In Announcement For TPS For Venezuela, Biden Administration Does Not Mention Cuba. Is There A Message? Trump Administration Maintained Connectivity

United States Department of State
Washington DC
9 March 2021

Ned Price, Spokesperson

Excerpt:

Later today, Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas will announce Venezuela’s designation for Temporary Protected Status, also known as TPS. This designation demonstrates the continuing support of the United States for the people of Venezuela.

To date, nearly 5.5 million Venezuelans have fled their homeland, while another seven million remain in chronic need of humanitarian aid. Nicolas Maduro’s repression, his corruption, and economic mismanagement have victimized these Venezuelans and produced this political and humanitarian crisis. Maduro’s willful neglect of his people, in a bid to remain in power, has created one of the hemisphere’s worst refugee and migration crises.

With this designation, we proudly join Colombia in their recent announcement to provide a similar status for vulnerable Venezuelans. The United States continues our leadership in the international effort to alleviate the suffering of the Venezuelan people. We provided nearly $529 million in regional humanitarian assistance in Fiscal Year 2020 in crisis response, and we welcome Spain’s recent financial commitment for the same. We encourage others to contribute.

We are proud to stand with these partners in both our commitment to democracy and the rule of law in Venezuela, as well as concrete action to help Venezuelans in need.

The White House
Washington DC
8 March 2021

Background Press Call by Senior Administration Officials on Venezuela
Via Teleconference


Excerpt:

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Thank you. Greetings to everyone from the National Security Council. My name is [senior administration official], and on behalf of the NSC press team, I would like to welcome our participants to an on-background conference call to discuss Venezuela.

You know, first of all, as a candidate, the President was the first democratic candidate to actually recognize Juan Guaidó as the legitimate leader of Venezuela and has been very clear that Nicolás Maduro is a dictator and that the May 2018 elections were fraudulent and illegitimate.

His approach to Venezuela has been -- has been fairly clear. Number one, he is going to underscore the importance of supporting the Venezuelan people inside and outside of the country by -- with robust humanitarian assistance, particularly to the countries in the region that have been impacted by the over 5 million Venezuelans that have fled their country.

Number two, he is committed to a robust multilateralism, meaning that we’re going to, as an administration, be working to increase the international consensus in favor of free and fair elections in Venezuela, and that we’re working with the international community to increase pressure in a coordinated fashion, and making clear that the only outcome of this crisis is a negotiation that leads to a democratic solution.

He has also made clear that -- and directed the administration to focus really on matters of human rights; to combat rampant corruption in the country; to go after every penny that has been stolen from the Venezuelan people by elements of the regime and its supporters; and to ensure that once Venezuela returns to democracy, that the United States is the first country in line to help rebuild. So, as part of that approach, we moved very quickly to grant Temporary Protected Status.

United States Department of State
Washington DC
8 March 2021

Press Briefing
Ned Price, Spokesperson


Excerpt:

QUESTION: Staying in Latin America, is it fair to say that the Biden administration is pursuing regime change in Venezuela?

MR PRICE: It is fair to say that the Biden administration supports the democratic aspirations of the people of Venezuela. Our overriding goal is to support a peaceful democratic transition in Venezuela through free and fair presidential and parliamentary elections, and to help the Venezuelan people rebuild their lives and their country.
We know at the root of much of the misery and the suffering of the people of Venezuela stands one individual, and we have been very clear that Nicolas Maduro is a dictator. His actions have not been in the best interests of the people of Venezuela. It hasn’t just been the United States that has been saying that. It has been the United States and many of our closest partners both in the region and well beyond.

QUESTION: So it’s basically – it’s basically a nicer way of saying Maduro must go?

MR PRICE: We believe and we support the democratic aspirations of the people of Venezuela. That is why we are committed to supporting the people through humanitarian measures and also targeting regime officials and their cronies involved in human rights abuses and corruption.

Department of Homeland Security
Washington DC
8 March 2021

New Designation Allows Eligible Venezuelans to Apply for TPS and Employment Authorization Documents


WASHINGTON—Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas is designating Venezuela for Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for 18 months, until September 2022. This new designation of TPS for Venezuela enables Venezuelan nationals (and individuals without nationality who last resided in Venezuela) currently residing in the United States to file initial applications for TPS, so long as they meet eligibility requirements.

This designation is due to extraordinary and temporary conditions in Venezuela that prevent nationals from returning safely, including a complex humanitarian crisis marked by widespread hunger and malnutrition, a growing influence and presence of non-state armed groups, repression, and a crumbling infrastructure. TPS can be extended to a country with conditions that fall into one, or more, of the three statutory bases for designation: ongoing armed conflict, environmental disasters, or extraordinary and temporary conditions.

“The living conditions in Venezuela reveal a country in turmoil, unable to protect its own citizens,” said Secretary Mayorkas. “It is in times of extraordinary and temporary circumstances like these that the United States steps forward to support eligible Venezuelan nationals already present here, while their home country seeks to right itself out of the current crises.”

Only individuals who can demonstrate continuous residence in the United States as of March 8, 2021 are eligible for TPS under Venezuela’s designation. For their own health and safety, individuals should not believe smugglers or others claiming the border is now open. Due to the pandemic, travel and admission restrictions at the border remain in place.

Individuals desiring TPS must file an application with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services within the 180-day registration period. They may also apply for Employment Authorization Documents (EADs) and for travel authorization. All individuals applying for TPS undergo security and background checks as part of determining eligibility. More details about the eligibility criteria to submit an initial TPS application and apply for an EAD can be found in the Federal Register Notice (FRN).

The FRN also provides information about Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) for Venezuelan nationals and how individuals may apply for DED-related EADs, based on the January 19, 2021, presidential memorandum establishing DED for Venezuelan nationals for 18 months, through July 20, 2022. Individuals who apply for and receive TPS and who are also covered by DED do not need to apply for Employment Authorization Documentations under both programs. USCIS encourages individuals who believe they are eligible for TPS to apply during the initial registration period announced in the FRN, even if they are also covered by DED, in case they cannot qualify for TPS late initial filing after DED has expired.

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ProLimp Cleaning In Cuba Precisely Type Of Entrepreneurship Biden Administration Should Support. Will Cuba Permit U.S. Venture Capitalists?

Xinhua News Agency
Beijing, China
28 February 2021

by Yosley Carrero


HAVANA, Feb. 28 (Xinhua) -- Jorge Montano, 30, is the leader of ProLimp, a Havana-based cleaning firm adjusting and updating its services swiftly to tap its resilience to survive the COVID-19 pandemic.

While hundreds of private businesses in Cuba have closed down due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the demand for cleaning services has increased since the health emergency began in March here last year.

Montano, who lives in Havana's San Miguel district on the periphery of the country's capital, learned part of what he knows about cleaning services at a car wash, where he first started to work nearly a decade ago.

He now seeks to provide clients with disinfection services for outdoor and indoor spaces as Cuba faces a surge in cases following the reopening of international airports and Christmas break. "Cleaning of surfaces has never been so important," he said. "The more people take care of hygiene, the better protected from the virus they will feel."

Founded in 2014, Prolimp provides clients with services ranging from cleaning of buildings and swimming pools to disinfection of carpets, furniture and vehicle interiors. Along with 10 workmates in their twenties, Montano has stepped up safety measures to reduce the risk of contracting the virus while removing germs, dirt and dust from different surfaces.

Yadier Iglesias, who joined the project during the pandemic, said that cleaning commercial and public service establishments is fundamental to keeping the pandemic at bay. "Before beginning to wash the different surfaces, we remove solids and all organic materials," said the 20-year-old. "This is a very time-consuming process, but we want to wash the virus away."

Meanwhile, Cuba on Sunday reported 618 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and another four deaths, pushing the national caseload to 49,779 and death toll to 322. Local authorities in Havana have urged people to stay at home as much as possible to reduce social interaction. State and private sector employees have been told to reinforce cleaning and disinfectant procedures against the virus at workplaces.

At present, the young Cuban entrepreneurs are examining emergent tendencies reshaping the cleaning industry worldwide while exploring new business opportunities to move ProLimp forward. Over the past few days, they have been disinfecting different areas at Atrevete Restaurant, one of the local eateries offering home delivery and takeaway services due to the pandemic.

Daniela Ruiz, a waitress at the eatery, told Xinhua that regular cleaning is required at home and public places to keep people safe from the contagious disease. "No one wants to test positive for COVID-19," said the 20-year-old. "So, cleaning startups are more than welcome here, not only to protect people from the novel coronavirus but from other diseases as well."

A Good Start- U.S. Food/Ag Exports To Cuba In January 2021 Increased 41.7% Compared To January 2020

ECONOMIC EYE ON CUBA©
March 2021

January 2021 Food/Ag Exports To Cuba Increase 41.7%- 1
58th Of 207 January U.S. Food/Ag Export Markets- 2
Year-To-Year Exports Decrease 41.7%- 2
Cuba Ranked 58th Of U.S. Ag/Food Export Markets- 2
2021 Healthcare Product Exports US$0.00- 2
2021 Humanitarian Donations US$305,608.00- 3
2021 Obama Administration Initiatives Exports Continue- 3
U.S. Port Export Data- 16


JANUARY 2021 FOOD/AG EXPORTS TO CUBA INCREASE 41.7%- Exports of food products and agricultural commodities from the United States to the Republic of Cuba in January 2021 were US$19,018,549.00 compared to US$13,421,660.00 in January 2020 and US$23,884,686.00 in January 2019.

Chicken Leg Quarters (Frozen)- US$8,566,575.00
Chicken Meat (Frozen)- US$4,201,456.00
Chicken Legs (Frozen)- US$4,181,269.00
Soybeans- US$1,950,117.00
Woodpulp- US$106,632.00
Rice- US$12,500.00

Since December 2001, agricultural commodity and food product exports reported from the United States to the Republic of Cuba is US$6,315,245,973.00.

This report contains information on exports from the United States to the Republic of Cuba- products within the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act (TSREEA) of 2000, Cuban Democracy Act (CDA) of 1992, and regulations implemented (1992 to present) for other products by the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the United States Department of the Treasury and Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) of the United States Department of Commerce.

The TSREEA re-authorized the direct commercial (on a cash basis) export of food products (including branded food products) and agricultural commodities from the United States to the Republic of Cuba, irrespective of purpose. The TSREEA does not include healthcare products, which remain authorized and regulated by the CDA.

LINK To Complete Report In PDF Format

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34th Libertad Act Lawsuit Filed: Trafigura Of Singapore Sued For Using Two Ports (Including Mariel) And Other Mining Assets

Singapore-based Trafigura Group Pte. Ltd. (2020 revenues US$147 billion) is multinational commodity trading company founded in 1993. 

From 2020 Annual Report: "The Castellanos zinc and lead mine, a joint venture between Trafigura and Cuban parastatal Geominera, had a very difficult year."

HILDA M. CASTANEDO ESCALON, AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF HILDA CASTANEDO AND THE ESTATE OF EMMA DIAZ, Plaintiffs, v. TRAFIGURA TRADING, LLC, TRAFIGURA PTE LTD, TRAFIGURA GROUP PTE LTD, Defendants. (4:21-cv-00659 Texas Southern District) 

Steptoe & Johnson (plaintiff) 

LINK To Complaint (3/1/2021) 

LINK To Libertad Act Lawsuit Filing Statistics

Excerpts: 

1. This is a civil action for money damages, including actual damages, treble damages, interest, attorneys’ fees and costs against Defendants for their unlawful trafficking in Plaintiffs’ property in violation of the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of 1996, 22 U.S.C. § 6021, et seq. (the “Act”), and specifically in violation of Title III of the Act, 22 U.S.C. §§ 6081-6085 (“Title III”). 

2. The Confiscated Property (defined below) at issue consists of a large lead and zinc mining operation in Cuba, which was seized by the Fidel Castro regime in 1960. All assets of the operation were confiscated, including: i) the port terminal of Santa Lucia in the province of Pinar del Rio, Cuba; ii) piers and docks, iii) warehouses, iv) commercial buildings, v) ranches, vi) roads, vii) a funicular, viii) a power plant, ix) a mineral processing plant, x) water pipes and infrastructure, xi) property rights (servitudes, easements, and concessions), and xii) future rights.   

