 investigation that is no longer before the 
    administrative law judge but is before the Commission, the 
    investigation of an alleged APO breach generally proceeds in the 
    following manner. The Secretary issues a letter of inquiry to ascertain 
    the alleged breacher's views on whether a breach has occurred. If, 
    based on the response made to such a letter of inquiry, the Commission 
    determines that a breach has occurred, the Commission issues a second 
    letter asking the breacher to address the questions of mitigating 
    circumstances and possible sanctions or other actions. The Commission 
    then determines what action to take in response to the breach. The 
    Commission retains sole authority to make final determinations 
    regarding the existence of a breach and the appropriate action to be 
    taken if a breach has occurred.
        In section 337 investigations that are before the presiding 
    Administrative Law Judge, it is the judge who presides over the inquiry 
    into any alleged APO breaches.
        Breaches have involved the unauthorized dissemination of CBI; the 
    use of CBI for purposes other than the section 337 investigation; and 
    the failure to return or destroy CBI in a timely manner. The following 
    is a summary of the one case in which a breach of the APO in a section 
    337 investigation was found in 1994:
        Case 9: An attorney failed to destroy CBI in a timely manner after 
    the termination of the investigation and after the determination was no 
    longer appealable. The Commission determined that the attorney had 
    breached the APO after written and oral requests by the supplier for 
    return of the information were denied. Mitigating circumstances 
    included the facts that this was the first APO breach by the attorney, 
    and that while the attorney failed to return or destroy the CBI, no CBI 
    was disclosed. The attorney received a private letter of reprimand.
    
        Issued: May 2, 1995.
    
        By order of the Commission.
    Donna R. Koehnke,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-11492 Filed 5-9-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7020-02-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/10/1995
Department:
International Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Summary of Commission practice relating to administrative protective orders.
Document Number:
95-11492
Pages:
24880-24884 (5 pages)
PDF File:
95-11492.pdf