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		U.S. experts resign from monitoring 
		China’s ZTE Corp: sources 
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		 [December 22, 2017] 
		By Karen Freifeld 
 (Reuters) - Two consulting firms hired to 
		help the United States police ZTE Corp’s compliance with trade sanctions 
		have resigned, according to four people familiar with the matter.
 
 China’s second-largest telecommunications company agreed earlier this 
		year to pay a nearly $900 million penalty - the largest in a U.S. export 
		controls case - and open its books to a U.S. monitor as part of a guilty 
		plea for illegally shipping goods to Iran and North Korea. To read the 
		Reuters report that exposed the practice, click goo.gl/rvNwr6
 
 Guidepost Solutions and Larkin Trade International were hired in June by 
		the U.S. monitor in charge of the oversight regime - Texas lawyer James 
		Stanton - to help assess the company’s compliance with U.S. export 
		control and sanctions laws, and reduce its risk of future misconduct, 
		said the people, who wished to remain unnamed because the matter is not 
		public.
 
 In late August, the two firms parted ways with the monitor after 
		clashing over his approach to the job, the people said. Although Reuters 
		was unable to determine the exact reasons for the departure , Stanton 
		initially restricted the consultants’ access to ZTE documents and 
		officials, hindering their ability to help monitor the company, one of 
		the people said.
 
		
		 
		Stanton did not respond to multiple phone calls and emails seeking 
		comment. 
 Tina Larkin, the chief financial officer of Larkin International, 
		declined to comment, as did a spokeswoman for Guidepost Solutions.
 
 A lawyer for ZTE declined to discuss the departure of the consulting 
		firms, or the company’s relationship with the monitor.
 
 “We're looking to be cooperative and have a successful monitorship," 
		said Matthew Bell, the head of compliance for ZTE in the United States.
 
 The problems with efforts to monitor ZTE, unreported to date, are rooted 
		in how a U.S. judge set up the policing program in March, according to 
		interviews with more than half a dozen people familiar with the matter 
		and a review of court documents related to the plea deal between ZTE and 
		the U.S. government.
 
 U.S. District Judge Ed Kinkeade presided over the ZTE sanctions case 
		because the Justice Department filed the plea agreement between the 
		United States and ZTE in his court in Texas, where the company’s U.S. 
		headquarters are located.
 
 Before signing off on the plea deal, Kinkeade took the unusual step of 
		having the agreement rewritten to put Stanton, a civil and personal 
		injury lawyer, in charge of monitoring ZTE’s compliance with U.S. export 
		controls, several people familiar with the matter said.
 
 The appointment was made despite the Dallas-based attorney’s lack of 
		experience in U.S. trade controls. The order naming him was sealed, 
		leaving additional details about the judge’s decision unclear.
 
 Generally, the Department of Justice chooses an independent monitor in a 
		corporate criminal case from candidates proposed by the company, which 
		is how the deal was originally set.
 
 But ZTE and the Justice Department felt compelled to agree to Kinkeade’s 
		choice and the changes to the monitorship agreement, sources said, 
		because the plea had already been negotiated and filed in the judge’s 
		court and a temporary license allowing ZTE to obtain U.S. made goods - 
		crucial for the company’s output - was about to expire.
 
		
		 
		While courts have been weighing in more often on monitors, John Hanson, 
		president of the Virginia-based International Association of Independent 
		Corporate Monitors, said it was extremely rare for a judge to modify a 
		major part of a plea agreement between a company and the government to 
		select his own monitor.
 Kinkeade and his courtroom deputy did not respond to inquiries about the 
		monitorship and requests for comment.
 
 A spokesman for the U.S. Department of Justice, which negotiated the 
		guilty plea with the company, declined to comment. A spokesman for the 
		Commerce Department referred questions to the U.S. Attorney's office in 
		Texas, which also declined to comment.
 
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			People stand at ZTE's booth during Mobile World Congress in 
			Barcelona, Spain, February 27, 2017. REUTERS/Paul Hanna/File Photo 
            
			 
		Stanton has to issue three reports, the first of which is due in 
		January, on ZTE’s compliance with U.S. trade rules. The reports will 
		help determine whether the company is liable for an additional fine of 
		$300 million or, worse, should lose its access to the U.S. market. 
		Both Washington and Beijing have a lot riding on the reports and the 
		success of the monitorship, which is set to last three years. The 
		agreement allows the company continued access to the U.S. market, which 
		provides 25 to 30 percent of the components used in its networking gear 
		and smart phones. It is also part of a wider push by the United States 
		to get China’s cooperation in combating nuclear proliferation and marks 
		the first time that a Chinese company has submitted to such scrutiny.
 Kevin Wolf, a former Commerce Department official who worked on the ZTE 
		case, said the first few months of a monitorship do not always determine 
		success or failure.
 
 “With any monitorship involving a complex situation, inevitably there 
		will be start-up problems but in my experience the issues work out in 
		the long run,” said Wolf, who is now a lawyer in Washington D.C.
 
 “MY MENTOR, ED KINKEADE”
 
 Kinkeade has known Stanton for over a decade. Both graduates of Baylor 
		law school in Waco, Texas, Stanton dedicated a 2016 book, titled “What 
		Judges Want” to Kinkeade, who he described as his mentor.
 
 "He guided me with grace and judgment as I became a lawyer, a husband, a 
		father and a judge," Stanton wrote of Kinkeade in his book. Stanton was 
		appointed as a Texas state civil judge in 2009 and lost the election the 
		following year.
 
 In the modified ZTE plea agreement, references to required 
		qualifications and experience were removed, and a clause about 
		professionals assisting the monitor was added, according to a review of 
		the original and modified documents.
 
 To compare the plea agreements, click http://tmsnrt.rs/2BV5Duq
 
 Kinkeade also gave his own court a key role in overseeing the 
		monitorship, including replacing the Justice Department as the arbiter 
		in any dispute, and the monitor’s description was changed in one 
		paragraph from “independent third-party” to "judicial adjunct.” In an 
		unusual move, the judge used a civil rule to make the monitor a judicial 
		adjunct, despite it being a criminal case.
 
		 
		“Anyone who looked at this scratched his or her head,” said Washington 
		lawyer Jacob Frenkel, who specializes in government investigations at 
		Dickinson Wright and has represented monitors. “How do you appoint 
		someone without requisite qualifications to the monitorship?”
 While monitors are not always subject experts, they generally are not 
		appointed in major cases without some relevant experience, Frenkel 
		added.
 
 With the original consultants out, Stanton turned to Ernst & Young in 
		August to advise him, two people familiar with the monitorship, said.
 
 Since Ernst & Young has been ZTE’s auditor since 2004, some ethics 
		experts including University of Virginia law professor Brandon Garrett 
		said the hiring raised conflict of interest concerns about how 
		independent the firm would be in assessing the company’s adherence to 
		U.S. trade rules.
 
 A spokeswoman for Ernst & Young declined to comment, as did a lawyer for 
		ZTE.
 
 (Editing by Carmel Crimmins and Edward Tobin)
 
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