3. The Diaz Estate and the Castanedo Estate are shareholders of the companies that owned the Confiscated Property. The Castro regime’s expropriation of the Confiscated Property rendered their ownership interests worthless, and no compensation has ever been paid to the Estates or their predecessors in interest. 

4. Defendants invest in and conduct mining operations worldwide, including through a joint venture with the Cuban government using the Confiscated Property. Through these mining operations and related commodities trading activities, Defendants have engaged in commercial activities using or otherwise benefiting from the Confiscated Property, and they have caused, participated in, and/or profited from use of the Confiscated Property by others.  

5. Specifically, the trafficking in the Confiscated Property includes at least the following activities: a. using the port terminal at the port of Santa Lucia, including its piers and warehouses (together, the “Port”), to transport minerals from Santa Lucia to the Mariel Port in Cuba; b. using the Port to import equipment and machinery for the construction and development of the Confiscated Property which includes, among other improvements, the construction of a mineral processing plant, a water reservoir and water treatment plant, utilities, roads, other infrastructure, offices, warehouses, and port facilities on the Confiscated Property; and c. extracting, refining and exporting minerals from a property previously owned by Minas de Matahambre, S.A., which also involves use of the Port.   

6. Through their partnership with the Cuban government, Defendants profit from the exploration, extraction, and exportation of minerals, such as lead and zinc, from the Confiscated Property, which they use to supply customers worldwide and to support their commodities trading activities. Notwithstanding their ongoing and substantial profits from the Confiscated Property, neither Defendants nor the Cuban government has ever obtained authorization from, or paid compensation to, the rightful owners. Defendants’ trafficking in the Confiscated Property is precisely the type of harm that the Act was intended to redress. Accordingly, Plaintiffs bring this action to collect what they are rightfully due.0

Required Reading For Officials At U.S. Department Of State And The White House: Two-Part How-To Guide For Removing Cuba From List Of State Sponsors Of Terrorism

Global Americans
New York, New York
25 February 2021

Special Contributor
By Robert L. Muse

Part 1: A consequence of relisting Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism

https://theglobalamericans.org/2021/02/part-1-a-consequence-of-relisting-cuba-as-a-state-sponsor-of-terrorism/ 

This article is the first in a two-part series on Cuba’s redesignation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism written by Robert L. Muse, a lawyer in private practice in Washington, D.C. who has written widely and testified on U.S. laws relating to Cuba before the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives; the Canadian House of Commons; the U.S. International Trade Commission; and the External Economic Relations Committee of the European Parliament (Brussels).  

In the final week of his tenure, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo redesignated Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism. Obviously, the list is punitive by design, so the designation of a particular nation is intended to have distinctly adverse economic consequences. 

Despite adverse intentions, the economic sanctions that Cuba is subject to as a result of its designation sound worse than they actually are. This is because the U.S. embargo on Cuba already prohibits trade with the island nation. Whenever a decision is made to relax that embargo, the president also has the authority to rescind any restrictions imposed by Cuba’s inclusion on the terrorist list by simply revoking its designation, as President Barack Obama did in May 2015. 

Outside of the economic ramifications, there is also a legal consequence from Cuba’s redesignation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism that will not be so easily remedied. Once on the list, a country is subject to lawsuits in U.S. courts that would otherwise be dismissed on the basis of sovereign immunity. It is the court judgments resulting from such suits that have long-term implications for U.S.–Cuba relations. 

A country that is designated a State Sponsor of Terrorism may be sued under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act for “extra-judicial” killings and personal injuries if it was (i) designated as a sponsor of terrorism at the time of the killing or personal injury and (ii) the victim was a U.S. citizen at the time of death or injury. More than USD $4 billion has been awarded by Florida courts against Cuba as a result of lawsuits that plainly do not meet the subject matter jurisdictional requirements of the statute. Interest on those awards under Florida law is an astonishing 11 percent per year until satisfied, according to §55.03 of the Florida Code. 

The cases began with Weiniger and McCarthy in 2006. The first involved the death of a man who bombed and strafed Cuba in a B-26 painted in Cuban Air Force colors. He had flown from a CIA-controlled airstrip in Guatemala to provide air cover for the Bay of Pigs invasion. McCarthy, who was charged with smuggling weapons into Cuba, was executed during the time of the Bay of Pigs. Both were killed in 1961—importantly, though, Cuba was first designated a State Sponsor of Terrorism in 1982. 

As legally deficient jurisdictionally as the Weiniger and McCarthy cases were, they nevertheless emptied the bank accounts of the government of Cuba that had been frozen in New York since the early 1960s. They also demonstrated to contingency attorneys in Miami that Cuba’s designation on the terrorism list was enough to generate massive awards against Cuba in the Florida courts, even if the requirements of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act were not met. It is the lawyers’ hope that they collect their fees out of the attachment and seizures of Cuban-owned property that enters the United States. 

Because the awards are without legal basis under controlling U.S. law, Cuba could simply refuse to pay them if they are raised by the U.S. in future claims negotiations. However, a refusal to pay the U.S. court awards will leave every agency or instrumentality of the Cuban government (and any private entity in a joint venture or contractual relationship with Cuba or one of its agencies) at risk of someday having any and all of its property that enters the U.S. attached in execution of those awards (e.g., Cubana Airline’s planes; ships; cigars from Cuba’s state tobacco monopoly; bank accounts set up to pay for U.S. exports, etc.). It is difficult to conceive of a larger obstacle to bilateral trade between the U.S. and Cuba. 

This outcome was exacerbated in 2008 when the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act was amended to add a new subsection that allows for the attachment and execution on any property of a foreign state with a §1605A judgment against it (i.e., a judgment against a “terrorist-sponsoring nation”), even if the government instrumentality that finds its assets in the U.S. attached had no connection to the events that were the basis for the court’s award, and even if there are other non-state joint or beneficial owners of that property. As a result, attorneys for families with judgments against Cuba have tried to seize telephone royalties Cuba owed U.S. telecommunications companies. They have also tried to seize money from U.S. airlines that fly to Cuba, claiming the money will be paid to the island as landing fees. Finally, they have tried to seize Cuban-owned trademarks for rum and cigars. 

When Cuba was removed from the list by the Obama administration in 2015, eleven judgments had been entered against Cuba. A brief review of a few of the judgments against Cuba illustrates their infirmities. In April 2008, a jury awarded the representative of the estate of a man named Rafael Del Pino USD $230 million. Not long after, a judge awarded the family of a man named Aldo Sera USD $94.6 million. Both judgments were entered in Miami-Dade County Court. 

In the first case, it was alleged, in a very confused and oddly phrased complaint (e.g., “At all times relevant hereto, Rafael Del Pino was executed by hanging”), that Del Pino, who had been “a friend of Fidel Castro and was involved in the Cuban Revolution,” was “executed” in 1979. According to Hugh Thomas’ history of Cuba, Del Pino acted as a paid informant for the Batista dictatorship, not as a friend to Castro. (His “involvement in the revolution” seems to have been informing Batista’s police agents of the location of an arms cache stored in a house in Mexico that was to be used in Castro’s Sierra Maestra campaign). According to one historical account, Del Pino left for the U.S. after the incident in Mexico. He returned to Cuba “in 1959 to lead an abortive expedition against Castro and to receive a thirty-year sentence.” Evidently, he died while in prison. 

In the second case, Aldo Vera was the “former Chief of Police of Havana” whose relatives claimed he was murdered by “Cuban agents” in Puerto Rico in 1976. Before his death, he organized and ran a paramilitary group (the Fourth Republic) with the objective of violently overthrowing the Cuban government. 

In 2007, USD $400 million was awarded to the family of a Cuban and U.S. dual national named Fuller, who was born and lived his entire life in Cuba, where his grandparents had immigrated. In 1960, he traveled to Florida to organize an “invasion of Cuba” by four Americans and twenty-three Cubans. He was apprehended and executed. 

Another case in 2007 awarded a Cuban plaintiff named Jerez USD $200 million. He was imprisoned in 1964. It is unclear when he was released, but the judgment states that he moved to the United States in 1980 and was naturalized as a U.S. citizen by 1993. 

Again, Cuba was not designated as a State Sponsor of Terrorism by the State Department until 1982. That means it was not susceptible to suit until three years after Del Pino died, six years after Vera’s death, and at least twenty years after the death and maltreatment alleged in the 2007 cases of Jerez and Fuller. 

Seeing as the courts of Florida have continuously failed to require litigants to demonstrate that they qualify to sue Cuba, President Joe Biden must promptly remove Cuba from the list of terrorism-sponsoring nations if he is to avoid further damage to the prospects one day of normalized commercial relations with the country. 

Robert L. Muse is a lawyer in private practice in Washington, D.C. He has written widely and testified on U.S. laws relating to Cuba before the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives; the Canadian House of Commons; the U.S. International Trade Commission; and the External Economic Relations Committee of the European Parliament (Brussels). He has spoken at many universities about U.S. law and policy regarding Cuba, including Columbia, Georgetown, Harvard, Fordham, and the Universities of California, Georgia, North Carolina, and Havana

Global Americans
New York, New York
25 February 2021

Special Contributor
By Robert L. Muse

Part 2: The unlawful basis for Cuba’s designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism

https://theglobalamericans.org/2021/03/part-2-the-unlawful-basis-for-cubas-designation-as-a-state-sponsor-of-terrorism/ 

This article is the second in a two-part series on Cuba’s redesignation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism written by Robert L. Muse, a lawyer in private practice in Washington, D.C. who has written widely and testified on U.S. laws relating to Cuba before the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives; the Canadian House of Commons; the U.S. International Trade Commission; and the External Economic Relations Committee of the European Parliament (Brussels).  

When former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that he was redesignating Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism in January, the reason he gave was that Cuba was “repeatedly providing support for acts of international terrorism in granting safe harbor to terrorists.” 

The first basis for the designation was Cuba’s refusal to extradite members of the Ejército de Liberación Nacional (ELN) guerilla group to Colombia, where they are most wanted in connection with the bombing of a police station. However, title II, article 35 of the Constitution of Colombia, states, “extradition shall not be granted for a political crime,” as stipulated in Columbia’s extradition treaty with Cuba. 

The second basis for designating Cuba was its refusal to extradite American fugitives to the United States. This prompts an obvious question: is the U.S. government required by law to designate a nation as a supporter of terrorism simply on the basis of whether or not it surrenders people wanted in the U.S. on criminal charges? 

The answer is clear: of course not. Many countries have not signed extradition treaties with the U.S., leaving the U.S. unable to demand the return of American fugitives (the right of a foreign sovereign state to demand and obtain extradition of an accused criminal is created by treaty; in the absence of a treaty there is no duty to extradite). Among the sixty nations with which the U.S. does not have extradition treaties are Russia, Indonesia, the People’s Republic of China, Kuwait, Vietnam, and Ukraine. Nevertheless, none of those countries are on the State Department’s State Sponsors of Terrorism list. 

Therefore, there is no requirement that countries that do not extradite fugitives to the U.S. must be listed as terrorism-sponsoring countries. Can this nonetheless be a valid reason for inclusion on the list? The answer, as a matter of U.S. law, is no. 

The State Department’s legal authority to designate countries as State Sponsors of Terrorism is set out in three different laws. These laws establish the statutory standard for such designation, and it has to be that a country “repeatedly provided support for international terrorism.” See § 1754(c)(1)(A)(i) of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2019. 

The U.S. defines “terrorism” as “premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets” (see 22 U.S.C. 265 6f(d)(2)). “International terrorism” is defined as “acts involving the citizens or the territory of more than one country” (see 22 U.S.C. 2656f(d)(1). Therefore, the criminal acts–even if terroristic–of an individual or group, if confined to a single country and aimed only at citizens of that country, would not qualify as “international terrorism.” 

Indisputably, certain fugitives from U.S. justice are permitted to reside in Cuba. However, does this action on the part of Cuba definitionally constitute the “repeated provision of support for international terrorism?” 

It does not unless two further elements can be demonstrated: (i) the fugitives in question must have committed “terrorist” acts, and (ii) those acts must have been “international” in character. 

I have been unable to identify a single U.S. citizen currently residing in Cuba who meets the twofold criteria of having (i) committed a terrorist act; that (ii) was also international in nature. 

