Deemed Exports Have Teeth
Former University of Tennessee Professor John Reece Roth was recently sentenced to 48 months in prison for violating the Arms Export Control Act.
U.S. District Judge Tom Varlan said UT professor emeritus J. Reece Roth could have caused “harm to the security of the United States” by allowing foreign national students, one from China and one from Iran, to work on a contract to produce technology to be used on unmanned Air Force drones.
Varlan noted that the Air Force was forced to scrap the research out of fear it had been compromised, although there was no testimony at Roth’s trial last year that any foreign government actually had accessed the information or that Roth ever had tried to sell or give the information to foreign governments.
Roth repeatedly has said he did not believe that mere research and the results of that research violated the Arms Export Control Act. However, Varlan said testimony showed Roth continued to allow foreign national students access to restricted data and even took various reports to China with him after he was twice warned by UT officials about the law.
Interested in learning how you can better manage this facet of trade compliance? Check out more details here.
Date: October 30, 2009
Categories: Deemed Exports, export compliance