ZTE Corporation pleaded guilty today to conspiring to
violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) by illegally
shipping U.S.-origin items to Iran, obstructing justice and making a material
false statement.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions of the U.S. Department of
Justice, Acting Assistant Attorney General Mary B. McCord for National
Security, U.S. Attorney John R. Parker for the Northern District of Texas and
Assistant Director Bill Priestap for the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division
made the announcement today. The plea was entered before U.S. District Judge Ed
Kinkeade.
Specifically, ZTE pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring
to unlawfully export in violation of the IEEPA, one count of obstruction of
justice and one count of making a material false statement. ZTE agreed to pay a
fine in the amount of $286,992,532 and a criminal forfeiture in the amount of
$143,496,266, and submit to a three-year period of corporate probation, during
which time an independent corporate compliance monitor will review and report
on ZTE’s export compliance program.
As previously announced on March 7, at the time that ZTE
agreed to plead guilty, the Corporation simultaneously reached settlement
agreements with the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and
Security (BIS) and the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign
Assets Control. In total ZTE has agreed to pay the U.S. Government $892,360,064.
The BIS has suspended an additional $300,000,000, which ZTE will pay if it
violates its settlement agreement with the BIS.
According to plea documents filed in the case, between
January 2010 and January 2016, ZTE, either directly or indirectly through a
third company, shipped approximately $32,000,000 of U.S.-origin items to Iran
without obtaining the proper export licenses from the U.S. government. In early
2010, ZTE began bidding on two different Iranian projects. The projects
involved installing cellular and landline network infrastructure. Each contract
was worth hundreds of millions of U.S. Dollars and required U.S. components for
the final products.
In December 2010, ZTE finalized the contracts with Iranian
customers. The contracts were signed by four parties: the Iranian customer,
ZTE, Beijing 8 Star and ZTE Parsian (ZTE’s subsidiary in Iran). Court documents
explain that ZTE identified Beijing 8 Star (8S) as a possible vehicle for
hiding its illegal shipments of U.S. items to Iran. It intended to use 8S to
export U.S.-origin items from China to ZTE customers in Iran. As part of this
plan, ZTE supplied 8S with necessary capital and took over control of the
company.
Under the terms of the Iran contracts, ZTE agreed to supply
the “self-developed equipment,” collect payments for the projects and manage
the whole network. ZTE Parsian was to provide locally purchased materials and
all services. 8S was responsible for “relevant third-party equipment,” which
primarily meant parts that would be subject to U.S. export laws. ZTE intended
for 8S to be an “isolation company,” that is, ZTE intended for 8S (rather than
ZTE) to purchase the embargoed equipment from suppliers and provide that
equipment under the contract in an effort to distance ZTE from U.S.
export-controlled products, and insulate ZTE from U.S. export violations.
However, 8S had no purchasing or shipping history and no real business
reputation.
Ultimately, although 8S was a party to the contracts, ZTE
itself purchased and shipped the embargoed goods under the contract. In its
shipping containers, it packaged the U.S. items with its own self-manufactured
items to hide the U.S.-origin goods. ZTE did not include the U.S. items on the
customs declaration forms, though it did include the U.S.-origin items on the
packing lists included inside of the shipments.
In early 2011, when ZTE determined that the use of 8S was
insufficient to hide ZTE’s connection to the illegal export of U.S.-origin
goods to Iran, senior management of ZTE ordered that a company-level export
control project team study, handle and respond to the company’s export control
risks. In September 2011, four senior managers signed an Executive Memo, which
proposed that the company identify and establish new “isolation companies” that
would be responsible for supplying U.S. component parts necessary for projects
in embargoed countries. The isolation companies would conceal ZTE’s role in the
transshipment scheme and would insulate ZTE from export control risks.
In March 2012, Reuters published an article regarding ZTE’s
sale of equipment to Iran. In response, ZTE made a decision to temporarily
cease sending new U.S. equipment to Iran. By November 2013, however, ZTE had
resumed its business with Iran. Beginning in July 2014, ZTE began shipping
U.S.-origin equipment to Iran once again without the necessary licenses.
Instead of using 8S, however, ZTE identified a new isolation
company. ZTE signed a contract with the new isolation company, which in turn
signed contracts with the two Iranian customers. According to the new scheme,
ZTE purchased and manufactured all relevant equipment – both U.S.-origin and
ZTE-manufactured – and prepared them for pick-up at its warehouse by the new
isolation company. The new isolation company then shipped all items to the
Iranian customers. Shipments to Iran continued from January 2014 through
January 2016.
Despite its knowledge of an ongoing grand jury investigation
into its Iran exports, according to plea documents, ZTE took several steps to
conceal relevant information from the U.S. government. It further took
affirmative steps to mislead the U.S. government. In the summer of 2012, ZTE
asked each of the employees who were involved in the Iran sales to sign
nondisclosure agreements in which the employees agreed to keep confidential all
information related to the company’s U.S. exports to Iran.
During meetings throughout late 2014, late 2015 and early
2016, outside counsel for ZTE, unaware that the statements ZTE had given to
counsel for communication to the U.S. Government were false, represented to the
DOJ and federal law enforcement agents that ZTE had stopped doing business with
Iran and therefore was no longer violating U.S. export laws. Similarly, on July
8, 2015, in-house counsel for ZTE accompanied outside counsel in a meeting with
the DOJ and federal law enforcement agents and reported that ZTE was abiding by
U.S. laws. That statement was also false.
ZTE also hid data related to its resumed illegal sales to
Iran from a forensic accounting firm hired by defense counsel to conduct an
internal investigation into the company’s Iran sales. ZTE knew the forensic
accounting firm was reviewing its systems and knew that the analysis was being
reported to the DOJ and U.S. law enforcement. To avoid detection of its
2013-2016 resumed illegal sales to Iran, ZTE formed the “contract data
induction team” (“CDIT”). The CDIT was comprised of approximately 13 people
whose job it was to “sanitize the databases” of all information related to the
2013-2016 Iran business. The team identified and removed from the databases all
data related to those sales. ZTE also established an auto-delete function for
the email accounts of those 13 individuals on the CDIT, so their emails were
deleted every night – a departure from its normal practices – to ensure there
were no communications related to the hiding of the data.
The case is being prosecuted by Deputy Chief Elizabeth
Cannon of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export
Control Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Penley of the Northern
District of Texas.
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