Since none of the fugitives in Cuba are wanted in the U.S. for terroristic acts of an international character, Cuba’s inclusion on the State Department list of State Sponsors of Terror is invalid. 

Political fugitives in Cuba: The legal dimension 

On January 11, 2021, then-Secretary of State Pompeo said, “Cuba harbors several U.S. fugitives from justice wanted in or convicted of, charges of political violence.” 

Besides, a similar comment appeared in a State Department report issued before former President Donald Trump took office. It stated: 

The salient feature of Cuba’s behavior in this arena, however, is its refusal to render to U.S. justice any fugitive whose crime is judged by Cuba to be political.” 

These two comments call into question whether U.S. officials are aware that the extradition treaty between the U.S. and Cuba explicitly prohibits the extradition of persons whose crimes are of “political character” (see Treaty of Extradition between the United States and Cuba, signed April 6, 1904, which is still included in the State Department’s annual publication of Treaties in Force).  I’ll return to this point in a moment. First, how many “political” fugitives of U.S. justice are actually in Cuba? 

According to a report published several years ago by the Council on Foreign Relations, eight U.S. nationals reside in Cuba whose crimes may be deemed “political.” Joanne Chesimard, better known by her nom de guerre Assata Shakur, was named in Cuba’s redesignation list. And her case is worth examining in some detail. 

Chesimard was a member of the Black Liberation Army (BLA), an offshoot of the Black Panther Party, and was convicted for the killing of a New Jersey state trooper in 1973. In 1979, she escaped from prison and has been in Cuba ever since. 

According to a Cuban official, Chesimard’s case was investigated, and she was found to merit treatment as a political offender. According to Cuba’s penal code, “Cuba will not extradite foreigners persecuted for having fought against imperialism, colonialism, neo-colonialism, fascism or racism, or for defending democratic principles or the rights of working people.” As a result of this judgment, Cuba’s position is that Chesimard is not extraditable. 

To make matters more complicated, Chesimard’s role in the killing of Trooper Werner Foerster is also the subject of intense controversy. In one version of the events, she is said to have shot the downed officer execution-style. In another version, it appears that unarmed Chesimard was shot herself while her hands were in the air, while Trooper Foerster was shot by one of Chesimard’s fellow black revolutionaries, who subsequently died at the scene from police bullets.   

Regardless of the competing accounts of what happened, is Cuba legally justified in refusing to extradite her? As deplorable and reprehensible as her killing of New Jersey State Trooper Foerster may have been, the answer is yes. 

The 1904 extradition treaty between the U.S. and Cuba, in Article VI, states: “A fugitive criminal shall not be surrendered if the offense in respect of which his surrender is demanded to be of a political character…If any question shall arise as to whether a case comes within the provisions of this article, the decision of the authorities of the government on which the demand for surrender is made…shall be final.” 

The political offense exception of the 1904 U.S.-Cuba extradition treaty is found in most bilateral extradition treaties. For example, until 1987 – when the U.S. and the United Kingdom amended their joint extradition treaty –, members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) were routinely determined by U.S. courts to be exempt from extradition under the political offense exception of an earlier treaty. 

It is worth exploring whether a U.S. court would find Chesimard exempt from extradition under the political offense exception of the 1904 treaty with Cuba. The facts of the case and relevant case law suggest it would. 

The historical development of the political offense exception is grounded in the belief that individuals have a “right to resort to political activism to foster political change.”  Violent political action is specifically covered by the exception because “A political offense… must involve an “uprising” or some other violent disturbance,” as was previously determined in the Garcia-Guillern v. the United States of America, 450 F.2d 1189 (5th Cir.) case. 

During the 1986 debates in the U.S. Senate over amending the extradition treaty with the U.K. to exclude such crimes as murder, opponents of both parties argued that the elimination of the political offense exception for certain crimes ran counter to the United States’ venerable tradition of providing a haven for political refugees and freedom fighters. Drawing an analogy to the American Revolution, Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC) argued for the existence of a “right to rebel” that must be respected in all circumstances. For instance, the Senator said, “If this [amended extradition] treaty had been in effect in 1776…[its] language would have labeled the boys who fought at Lexington and Concord as terrorists. There is no question that the British authorities in 1776 would have considered the guerilla operations of the Americans to be murder and assault. Their offenses included the use of bombs, grenades, rockets, firearms, and incendiary devices, endangering persons, as may be demonstrated by reference to our National Anthem.” 

On the other side of the aisle, Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT) concurred, saying: “The underlying proposition in this [extradition] agreement is that all acts of political violence are wanton crimes and acts of terrorism. It equates all political violence with terrorism, and that is a bogus proposition. It’s as bogus as equating political opposition to sedition or treason.” 

U.S courts have historically required a crime to meet a twofold test for an action to be considered political, as demonstrated in the case Quinn v. Robinson, 783 F.2d 776 (9th Cir. 1986). First, the occurrence of an “uprising or other violent political activity” at the time of the offense should occur; and second, the offense must be “incidental to,” “in the course of” or “in furtherance of the uprising.” 

Influenced by Marxist-Leninist philosophies and the writings of Frantz Fanon, the BLA saw revolutionary violence against the state as a necessary response to what they viewed as a racist, imperialist American regime. 

Judging from the case law, there is a good chance that a U.S. court would find BLA to have been in a state of revolt against the U.S. government in 1973; and Chesimard’s violent attempt to avoid capture as having been “incidental” for the means of that revolt. 

We can deplore Chesimard’s crime – assuming she indeed shot and killed Officer Werner – while simultaneously admitting that Cuba’s treatment of her as a political fugitive has a legal basis in the international law of treaties in general and, more particularly, in U.S. jurisprudence. 

Cuba’s inclusion on the list of State Sponsors of Terror is pretextual 

Even a casual reading of the former Secretary of State Pompeo’s announcement may lead one to conclude that there is no legal or factual basis for the designation of Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism. Recalling previous statements, President Bill Clinton’s former special advisor to Cuba, Richard Nuccio, once said: “Frankly, I don’t know anyone in or outside of government who believes in private that Cuba belongs on the terrorist list. People who defend it know it is a political calculation. It keeps a certain part of the voting public in Florida happy, and it doesn’t cost anything.” 

Up to the Obama administration, the political calculations referred to by Mr. Nuccio forced the State Department to annually defend its inclusion of Cuba on the list of countries that sponsor international terrorism. Mainly because no factual basis existed to keep Cuba on the list, and so the State Department was forced to resort to pretexts. 

For example, one of the allegations used to designate Cuba in 2004 was that it “remained opposed to the U.S.-led coalition prosecuting the global war on terrorism and condemned many associated U.S. policies and actions throughout 2003.” The same could, of course, be said of France, Germany, and a majority of other countries. However, none were designated on the State Department’s list. It follows that the inclusion of Cuba on the terrorist list on such a basis can therefore be nothing but pretextual. 

The allegation that Cuba “hosts dozens of fugitives from U.S. justice” is as much a pretext as other accusations advanced by the State Department. As I mentioned at the outset, even if true, Cuba’s conduct concerning fugitives is simply irrelevant for deciding whether or not it meets the explicit criteria for designation, which is, does it “provide support for international terrorism?” 

If the U.S. is sincere in wishing to see political fugitives returned from Cuba, it must inform Cuba of its willingness to negotiate an amendment to the existing treaty that abolishes the political offense exception, as the U.S. did with the U.K. in 1987. Of course, however, none of this is required to remove Cuba from the list of State Sponsors of Terrorism—that entails nothing more than a few strokes of the presidential pen. 

Robert L. Muse is a lawyer in private practice in Washington, D.C. He has written widely and testified on U.S. laws relating to Cuba before the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives; the Canadian House of Commons; the U.S. International Trade Commission; and the External Economic Relations Committee of the European Parliament (Brussels). He has spoken at many universities about U.S. law and policy regarding Cuba, including Columbia, Georgetown, Harvard, Fordham, and the Universities of California, Georgia, North Carolina, and Havana.

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The White House Publishes 24-Page Interim National Security Strategic Guidance: 19 Countries Listed; Cuba And Venezuela Not Included

The White House
Washington DC
March 2021

Interim National Security Strategic Guidance

Excerpt:

Page 10: “Because the vital national interests of the United States are inextricably bound to the fortunes of our closest neighbors in the Americas, we will expand our engagement and partnerships throughout the Western Hemisphere—and especially with Canada and Mexico—based on principles of mutual respect and equality and a commitment to economic prosperity, security, human rights, and dignity. This includes working with the Congress to provide Central America with $4 billion in assistance over four years, and taking other steps to address the root causes of human insecurity and irregular migration, including poverty, criminal violence, and corruption – problems made exponentially worse by COVID-19 and the deep recession and debt crisis it has wrought throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. And we will cooperate to confront the regional effects of climate change, while helping our neighbors invest in good governance and democratic institutions.”

Countries and organizations referenced in document (in order of mention)

China
Russia
Iran
North Korea
NATO
Australia
Japan
Republic of Korea
India
New Zealand
Singapore
Vietnam
ASEAN
Pacific Island states
European Union
United Kingdom
Canada
Mexico
Israel
Iran
Yemen
World Health Organization
United Nations
G-7
G-20
Afghanistan
World Trade Organization
Taiwan

LINK TO Complete Document In PDF Format

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President Biden To Congress: "Venezuela continues to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat..." And No Mention Of Cuba

The White House
Washington DC
2 March 2021

TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES:

Section 202(d) of the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1622(d)) provides for the automatic termination of a national emergency unless, within 90 days prior to the anniversary date of its declaration, the President publishes in the Federal Register and transmits to the Congress a notice stating that the emergency is to continue in effect beyond the anniversary date. In accordance with this provision, I have sent to the Federal Register for publication the enclosed notice stating that the national emergency declared in Executive Order 13692 of March 8, 2015, with respect to the situation in Venezuela is to continue in effect beyond March 8, 2021.

The situation in Venezuela continues to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States. Therefore, I have determined that it is necessary to continue the national emergency declared in Executive Order 13692 with respect to the situation in Venezuela.

JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.
THE WHITE HOUSE, March 2, 2021.

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U.S. Department Of State Reports On Cuba's Banking System And Illicit Drug Activity

United States Department of State
Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
Washington DC
2 March 2021

2021 INCSR–Volume II: Money Laundering (As submitted to Congress) Report


Cuba- OVERVIEW

Cuba is not a regional financial center. Cuban financial practices and U.S. sanctions continue to
prevent Cuba’s banking system from fully integrating into the international financial system.
The government-controlled banking sector renders Cuba an unattractive location for large-scale,
third-party money laundering through financial institutions. The centrally-planned economy
allows for little, and extremely regulated, private activity. However, a significant black market
operates parallel to the heavily subsidized and rationed formal market dominated by the state and
which state authorities actively participate in and benefit from. The Cuban government does not
identify money laundering as a major problem.

The Cuban government and state-controlled businesses actively engage in international money
laundering in order to evade U.S. sanctions. Cuba should strengthen the transparency of its
financial sector by engaging regional and international AML/CFT communities and increase
criminal investigations and prosecutions.

VULNERABILITIES AND MONEY LAUNDERING METHODOLOGIES

Although it is largely disconnected from the international financial system, there are some
factors and conditions in Cuba that are conducive to money laundering and make Cuba a
potential destination for illicit funds. These include a poorly regulated and opaque banking
sector, Cuba’s cash-based economy, the Cuban government’s desperation for hard currency,
ubiquitous government corruption and overall lack of transparency, and connections to high
profile current and former government leaders of countries in the region accused of corruption.
Cuba’s geographic location places it between drug-supplying and drug-consuming countries.
Cuba has little foreign investment compared to similar nations in the Caribbean, a small
international business presence, and no known offshore casinos or internet gaming sites. There
are no known issues with or abuse of NPOs, ARS, offshore sectors, FTZs, bearer shares, or other
specific sectors or situations.

Cuba’s first special economic development zone at the port of Mariel in northwestern Cuba was
established in November 2013 and is still under development. It is potentially located on
expropriated property, built by the government in partnership with Brazilian engineering firm
Odebrecht, subject of numerous corruption investigations throughout Latin America.

KEY AML LAWS AND REGULATIONS

Cuba claims to take into account international AML/CFT standards. Legislation released in
2013 outlines regulations regarding enhanced CDD for foreign PEPs, although it continues to
exempt domestic PEPs from the reach of the legislation.

The FIU shares financial intelligence with the Revolutionary National Police, the Attorney
General's Office, and General Comptroller of the Republic. In addition to its core FIU functions,
the FIU can suspend transactions and freeze funds, both domestically and upon request from a
foreign counterpart.

The United States and Cuba have very limited engagement in law enforcement matters. Cuba
has bilateral agreements with a number of countries related to combating drug trafficking.
Cuba is a member of the GAFILAT, a FATF-style regional body. Its most recent MER is
available at: http://www.fatf-gafi.org/countries/a-c/cuba/documents/mer-cuba-2015.html.

AML LEGAL, POLICY, AND REGULATORY DEFICIENCIES

Cuba has a number of strategic deficiencies in its AML regime. These include a lack of SAR
reporting to its FIU by financial institutions and DNFBPs, and weak supervision and
enforcement within its DNFBP and NPO sectors. These deficiencies stem from Cuba’s opaque
national banking system, which hampers efforts to monitor the effectiveness and progress of
Cuba’s AML efforts.

The U.S. government issued the Cuban Assets Control Regulations in 1963, under the Trading
with the Enemy Act. The embargo remains in place and restricts travel and most investment and
prohibits the import of most products of Cuban origin. With some notable exceptions, including
agricultural products, medicines and medical devices, telecommunications equipment, and
consumer communications devices, most exports from the United States to Cuba require a
license.

Additionally, a number of U.S.-based assets of the Cuban government or Cuban nationals are
frozen.

ENFORCEMENT/IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES AND COMMENTS

In April 2019, the Cuban government convicted Cuban-American Orelvis Olivera in absentia
and sentenced him to 10 years in prison for money laundering, tax evasion, forgery of public
documents, and illicit enrichment, among other crimes. The conviction was based on his
convictions in the United States and his investments in Cuba, which the Cuban government
proceeded to confiscate.

Major international banks have participated in transferring funds involving Cuba in apparent
violation of U.S. sanctions. In April 2019, British bank Standard Chartered agreed to pay $1.1
billion to settle allegations by the authorities in the United States and Britain that it violated
money laundering laws and economic sanctions, including those involving Cuba. This follows a
$1.34 billion settlement French bank Société Générale agreed to in November 2018 that also
implicated U.S. sanctions on Cuba.

Cuba should increase the transparency of its financial sector and increase its engagement with
the regional and international AML communities. Cuba should ensure its CDD measures and
SAR requirements include domestic PEPs, all DNFBPs, and the NPO sector, and create
appropriate laws and procedures to enhance international cooperation and mutual legal
assistance. Cuba should increase the transparency of criminal investigations and prosecutions.

Actions by Governments Y- Yes. N- No.)
Criminalized Drug Money Laundering- Y
Know-Your-Customer Provisions- Y
Report Suspicious Transactions (YPN)- Y
Maintain Records Over Time- Y
Cross-Border Transportation of Currency- Y
Financial Intelligence Unit is a Member of the Egmont- Y
Group of FIUs- Y
Intl Law Enforcement Cooperation- Y
System for Identifying/Forfeiting Assets- Y
Arrangements for Asset Sharing- N
Information exchange agreements with non-U.S. govts- Y
States Party to 1988 UN Drug Convention- Y
States Party to UNTOC- Y
States Party to UNCAC- Y
Financial Institutions transact in proceeds from international drug trafficking that significantly affects the U.S.- N

United States Department of State
Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
Washington DC
2 March 2021

2021 INCSR–Volume I: Drug and Chemical Control Report


Cuba- OVERVIEW

Cuba is not a major consumer, producer, or transit point of illicit drugs. Cuba’s domestic production and consumption remain low due to active policing, strict sentencing, and nationwide prevention and public information programs. Cuba’s intensive security presence and interdiction efforts have kept supplies of illicit drugs down and prevented traffickers from establishing a foothold. Cuba concentrates supply reduction efforts on preventing smuggling through its territorial waters, collecting abandoned drugs found washed up on coastal shores and conducting thorough airport searches. Cuba dedicates significant resources to prevent illicit drugs and drug use from entering or spreading within the country, and regional traffickers typically avoid Cuba. Most maritime seizures are found washed up on the shores of Cuba’s coast after being jettisoned by traffickers being pursued by law enforcement. With respect to international cooperation, the Cuban government reports 40 bilateral agreements for counterdrug cooperation, including the U.S.-Cuba Operational Cooperation Arrangement to Counter Illicit Traffic in Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances (signed in July 2016). The U.S. Embassy maintains a U.S. Coast Guard
liaison to coordinate with Cuban law enforcement, particularly the Cuban Border Guards. The United States and Cuba exchange limited drug control information at the working level. Prescription drug abuse is increasing in Cuba, though it remains low compared to other countries, partly due to severe pharmaceutical shortages. Steroids, psychoactive drugs, sedatives, and painkillers are available in the black market through diversion from the legitimate supply chain (including drugs intended for veterinary use) and illicit importation.

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Are Cuba Advocates Again Ahead Of Tips Of Their Legislative/Regulatory Skis?

Are Cuba Advocates Again Ahead Of Tips Of Their Legislative/Regulatory Skis?
Incrementalism Preferred
Critical To Match Legislative/Regulatory Intent With What U.S. Companies Will Use
Don’t Get Ahead Of What Cuba Is Willing To Do- That Leads To Disappointment
Important Statutes
USDA FMD/MAP Funding
Reporting On Activity Is Important For Market Credibility
Receiving Payments Bank-To-Bank
Obama Administration Did Not Understand Banking
What Florida May Require Will Remain Relevant

With the arrival of the new year, a new occupant to the Oval Office, a new majority leader for the United States Senate, and new committee and sub-committee chairpersons in the United States Congress, counterintuitively there is again fear by individuals and organizations who have focused throughout the last twenty-five or more years on issues relating to the Republic of Cuba. 

The Cuban Democracy Act (CDA) of 1992, the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity Act of 1996 (known as “Libertad Act”) of 1996, and the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act (TSREEA) of 2000 will not be repealed during the 117th United States Congress. 

Members of the United States Congress should withstand a desire to make a point by proposing legislation they know, advocates know, and opponents know will never become law.  Feel-good legislation to “Lift the Embargo” is a waste of precious legislative moments which opponents use to demonstrate the unseriousness of such efforts.   

Forgo legislative adventurism of “if we change it, they will use it,” and focus upon “let’s ask not only what they want, but what they need and focus upon what will be useful now.” 

There are changes to provisions within the CDA, Libertad Act, and TSREEA which would be of potential value to United States companies.  However, changing a few regulations would provide immediate benefit to United States companies and, of increasing importance, for the nascent private sector (products and services) and nascent hybrid private-public sector (primarily agricultural) in the Republic of Cuba. 

The proposition required for anything relating to the Republic of Cuba is for the United States to accept, albeit for now, the omnipresence of the government (controlled by a Communist Party) throughout the economy of the nation of 11.3 million nine-three (93) miles south of Key West, Florida.  During the best of United States legislative branch and executive branch harmony, acceptance of the realities of MarketCuba remains fraught with obstacles.     

The Republic of Cuba is perfectly prepared to endure pain repeatedly.  Not for months or years, but decades and to transition that unpleasantness from one century to the next.   

Critical for advocates to appreciate the Trump Administration (2017-2021) successfully connected for many members of the United States Congress conditions today in Venezuela with critical support received from the Republic of Cuba.  The Biden Administration, thus far, has made no effort to disconnect Venezuela from the Republic of Cuba. 

For United States opponents to legislative, policy, or regulatory change or those seeking stringently conditional change, accepting the status quo in the Republic of Cuba or an opaque promise to change or a mystical belief that change will come requires for them gravitational deniability and a world where the calculations of the scientist Albert Einstein do not function properly.  Why, they ask, should the United States, and potentially taxpayers, be helping rebuild a neglected nation where the government of that nation is responsible for its current state and seems to be in little hurry to change?  They view the Republic of Cuba as using Google Maps to find “change” and preferring the scenic route when the goal should be finding the nearest expressway. 

With the 117th United States Congress a tenuous 50/50 composition in the 100-member United States Senate and 2.29%, or ten seats, separating the majority from the minority in the 435-member United States House of Representatives, legislative changes to Republic of Cuba-related statutes may be threadbare if at all.  This means think small.  Prepare for limitations.  Accept conditionality.  Filing legislation for the purpose of making a point is an abuse of resources. 

There is concern that zeal for ordering everything from the legislative menu will overwhelm the logic from using the menu as a buffet- selecting what is most needed first and then moving onward in a methodical manner towards what is desired.  This metaphor is particularly appropriate given the number of times a similar legislative menu has been in play- and the result is a lack of satisfaction. 

For example, how can what is currently permissible by United States statutes be made more efficient?  The presumption being the status quo remains undesirable.  What components can be revisited which, if changed, provide useable value for United States companies and individuals while permitting opponents of change to extract conditionality, but conditionality limited to the extent where the implemented changes remain viable when available.  Yes, a heavy lift.   

Critical that the constituents, not organizations representing companies, but directly from the companies (and financial institutions) who legislators believe to be beneficiaries from change in statutes and regulations relating to the Republic of Cuba are public (statements at hearings and media releases) about what they want and if they obtain what they say they want will then make prompt use of whatever they have received.  See more about this below.   

The White House, United States Senate and United States House of Representatives again are controlled by the same political party as 2009 to 2011, 1993 to 1995, 1977 to 1981, and 1961 to 1969

Once again Members of the United States Congress who have supported commercial, economic, and political changes to the United States-Republic of Cuba landscape are believing the legislative, policy and regulatory stars have aligned.  The result, they believe, will be a normalization of the bilateral relationship or, at minimum, a backhoe-like carving up of statutes designed to constrain, constrict, impede, and prohibit a robust bilateral relationship.  United States companies would like to share these beliefs, but are sober enough to recognize the realities.  

Once again well-intentioned advocacy groups will present in their marketing materials that a “pathway forward” is in place, that “the votes are there” and that now is when “funding is so important” because with it, there will be success.  

Everyone can be aspirational and inspirational about legislative, policy, and regulatory changes.  However, might not it be practical to be practical

Important Statutes 

The TSREEA re-authorized the direct commercial (on a cash-in-advance basis) export of food products (including branded food products) and agricultural commodities from the United States to the Republic of Cuba, irrespective of purpose. The TSREEA does not include medical equipment, medical instruments, medical supplies, pharmaceuticals, and healthcare products which remain authorized and regulated by the CDA (which permits payment terms). 

Since December 2001, reported TSREEA exports are approximately US$6,296,227,424.00 and since 1992, reported CDA exports are approximately US$26,704,691.00

Might provisions within the CDA and/or TSREEA be legislatively revised?  Perhaps.  One oft-referenced provision of the TSREEA discussed for revision is the prohibition upon payment terms other than cash-in-advance for exports of agricultural commodities and food products from the United States to the Republic of Cuba.  The problem, which is similar to what existed in 1999 and in 2000, is neither United States exporters nor United States financial institutions have and are advocating publicly for changes to the payment terms.  While the cash-in-advance requirement retards the U.S. Dollar value of export opportunities, for exporters cash-in-advance means no risk for any transaction which is important given the Republic of Cuba continues to be in constant arrears to other countries for payment obligations to companies, financial institutions, and governments.  No United States company wants to see publicized that it has not been paid for a transaction with the Republic of Cuba as that would harm every transaction. 

United States companies would prefer to determine the creditworthiness of customers rather than the United States government do so on their behalf.  However, the payment provision of the TSREEA serves as a required self-insurance policy making certain that aspirational risk analysis does not replace realistic risk analysis. 

If payment terms and financing were permitted for the export of agricultural commodities and food products from the United States to the Republic of Cuba and United States exporters were to deny payment terms and financing to entities in the Republic of Cuba, then those entities could use the choice of not providing payment terms and financing as reasons to avoid purchases from United States companies.   

Critical to have United States exporters and United States financial institutions prepared in conjunction with any legislative or regulatory or policy advocacy to provide on-the-record whether they would provide payment terms and financing for authorized United States exports to the Republic of Cuba and what those terms would be and to what amount would be financeable. 

USDA FMD/MAP Funding 

In 2018, legislative advocates maintained that inserting a Market Access Program (MAP) and Foreign Market Development (FMD) provision in the Farm Bill was critical to “laying the groundwork” for increasing exports of agricultural commodities and food products to the Republic of Cuba.  Statements from members of Congress included: “… an important first step to regaining our presence in Cuba.”  Yet, there was not one application to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in 2018 or 2019.  

Most observers reasonably concluded that legislative advocates- within the United States Congress and organizations located in Washington DC and located outside of the beltway would have prominently teed-up at least one high-profile applicant to publicize in advance they would use the provision if it became law or at least one high-profile applicant to immediately and publicly request funding when the Farm Bill became law on 21 December 2018.  

The most significant impact of a shockingly low number of MAP/FMD requests in 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021 is what the lack of interest portends for other legislative efforts in the United States Congress to rescind prohibitions upon the provision of payment terms for agricultural commodity and food product exports from the United States to the Republic of Cuba.  

Use to date of USDA MAP/FMD Republic of Cuba-focused funding provisions in the 2018 Farm Bill has been anemic.  Since 2018, One entity has used MAP funding in the Republic of Cuba.  No entity has used FMD funding in the Republic of Cuba.  The USDA reported no applications were rejected.  From The USDA: 

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Since 2019, a total of eight applications were received by the USDA to use MAP and/or FMD.  According to the USDA, “Although the table indicated nine expressions of interest over two years, these represent fewer than nine organizations as some of the organizations applied in multiple years.  The earlier table only included those entities that expressed interest in Cuba directly, not anyone that sought to add Cuba to a regional program.”   

According to the USDA, at least one participant in 2021 and 2020 sought to add the Republic of Cuba to a regional program for MAP, but none for FMD.  No entity pursued or was rejected for activities in the Republic of Cuba through a regional program.  In some respects, that some entities applied more than once, but did not ultimately use MAP and/or FMD in the Republic of Cuba is more consequential because it begs the question- why did the entities apply, but not choose to use MAP and/or FMD in the Republic of Cuba? 

One entity received MAP funding (US$60,000.00) in the Republic of Cuba- Denver, Colorado-based Potatoes USA which in November 2020 delivered to the Republic of Cuba 33,118 pounds of potato seeds valued at US$44,760.00.  Sample costs are ineligible for MAP or FMD funding. 

In 2020, one (1) entity applied to use, but did not use FMD funding and four (4) entities applied to use MAP funding while one (1) entity (Potatoes USA) used MAP funding.  From the USDA, “… any unspent funds would normally remain in participants’ agreements, available for the agency to approve for plans a participant submits in a future year.”    

In 2021, no entity applied to use FMD funding and three entities applied to use MAP funding, but no entity has yet used MAP funding.  From the USDA, “Most MAP programs operate on a January to December year, however, some run on a July to June year.  The regulations allow groups to continue already approved activities up to thirty days after the end of the program year.  Thus, the latest a participant could continue an activity funded by MAP 21 would be July 30, 2022, if their MAP 21 program began June 1, 2021.  A participant would have until the end of January 2022, if their MAP program began January 1, 2021.  The MAP regulations allow a participant to file claims up to six months after the end of the program year.”  In 2021, sixty-seven (67) entities received funding for MAP and twenty-one (21) entities received funding for FMD.  

Reporting On Payment Activity Is Important For Market Credibility 

As the Biden Administration compares what worked during the Obama Administration (2009-2017) and Trump Administration (2017-2021) with what did not work during the Obama Administration and Trump Administration, important during the review include commercial activities, specifically focusing upon those exports from the United States to the Republic of Cuba for which payment terms and financing are permitted. 

Critical for members of the United States Congress to have before them evidence demonstrating that when United States exporters are permitted to provide payment terms and financing, Republic of Cuba-based entities a) make use of the payment terms and financing and b) maintain the terms of all payment terms and financing. Meaning, the United States exporters are being paid on time as expected. 

In 2015 and 2016, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the United States Department of the Treasury and Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) of the United States Department of Commerce expanded the list of products authorized for export from the United States and from third countries to the Republic of Cuba with a focus upon products (non-durable, durable, and consumable) to entities not affiliated with the government of the Republic of Cuba.  

In 2017, Deere & Company (2019 revenues approximately US$39.26 billion) established a distribution center in the Republic of Cuba, joining San Juan, Puerto Rico-based RIMCO, the Republic of Cuba distributor for Peoria, Illinois-based Caterpillar Inc. (2019 revenues approximately US$53.8 billion) established the same year.  At the time, neither Deere & Company nor Caterpillar issued media releases or posted information on their respective Internet sites.  

Since November 2017, Deere & Company delivered more than US$800,000.00 in agricultural equipment to the Republic of Cuba for use at its distribution center.  Antioch, Tennessee-based Wirtgen America, Inc., a subsidiary of Windhagen, Germany-based Wirtgen Group (2020 revenues approximately US$3 billion), a construction equipment machinery subsidiary (acquired in 2017) of Deere & Company has also delivered products to the Republic of Cuba.  RIMCO continues to deliver equipment for use at its distribution center in the Republic of Cuba, including excavators, backhoes, graders, scrapers, bulldozers, railway fixtures, and signaling equipment, valued at more than US$4 million since December 2018.  

John Deere Financial Services was to provide payment terms/financing for the exports, primarily Series 5000 (price range US$25,000.00 to US$80,000.00) with a limited quantity of Series 7000 (price range US$219,000.00 to US$280,000.00).  According to the company, several hundred tractors, parts and accessories may be exported from the United States to the Republic of Cuba during the next four years, with the first deliveries (for testing and evaluation) scheduled for mid-November 2017.  The potential value of the several hundred products exported from the United States to the Republic of Cuba that would be financed could range from US$9 million to US$30 million.    

John Deere Financial Services has not commented as to whether the product sales goals have been achieved or if there have been issues relating to the receipt of payments.    

Caterpillar has not disclosed if the company has provided payment terms for its products exported to the Republic of Cuba.  

Without the provision of substantial discounts in conjunction with extended payment terms and low-interest financing, United States companies remain at a competitive disadvantage as Republic of Cuba government-operated companies prefer government-to-government transactions and government-to-government financing agreements.   

For example, the governments of the People's Republic of China, Russian Federation, Japan, Belarus, France, and India among others provide substantial long-term financing for durable product exports to the Republic of Cuba; and those financing agreements are almost always extended when repayment is problematic, which is often.  

Due to inaction by the Obama Administration throughout its two terms in office despite repeated requests from representatives of the United States business community, payments from the Republic of Cuba to Deere & Company and Caterpillar, payments for agricultural commodities and food products authorized by the Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancement Act (TSREEA) of 2000, and payments for medical equipment, medical instruments, medical supplies, pharmaceuticals, and healthcare products authorized by the Cuban Democracy Act (CDA) and were routed through financial institutions located in third countries rather than directly through the use of Direct Correspondent Banking (DCB). 

Direct Correspondent Banking 

Absent Direct Correspondent Banking (DCB), authorized transactions from the Republic of Cuba to the United States and from the United States to the Republic of Cuba are multi-day rather than multi-hour and third parties located in third countries earn unnecessary fees.   

One use for DCB would be for the transparent and efficient movement of funds from the United States to the Republic of Cuba to directly support Republic of Cuba nationals who are managing businesses- think Direct Foreign Investment (DFI) in an Airbnb-affiliated property, a hair salon, a restaurant, a vehicle repair service, a computer programing service or becoming an investor in Bajanda, the Uber of the Republic of Cuba.  Obviously, the Republic of Cuba would need to approve these types of transactions.  DCB would permit the recipients of DFI to easily repatriate a share of the profits to their investors and partners in the United States.  There needs to be an advance buy-in from the Republic of Cuba.  Without their consent what is the purpose?  The Biden Administration will be seeking quid pro quo

Since the CDA became effective in October 1992, the TSREEA became effective in October 2000, and the OFAC, BIS, and United States Department of State have authorized other types of transactions including for the export of agricultural equipment, construction equipment, agricultural commodities, food products, medical equipment, medical instruments, medical supplies, pharmaceuticals, healthcare products, and services including travel-related (airline landing fees, telecommunications, etc.) all payments have been subject to a triangular process through financial institutions located in third countries and then to United States financial institutions.   

Since 1992, the total value of commercial payments from Republic of Cuba government-operated companies to United States-based companies exceeds US$6.4 billion with third-country financial institutions receiving unnecessarily approximately US$130+ million in processing fees.  Reducing transaction fees, which can range to 2% or more, will permit United States companies to a) be more competitive on pricing b) be more competitive on transportation where a 2% difference in a proposed contract may make a difference and c) will permit United States companies to be paid promptly. 

Obama Administration Did Not Understand Banking 

In 2015, Pompano Beach, Florida-based Stonegate Bank (2017 assets approximately US$2.9 billion) was vetted by the OFAC and approved for a correspondent banking relationship with Banco Internacional de Comercia SA (BICSA), a member of Republic of Cuba government-operated Grupo Nuevo Banca SA, created by Corporate Charter No. 49 in 1993 and commenced operation in 1994.  In 2017, Conway, Arkansas-based Home BancShares (2020 assets approximately US$16 billion) through its subsidiary Centennial Bank purchased Stonegate Bank.   

According to the Republic of Cuba, “Its [BICSA] main activity is ‘enterprises’ bank’ carried through its central services and five branches based in the country’s capital, Santiago de Cuba and Villa Clara. It records all transactions in real time providing its customers with card and remote banking services while it is working on developing other methods of electronic banking.  Its institutional clients, national or foreign, receive a complete accounting and documentary service, while national entities also enjoy of significant volumes of credit facilities. Practically all sectors of the economy benefit from all this, such as that of agriculture, the food industry, the basic and light industries, transportation, aviation, fishing, construction, domestic and foreign trade, the iron and steel industry, sugar, informatics, communications and others with not only economic importance but also social, such as health, water supply, education, culture and sports.  Credit policy followed by the Bank is dictated in a collegiate way by its Credit Committee on the basis of a strict analysis and control in loan making.  The Bank counts on correspondents in the five continents, the majority are first class banks, mainly Europeans and Americans.  Equity capital of shareholders (Grupo Nueva Banca with the biggest share and Bancholding), near the USD95 millions with a balance ranging from 550 to 600 millions, make sure the Bank has a strong solvency ratio.” 

Stonegate Bank provided commercial operating accounts for the Embassy of the Republic of Cuba in Washington, DC, and the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Cuba to the United Nations in New York City, New York; and other types of OFAC-authorized and BIS-authorized transactions. 

Without explanation the Obama Administration did authorize BICSA under a license from the OFAC to have an account at Stonegate Bank, so Stonegate Bank routed transactions for approximately eighty (80) customers on a regular basis through Panama City, Panama-based Multibank (2019 assets approximately US$5 billion) which had dealings with the Republic of Cuba. 

However, on 16 June 2020, Bogota, Colombia-based Grupo Aval (2020 assets approximately US$79 billion) reported that “On May 25th, Banco de Bogotá, through its subsidiary Leasing Bogotá S.A. Panamá, acquired 96.6% of the ordinary shares of Multi Financial Group. As part of the acquisition process, MFG’s operation in Cuba was closed and as part of the transaction. Grupo Aval complies with OFAC regulations and doesn't have transactional relationships with Cuba.” 

The United States Congress And Florida 

Unhelpful for the legislative, policy and regulatory change landscape narrative when a college professor in an interview links “more freedom and more private businesses” in the Republic of Cuba to the final twenty-five months of the Obama Administration and less freedom and less private businesses in the Republic of Cuba during the Trump Administration (2017-2021).  And unhelpful when college professors maintain that for the Biden Administration the State of Florida is now “red” and thus no longer a focus for the Democratic Party.   

The bilateral relationship was robust during the final two years of the eight-year Obama Administration and there was a substantial increase from 17 December 2014 to 20 January 2017 in visitors from the United States to the Republic of Cuba which resulted in an increase in the creation of visitor-dependent commercial activities throughout the Republic of Cuba, but “less freedom” today in the Republic of Cuba is not a result of the Trump Administration.  

The Biden Administration and Democratic Party will continue to appease the State of Florida and its 2020 population of 21.48 million residents (14.5 million registered voters) where the Republican Party has 5,219,015 and the Democratic Party has 5,335,965; and 3,790,478 have no party affiliation.  In the 2020 Presidential Election, Florida voted 51.2% Republican to 47.9% Democratic; in 2016, 49.0% Republican to 47.8% Democratic; in 2012, 50.0% Democratic to 49.1% Republican; and in 2008, 51.0% Democratic to 48.2% Republican.  That data does not suggest a red state.  These are the changes from the 116th United States Congress to the 117th United States Congress:   

116th Congress
Senate- 2 R
House- 13 R and 14 D

117th Congress
Senate- 2 R
House- 15 R and 12 D

United States Senate
The Honorable Ted Cruz (R- Texas)
The Honorable Marco Rubio (R- Florida)
The Honorable Robert Menendez (D- New Jersey)

United States House of Representatives
The Honorable Albio Sires (New Jersey; D- 8th)
The Honorable Alex Mooney (West Virginia; R- 2nd)
The Honorable Anthony E. González (Ohio; R- 16th)
The Honorable Mario Díaz-Balart (Florida; R-25th)
The Honorable Carlos Gimenez (Florida; R- 26th)
The Honorable Maria Elvira Salazar (Florida; R- 27th)
The Honorable Nicole Malliotakis (New York; R- 11th)

The Biden Administration will remain concerned about the 435-member United States House of Representatives where the Democratic Party has a ten-seat majority in the 117th United States Congress.  

The 2020 Census is expected to deliver to Florida two (2) additional seats in the United States House of Representatives- which increases the electoral prominence of the state in the 2022 and 2024 elections (24 votes of the required 270 votes for victory in the Electoral College).    

The state legislature in Florida is controlled by Republican Party.  In 2021, the Florida Senate (24- R and 16- D) and the Florida House of Representatives (78- R and 42- D) will expectantly seek to craft favorably the two new districts for the United States House of Representatives and recraft existing districts to lessen the number of Democrats.  There will likely too be court challenges. 

One result will be current Democratic Party members of the United States House of Representatives from Florida will tact right, meaning against Republic of Cuba initiatives in their primaries or general election. 

There will also be Democratic Party members of the United States House of Representatives and United States Senate from other states who will oppose perceived lessening of pressures upon the Republic of Cuba. 

What some advocates will promote as a vote of legislative courage others will decry as a shortcut to the unemployment line.

Efforts to request the Biden Administration suspend Title III of the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity Act of 1996 (known as “Libertad Act”) made operational on 2 May 2019 by the Trump Administration risks antagonizing an important constituency in Florida and conflicting with President Biden’s appreciation of not interrupting the judicial process from his tenure as Chairman of the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary (1987-1995).   

There have been thirty-two lawsuits filed since 2019 and some are at Courts of Appeals.  Title III authorizes lawsuits in United States District Courts against companies and individuals who are using a certified claim or non-certified claim where the owner of the certified claim or non-certified claim has not received compensation from the Republic of Cuba or from a third-party who is using (“trafficking”) the asset.   

And there are the many unknowns which can influence the 2022 and 2024 elections in Florida and other states: H.E. Nicolas Maduro, President of Venezuela, is removed from office.  H.E. Daniel Ortega, President of Nicaragua, is removed from office.  The government of the Republic of Cuba decides to robustly engage with the Biden Administration; the 5,913 certified claims are resolved.   

Neither the Biden Administration nor the Democratic Party headquarters in Washington DC will abandon Florida and policies relating to the Republic of Cuba will reflect the electoral realities of Florida.  

Conclusion 

The priority should be changes to regulations for financial transactions which are practical and serve to increase efficiencies and opportunities for United States-based companies while providing increased transparency alongside prodding the Republic of Cuba to simultaneously engage.  Opportunities flow as money flows.   

Any legislative effort should be targeted, as in rifle, rather than scattered, as in shotgun.  Be incrementalist rather than desirous of making a point.

LINK To Complete Text Of Analysis In PDF Format

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Biden Administration Removal Of Cuba From List Of State Sponsors Of Terrorism Requires 45-Day Notice To United States Congress

On 12 January 2021, the United States Department of State during the Trump Administration returned the Republic of Cuba to the List of State Sponsors of Terrorism

If the Biden Administration had intended promptly to remove the Republic of Cuba from the List of State Sponsors of Terrorism, then the earliest date for rescission from Inauguration Day on 20 January 2021 would have been 6 March 2021 as this would mark forty-five (45) days before a rescission takes effect.  No member of the United States Congress has reported receiving a required notification.   

Part of the removal process includes a certification from the Biden Administration to leadership of the United States Congress that “the Government of Cuba has not provided any support for international terrorism during the preceding 6-month period; and ... has provided assurances that it will not support acts of international terrorism in the future.” 

The Biden Administration has discretion as to when a six-month period commences.  For example, the Biden Administration could certify the six-months commenced on 20 July 2020 and ended on 20 January 2021 or the six-month period commenced on 20 January 2021 and would end on 20 June 2021. 

The Obama Administration when advising the United States Congress of its intention to remove the Republic of Cuba from the List of State Sponsors of Terrorism reported on 14 April 2015 that the six-month period commenced on 14 October 2014, prior to the announcement on 17 December 2014 that the United States would re-normalize diplomatic relations with the Republic of Cuba after nearing two years of secret discussions and then secret negotiations. 

There are impediments for a removal of the Republic of Cuba from the List of State Sponsors of Terrorism.  The Trump Administration expanded the definition of “terrorism” which both adds time for evaluation and complicates the evaluation process.  The chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, The Honorable Robert Menendez (D- New Jersey) is of Cuban descent and all issues relating to the Republic of Cuba are personal- particularly the connectivity between a convicted murderer of a New Jersey State Police officer who escaped in 1979 from a correctional facility in New Jersey and resides in the Republic of Cuba.   

Mrs. JoAnne Chesimard remains since 2 May 2013 as the first woman to be on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists List.  There is a US$2 million reward.  The Honorable Robert Mueller was Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from 4 September 2001 to 4 September 2013. The Honorable Christopher Christie was Governor of the State of New Jersey from 19 January 2010 to 16 January 2018.

Senator Menendez was previously chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations from 1 February 2013 to 3 January 2015 during the Obama Administration (2009-2017) when Mrs. Chesimard was added to the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists List.  The United States Secretary of State during the period 1 February 2013 to 20 January 2017 was The Honorable John Kerry (D- Massachusetts) who served as chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations from 6 January 2009 to 1 February 2013. 

The Honorable Antony Blinken, United States Secretary of State, was Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor from 20 January 2013 to 9 January 2015 and Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor to the Vice President from 20 January 2009 to 20 January 2013. 

The Honorable Jake Sullivan, Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, served as Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor to the Vice President of the United States from 26 February 2013 to 1 August 2014.  Mr. Sullivan was Director of Policy Planning at the United States Department of State from 4 February 2011 to 15 February 2013.

Federal Register
Washington DC
22 January 2020

“DEPARTMENT OF STATE [Public Notice: 11332] Republic of Cuba Designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism (SST) In accordance with section 6(j)(1) of the Export Administration Act of 1979 (50 U.S.C. App. 2405(j)), and as continued in effect by Executive Order 13222 of August 17,2001, section 620A(a) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, Public Law 87–195, as amended (22 U.S.C. 2371(c)), and section 40(f) of the Arms Export Control Act, Public Law 90–629, as amended (22U.S.C. 2780(f), I hereby determine that the Republic of Cuba has repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism. This notice shall be published in the Federal Register. Dated: January 12, 2021. Michael R. Pompeo, Secretary of State. [FR Doc. 2021–01416 Filed 1–21–21; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4710–AD–P” 

In 1987, the Export Administration Act (EAA) included the requirement for an annual list of state sponsors of terrorism by the United States Department of State (U.S. Code, Title 22, Sec. 2656f). 

From Congressional Research Service (CRS): “In December 2014, the President announced he would proceed over the coming months to reestablish diplomatic relations with Cuba and ease those diplomatic and economic restrictions he could, while anticipating Congress could engage in a review of sanctions codified in permanent law. At the same time, the President announced that the State Department had begun a review of Cuba’s designation on the state sponsors of terrorism list.  On April 14, 2015, the President sent a message to Congress to certify that “the Government of Cuba has not provided any support for international terrorism during the preceding 6-month period; and ... has provided assurances that it will not support acts of international terrorism in the future.” This met the requirements of the statutes that form the terrorist lists; Cuba’s designation was removed on the 45th calendar day following the announcement (May 29, 2015), as the laws provide.”  

“Removal from the Lists: Statutory Requirements.  Each of the three statutes has some unique aspects to its construction, but all three have in common two possible paths for removing a foreign government from designation.”  

“The first possible option is that the President certifies and reports to Congress that (i) there has been a fundamental change in the leadership and policies of the government of the country concerned; (ii) that government is not supporting acts of international terrorism; and iii) that government has provided assurances that it will not support acts of international terrorism in the future.  In the case of the ECA, the President notifies the Speaker of the House, Chairpersons of the House Committees on Foreign Affairs, and on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, and Chairpersons of the Senate Committees on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, and on Foreign Relations that such changes have occurred.  The FAA’61 and AECA require the President to notify only the Speaker and the Foreign Relations Committee Chairperson.”  

“The second possible option the statutes offer is that the President, 45 days before a rescission takes effect, certifies to congressional leadership (as identified in the first option) that (i) the government concerned has not provided any support for acts of international terrorism during the preceding 6-month period; and (ii) the government concerned has provided assurances that it will not support acts of international terrorism in the future.  There is no reporting requirement to notify Congress that the clock has started ticking on the six-month period of changed behavior of the designated government. In past instances of delisting a foreign government, the Secretary of State has published a notice that the designation is under review, but the law does not require this advance notice beyond the 45-day requirement prior to issuing a rescission.”

U.S. Announces Designation of Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism
Press Statement
Michael R. Pompeo, Secretary of State
January 11, 2021

“The State Department has designated Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism for repeatedly providing support for acts of international terrorism in granting safe harbor to terrorists. 

The Trump Administration has been focused from the start on denying the Castro regime the resources it uses to oppress its people at home, and countering its malign interference in Venezuela and the rest of the Western Hemisphere. 

With this action, we will once again hold Cuba’s government accountable and send a clear message: the Castro regime must end its support for international terrorism and subversion of U.S. justice. 

For decades, the Cuban government has fed, housed, and provided medical care for murderers, bombmakers, and hijackers, while many Cubans go hungry, homeless, and without basic medicine.  Members of the National Liberation Army (ELN), a U.S.-designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, traveled to Havana to conduct peace talks with the Colombian government in 2017.  Citing peace negotiation protocols, Cuba has refused Colombia’s requests to extradite ten ELN leaders living in Havana after the group claimed responsibility for the January 2019 bombing of a Bogota police academy that killed 22 people and injured more than 87 others. 

Cuba also harbors several U.S. fugitives from justice wanted on or convicted of charges of political violence, many of whom have resided in Cuba for decades.  For example, the Cuban regime has refused to return Joanne Chesimard, on the FBI’s Most Wanted Terrorists List for executing New Jersey State Trooper Werner Foerster in 1973; Ishmael LaBeet, convicted of killing eight people in the U.S. Virgin Islands in 1972; Charles Lee Hill, charged with killing New Mexico state policeman Robert Rosenbloom in 1971; and others. 

Cuba returns to the SST list following its broken commitment to stop supporting terrorism as a condition of its removal by the previous administration in 2015.  On May 13, 2020, the State Department notified Congress that it had certified Cuba under Section 40A(a) of the Arms Export Control Act as “not cooperating fully” with U.S. counterterrorism efforts in 2019. 

In addition to the support for international terrorism that is the basis for today’s action, the Cuban regime engages in a range of malign behavior across the region.  The Cuban intelligence and security apparatus has infiltrated Venezuela’s security and military forces, assisting Nicholas Maduro to maintain his stranglehold over his people while allowing terrorist organizations to operate.  The Cuban government’s support for FARC dissidents and the ELN continues beyond Cuba’s borders as well, and the regime’s support of Maduro has created a permissive environment for international terrorists to live and thrive within Venezuela. 

Today’s designation subjects Cuba to sanctions that penalize persons and countries engaging in certain trade with Cuba, restricts U.S. foreign assistance, bans defense exports and sales, and imposes certain controls on exports of dual use items. 

The United States will continue to support the Cuban people in their desire for a democratic government and respect for human rights, including freedom of religion, expression, and association.  Until these rights and freedoms are respected, we will continue to hold the regime accountable.”

LINK To Complete Analysis In PDF Format

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U.S. Secretary Of State Blinken Travels "Virtually" To Mexico And Canada: Topics Readout Does Not Include Cuba Or Venezuela

United States Department of State
Washington DC
25 February 2021

Secretary Blinken’s Virtual Travel to Mexico and Canada


Ned Price, Department Spokesperson

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken will embark tomorrow on his first “virtual trip,” visiting Mexico and Canada on February 26. Secretary Blinken’s virtual travel prioritizes the health and safety of everyone involved, while demonstrating the significance of our partnerships with our neighbors and some of our closest partners.

The United States and Mexico enjoy a strong partnership, and this trip reinforces the importance of that relationship under the Biden Administration. During his trip to Mexico, Secretary Blinken will meet individually with Secretary of Foreign Affairs Marcelo Ebrard and Secretary of Economy Tatiana Clouthier. He will speak with his Mexican counterparts about our bilateral trade relationship, shared security challenges, regional migration, climate change, and other issues of mutual interest. During a visit to the Paso Del Norte port of entry — which links El Paso, Texas, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico — Secretary Blinken and Foreign Secretary Ebrard will discuss cooperation between Mexico and the United States to manage migration flows and travel across the U.S.-Mexico border.

From Mexico, Secretary Blinken will travel virtually to Canada, with whom we enjoy a close a comprehensive bilateral relationship. We are neighbors, friends, and allies. During his visit, Secretary Blinken will follow up on the outcomes of President Biden’s meeting with Prime Minister Trudeau — his first virtual bilateral meeting as President — including the U.S.-Canada Partnership Roadmap the leaders jointly announced on Tuesday. Secretary Blinken will meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Foreign Minister Marc Garneau and other cabinet members. They will discuss a common approach to global challenges such as protecting our citizens from the pandemic and reinvigorating our economies, taking bold action on climate change, defending human rights in the Western Hemisphere and around the world, and bolstering our shared defense and security. Secretary Blinken will also meet with students to discuss opportunities and policy options for our two nations.

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President Biden Continues National Emergency With Respect To Cuba

The White House
Washington DC
24 February 2021


NOTICE

CONTINUATION OF THE NATIONAL EMERGENCY WITH RESPECT TO CUBA AND OF THE EMERGENCY AUTHORITY RELATING TO THE REGULATION OF THE ANCHORAGE AND MOVEMENT OF VESSELS

On March 1, 1996, by Proclamation 6867, a national emergency was declared to address the disturbance or threatened disturbance of international relations caused by the February 24, 1996, destruction by the Cuban government of two unarmed United States-registered, civilian aircraft in international airspace north of Cuba. On February 26, 2004, by Proclamation 7757, the national emergency was expanded to deny monetary and material support to the Cuban government. On February 24, 2016, by Proclamation 9398, and on February 22, 2018, by Proclamation 9699, the national emergency was further modified based on continued disturbances or threatened disturbances of the international relations of the United States related to Cuba. The Cuban government has not demonstrated that it will refrain from the use of excessive force against United States vessels or aircraft that may engage in memorial activities or peaceful protest north of Cuba.

Further, the unauthorized entry of any United States-registered vessel into Cuban territorial waters continues to be detrimental to the foreign policy of the United States because such entry could facilitate a mass migration from Cuba. It continues to be United States policy that a mass migration from Cuba would endanger United States national security by posing a disturbance or threatened disturbance of the international relations of the United States.Therefore, in accordance with section 202(d) of the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1622(d)), I am continuing the national emergency with respect to Cuba and the emergency authority relating to the regulation of the anchorage and movement of vessels set out in Proclamation 6867, as amended by Proclamation 7757, Proclamation 9398, and Proclamation 9699.This notice shall be published in the Federal Register and transmitted to the Congress.

JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.
THE WHITE HOUSE
February 24, 2021

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According To Libertad Act Court Filing, Carnival Corporation President/CEO Lobbied U.S. Secretary Of State Mike Pompeo About Cuba Operations

HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION VS. CARNIVAL CORPORATION D/B/A/ CARNIVAL CRUISE LINES [1:19-cv-21724; Southern Florida District]

Colson Hicks Eidson, P.A. (plaintiff)
Margol & Margol, P.A. (plaintiff)
Jones Walker (defendant)
Boies Schiller Flexner LLP (defendant)
Akerman (defendant)

HAVANA DOCKS’ REPLY IN SUPPORT OF MOTION TO COMPEL AND MEMORANDUM OF LAW ON CARNIVAL’S WAIVER OF ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE

Excerpts:

Carnival Corporation (“Carnival”), in shotgun fashion, has lodged twenty-nine affirmative defenses to the sole count asserted in Plaintiff Havana Docks Corporation’s (“Havana Docks”) second amended complaint.1 (D.E. 160 at 18-23.) As observed at the January 11th hearing in this case, many of these defenses are not defenses at all and should be withdrawn.2 Two of these improper defenses inject Carnival’s corporate state of mind and are therefore pertinent to Havana Docks’ motion to compel (the “Motion,” D.E. 202): the “Fourth Defense—Due Process” and the “Thirteenth Defense—Lack of Intent.”

If this case is tried, Carnival will parade out its legal department, one by one, to testify about OFAC regulations and Carnival’s purported compliance with them, and then present its CEO to testify about how the Obama Administration allegedly “encouraged” Carnival to go to Cuba. But Carnival has known about its obligations under the LIBERTAD Act and Havana Docks for many years. (Mot. at 9-11.) And through discovery in this case it is apparent that Carnival was counseled that its conduct on the Subject Property was not as lawful as it now claims in this litigation.

For example, if Carnival truly believed that its conduct on the Subject Property was lawful under the LIBERTAD Act such that it actually relied on executive branch regulations and representations to insulate it from liability under that law, then why would Carnival’s President and CEO, Arnold Donald, be lobbying the Secretary of State in February 2019 for an “enabling order policy or rule” to “clarify the lawful travel exclusion [under the LIBERTAD Act] applies to cruise ships calling at Cuban ports”? (D.E. 202-6.). [NOTE: D.E. means Docket Entry; 202-6 is currently sealed and unknown if request was by plaintiff or defendant.]

By the same token, if Carnival truly believed that its conduct on the Subject Property was lawful under the LIBERTAD Act, then why would [FOUR LINES OF REDACTED TEXT].

Contrary Carnival’s position in this litigation, someone clearly was advising Mr. Arison and Mr. Donald that Carnival’s conduct was not lawful under the LIBERTAD Act. It would be manifestly unfair to allow Carnival to create a false narrative through its presentation of “objective” evidence of Government representations, while depriving Havana Docks of the ability to rebut that showing by demonstrating that Carnival knew that, regardless of what the executive branch said or did, operating on confiscated property subject to a certified claim would expose it to liability under the LIBERTAD Act.

As set forth above and in the Motion, Carnival injected its knowledge of the law into this case. Havana Docks, thus, respectfully requests that the Court order Carnival to produce withheld evidence reflecting its knowledge of the LIBERTAD Act and OFAC regulations.

LINK To Court Filing (22 February 2021)

Libertad Act Suspension History

Title III has been suspended every six months since the Libertad Act was enacted in 1996- by President William J. Clinton, President George W. Bush, President Barack H. Obama and President Donald J. Trump.

On 16 January 2019, The Honorable Mike Pompeo, United States Secretary of State, reported a suspension for forty-five (45) days.

On 4 March 2019, Secretary Pompeo reported a suspension for thirty (30) days.

On 3 April 2019, Secretary Pompeo reported a further suspension for fourteen (14) days through 1 May 2019.

On 17 April 2019, the Trump Administration reported that it would no longer suspend Title III.

On 2 May 2019 certified claimants and non-certified claimants were permitted to file lawsuits in United States courts.

LINK To Libertad Act Lawsuit Statistics

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President Biden & Prime Minister Trudeau- No Spoken Statements About Cuba Or Venezuela; Venezuela Mentioned In Written Statement; President Biden Personal Note About Juan Gonzalez

The White House
Washington DC
23 February 2021


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Remarks by President Biden and Prime Minister Trudeau of Canada Before Virtual Bilateral Meeting
Roosevelt Room (4:16 P.M. EST)

PRESIDENT BIDEN: Well, before we go on, I want to make sure you know Anthony Blinken, our Secretary of State, sitting here. And the fellow down here on the right hand side is a guy named Jake Sullivan, and he's the National Security Advisor. And the National Security Council Senior Director for Western Hemisphere, Juan Gonzalez, who usually speaks Spanish to me, which I have trouble with as well.

NOTE: Juan Gonzalez is Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for the Western Hemisphere at the National Security Council (NSC) in The White House

I told you, Mr. Prime Minister, I took five years of French in school and college, as well. And when I -- every time I tried to speak it, I'd make such a fool of myself, I stopped trying. At least when I try Spanish and I make a fool of myself, they laugh with me. At any rate, thank you very much. And the press is about to leave the room here, and we can get to business.

Roadmap for a Renewed U.S.-Canada Partnership
Building Global Alliances


”The Prime Minister and the President affirmed their shared commitment to addressing global challenges, and reiterated their firm commitment to the United Nations, G7 and G20 as well as NATO, the WTO, and the Five Eyes community.

The two leaders discussed their shared concern about Russia’s egregious mistreatment of Aleksey Navalny and its repression of democratic processes, gross violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and destabilizing policies around the world. They also reviewed the situations in Venezuela, Myanmar, Iran, Yemen, and the Middle East.”

Left To Right: Jake Sullivan, National Security Advisor; Vice President Kamala Harris; President Joe Biden; Secretary of State Antony Blinken; Senior Director Western Hemisphere Affairs at The National Security Council Juan Gonzalez.

Left To Right: Jake Sullivan, National Security Advisor; Vice President Kamala Harris; President Joe Biden; Secretary of State Antony Blinken; Senior Director Western Hemisphere Affairs at The National Security Council Juan Gonzalez.

Mediator Reports In Four Cruise Company Libertad Act Lawsuits: "The parties are continuing to discuss settlement." Biden Administration Might Want To Delay Re-Authorizing Cuba Itineriaries

There was a seven-word change in the most recent Mediator’s Report for each of the four Libertad Act Title III lawsuits filed by Havana Docks Corporation against cruise lines.  The most important new word is “settlement.”   

On 6 October 2020, the Mediator’s Report in each of the four lawsuits did not mention “settlement” while the 20 February 2021 Mediator’s Report included the sentence: “The parties are continuing to discuss settlement.”  Meaning, a discussion or discussions about a settlement(s) predate 20 February 2021, but for what period is unknown and to what depth the discussions progressed is unknown.  Plaintiffs had been reported previously as seeking approximately US$500 million from the four defendants. 

If the Biden Administration re-authorizes passenger cruise ships to operate itineraries that include the Republic of Cuba, the cruise companies must decide if they would individually or collectively return to the Republic of Cuba while each remain defendants in litigation.  Absent a dismissal or settlement of the lawsuits, the cruise companies would continue to be exposed to an additional count of trafficking as defined by Libertad Act for each arrival/departure to any of the three piers of the Terminal Sierra Maestra located at the Port of Havana. 

For the cruise companies, having the Biden Administration delay a decision relating to the return of the Republic of Cuba for itineraries is beneficial as it lessens commercial pressures, including those from shareholders, insurance companies, and financial institutions to settle the lawsuits

The Trump Administration on 2 May 2019 made operational Title III of the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity Act of 1996 (known as “Libertad Act”).  

Title III authorizes lawsuits in United States District Courts against companies and individuals who are using a certified claim or non-certified claim where the owner of the certified claim or non-certified claim has not received compensation from the Republic of Cuba or from a third-party who is using (“trafficking”) the asset.   

Since 2 May 2019, there have been thirty-three (33) lawsuits filed some of which have been appealed, consolidated, dismissed, refiled, reversed, and transferred within districts and from district to district.  Some defendants have been dismissed, but the case continues with other defendants.   

LINK To Libertad Act Lawsuit Statistics 

HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION, Plaintiff, v. CARNIVAL CORPORATION d/b/a CARNIVAL CRUISE LINE, a foreign corporation.  Defendant. [SAME WORDING FOR EACH LAWSUIT

MEDIATOR’S REPORT- In accordance with Local Rule 16.2(f)(1) of the Southern District of Florida, the amended scheduling order (ECF No. 80), and the order scheduling mediation (ECF No. 87), the undersigned Mediator reports that a mediation conference was held on October 5, 2020.  All of the parties or their representatives were present at the conference with full authority.  The case did not settle, but by agreement of the parties and the mediator, the mediation was adjourned (and not impassed) ending future developments in the case.  The parties are continuing to discuss settlement.  All of the parties have agreed that following briefing of dispositive motions another mediation will occur prior to trial.  

LINK To Mediator Statement (20 February 2021) 

MEDIATOR’S REPORT- In accordance with Local Rule 16.2(f)(1) of the Southern District of Florida, the amended scheduling order (ECF No. 80), and the order scheduling mediation (ECF No. 87), the undersigned Mediator reports that a mediation conference was held on October 5, 2020.  All of the parties or their representatives were present at the conference with full authority.  The case did not settle, but  by agreement of the parties and the mediator, the mediation was adjourned (and not impassed) pending future developments in the case.   

LINK To Mediator Statement (6 October 2020) 

HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION V. NORWEGIAN CRUISE LINE HOLDINGS, LTD. [1:19-cv-23591; Southern Florida District]

Colson Hicks Eidson, P.A. (plaintiff)
Margol & Margol, P.A. (plaintiff)
Hogan Lovells US LLP (defendant)

LINK To Mediator Statement (20 February 2021)

HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION VS. ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRUISES, LTD. [1:19-cv-23590; Southern Florida District]

Colson Hicks Eidson, P.A. (plaintiff)
Margol & Margol, P.A. (plaintiff)
Holland & Knight (defendant)

LINK To Mediator Statement (20 February 2021)

HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION V. MSC CRUISES SA CO, AND MSC CRUISES (USA) INC. [1:19-cv-23588; Southern Florida District]

Colson Hicks Eidson, P.A. (plaintiff)
Margol & Margol, P.A. (plaintiff)
Venable (defendant)

LINK To Mediator Statement (20 February 2021)

HAVANA DOCKS CORPORATION VS. CARNIVAL CORPORATION D/B/A/ CARNIVAL CRUISE LINES [1:19-cv-21724; Southern Florida District]

Colson Hicks Eidson, P.A. (plaintiff)
Margol & Margol, P.A. (plaintiff)
Jones Walker (defendant)
Boies Schiller Flexner LLP (defendant)
Akerman (defendant)

LINK To Mediator Statement (20 February 2021)

COMPLETE ANALYSIS IN PDF FORMAT

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U.S. Department Of Commerce Designates Cuba As "Foreign Adversary" But That Does Not Mean It Applies To "Any Other Purpose"

United States Department Of Commerce
Washington DC
19 February 2021

Securing the Information and Communications Technology and Services Supply Chain


The list of “foreign adversaries” consists of the following foreign governments and non-government persons: The People's Republic of China, including the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (China); the Republic of Cuba (Cuba); the Islamic Republic of Iran (Iran); the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea); the Russian Federation (Russia); and Venezuelan politician Nicolás Maduro (Maduro Regime). The provision clarifies that the Secretary's determination is based on multiple sources, including the National Security Strategy of the United States, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence's 2016-2019 Worldwide Threat Assessments of the U.S. Intelligence Community, and the 2018 National Cyber Strategy of the United States of America, as well as other reports and assessments from the U.S. Intelligence Community, the U.S. Departments of Justice, State and Homeland Security, and other relevant sources. Additionally, the provision notes that the Secretary will periodically review this list in consultation with appropriate agency heads and may add to, subtract from, supplement, or otherwise amend the list.

It is important to note that the list at section 7.4 identifies “foreign adversaries” solely for the purposes of the Executive Order, this rule, and any subsequent rules. It does not reflect a determination by the United States about the nature of such foreign governments or foreign non-government persons for any other purpose.

AGENCY: U.S. Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Interim final rule; request for comments.
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce is promulgating regulations to implement provisions of Executive Order 13873, “Executive Order on Securing the Information and Communications Technology and Services Supply Chain” (May 15, 2019). These regulations create the processes and procedures that the Secretary of Commerce will use to identify, assess, and address certain transactions, including classes of transactions, between U.S. persons and foreign persons that involve information and communications technology or services designed, developed, manufactured, or supplied, by persons owned by, controlled by, or subject to the jurisdiction or direction of a foreign adversary; and pose an undue or unacceptable risk. While this interim final rule will become effective on March 22, 2021, the Department of Commerce continues to welcome public input and is thus seeking additional public comment. Once any additional comments have been evaluated, the Department is committed to issuing a final rule.
DATES: Effective March 22, 2021.

LINK To Interim Final Rule In PDF Format

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Ten Days Later, U.S. Department Of State Answers Reporter Question About Travel To Cuba: adding aware of issue and looking closely at it

United States Department of State
Washington DC
11 February 2021


Briefing With Mr. Ned Price:

REPORTER QUESTION: Can I follow on that, on Cuba? And this is a very specific question, so if you could – if you don’t have an answer, I understand, but if you could take it. And that is that you probably know that the Cuban Government has introduced COVID restrictions requiring people coming into the country to quarantine in hotels. Well, Americans and Cuban Americans are not allowed under – or they can, I suppose, but then they’re subject to Treasury penalties – to stay in almost all Cuban hotels. So as part of the review into the Cuba policy, is this something that you guys are looking at with an eye toward perhaps doing it more urgently than in other parts? Or are these people who are going in just SOL?

MR PRICE: You’re right. Let me take that question back. I think that our review of our approach to Cuba is very much ongoing. But let me take that question back and see if we have anything we can add.

After repeated requests, on 19 February 2021, the United States Department of State shared the following statement which it confirmed is the response provided to Mr. Matt Lee, the reporter for Associated Press (AP) who asked the question on 11 February 2021:

“We have no higher priority than the safety and security of U.S. citizens overseas. We are aware of this issue and are looking closely at the implementation of Cuba's quarantine requirements and how they may affect U.S. travelers. Our current Travel Advisory for Cuba is Level 4 -- Do Not Travel due to health and safety concerns and COVID-19-related conditions. If travel is necessary, we recommend travelers contact their travel agent to inquire about sanctions regulations and related license applications and refer further specific questions about U.S. travel regulations for Cuba to Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.”

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A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S, World's Largest Container Shipping Company Is Third To Be Defendant In Libertad Act Lawsuit; Joining Crowley & Seaboard

Copenhagen, Denmark-based A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S (2019 revenues approximately US$42 billion) is the world’s largest container shipping company.

ODETTE BLANCO DE FERNANDEZ née BLANCO ROSELL; EMMA RUTH BLANCO, in her personal capacity, and as Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF ALFREDO BLANCO ROSELL, JR; HEBE BLANCO MIYARES, in her personal capacity, and as Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF BYRON BLANCO ROSELL; SERGIO BLANCO DE LA TORRE, in his personal capacity, and as Administrator Ad Litem of the ESTATE OF ENRIQUE BLANCO ROSELL; EDUARDO BLANCO DE LA TORRE, as Administrator Ad Litem of the ESTATE OF FLORENTINO BLANCO ROSELL; LIANA MARIA BLANCO; SUSANNAH VALENTINA BLANCO; LYDIA BLANCO BONAFONTE; JACQUELINE M. DELGADO; BYRON DIAZ BLANCO, JR.; MAGDELENA BLANCO MONTOTO; FLORENTINO BLANCO DE LA TORRE; JOSEPH E. BUSHMAN; CARLOS BLANCO DE LA TORRE; and GUILLERMO BLANCO DE LA TORRE VERSUS A.P. MOLLER-MAERSK A/S (a/k/a A.P. MOLLER-MAERSK GROUP); MAERSK A/S (a/k/a MAERSK LINE A/S); MAERSK, INC.; and MAERSK AGENCY U.S.A., INC [2:21-cv-00339 Eastern District of Louisiana]

Pusateri, Johnston, Guillot & Greenbaum, LLC (plaintiff)
Berliner Corcoran & Rowe LLP (plaintiff)
Fields PLLC (plaintiff)

LINK To Complaint (2/17/2121)

LINK To Libertad Act Lawsuit Statistics

Excerpts:

“As discussed more fully below, Defendant Maersk’s website touts that, since 2016, Maersk has been providing direct shipping services from Europe and Asia to Cuba, and specifically to the Port of Mariel, Cuba:

In 2016, Maersk’s operation in Cuba broke all records, seeing its vessels carry 23,094 FFE to the ports in Mariel and Santiago. Volumes came from Asia primarily but also, increasingly, from Europe via a direct service which was launched the same year.

Defendant Maersk, together with its subsidiaries and agents, also has provided direct service from the Port of New Orleans to the Port of Mariel. As discussed more fully below, infra ¶¶ 108 - 110, according to the International Maritime Organization (“IMO”), a specialized agency of the United Nations responsible for regulating shipping, the ship A/S PETRA (IMO # 9283708), while operated by Defendant Maersk A/S, sailed from the Port of New Orleans on four occasions in 2020 and called at the Port of Mariel, Cuba on January 20, 2020, January 31, 2020, May 20, 2020, and August 12, 2020, respectively. At each of the aforementioned callings at the Port of Mariel, the A/S PETRA engaged in commercial activities with the Port of Mariel and the Zona Especial de Desarollo Mariel (“ZEDM”) (a/k/a Mariel Special Economic Zone).

Upon information and belief, related to the A/S PETRA’s aforementioned trafficking voyages from the Port of New Orleans to the Port of Mariel, Defendant Maersk Agency provided, inter alia, inland service, and other logistical support, including purchasing transportation services related to those voyages.

35. The A/S PETRA was knowingly and intentionally directed by Defendants to the Port of Mariel, where the A/S PETRA for itself and on behalf of and/or at the direction of Defendants, engaged in commercial activities using or otherwise benefiting from the Confiscated Property, the claims to which are owned by Plaintiffs and without the authorization of Plaintiffs, which constitutes trafficking as defined in 22 U.S.C. § 6023(13)(A)(ii). Infra ¶ 109.”

Other Lawsuits Filed By Same Plaintiffs:

ODETTE BLANCO DE FERNANDEZ née BLANCO ROSELL, Plaintiff, v. CROWLEY MARITIME CORPORATION, Defendant. [3:20-cv-01426 Middle District Florida; Transferred To Florida Southern District 1:21-cv-20443]

Murphy & Anderson, P.A. (plaintiff)
Berliner Corcoran & Rowe LLP (plaintiff)
Fields PLLC (plaintiff)
Law Offices of John S. Gaebe P.A. (plaintiff)
Venable LLP (defendant)

ODETTE BLANCO DE FERNANDEZ née BLANCO ROSELL, Plaintiff, v. SEABOARD MARINE, LTD., Defendant. [1:20-cv-25176; Southern Florida District]

Horr, Novak & Skipp, P.A. (plaintiff)
Law Offices of John S. Gaebe (plaintiff)
Berliner Corcoran & Rowe LLP (plaintiff)
Fields (plaintiff)
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP (defendant)

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OFAC Fines Bitpay, Inc., US$507,375.00 For Violations Of Digital Currency Transactions Including With Cuba

United States Department of the Treasury
Washington DC
18 February 2021

"The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) today announced a settlement with BitPay, Inc., a private company based in Atlanta, Georgia, that offers a payment processing solution for merchants to accept digital currency as payment for goods and services. BitPay agreed to remit $507,375 to settle its potential civil liability for 2,102 apparent violations of multiple sanctions programs. BitPay allowed persons who appear to have been located in the Crimea region of Ukraine, Cuba, North Korea, Iran, Sudan, and Syria to transact with merchants in the United States and elsewhere using digital currency on BitPay’s platform even though BitPay had location information, including Internet Protocol (IP) addresses and other location data, about those persons prior to effecting the transactions."

LINK To Settlement Document In PDF Format

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