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						Exclusive: U.S. Commerce's Ross picks ZTE monitor after 
						rejecting 'Never Trump' lawyer
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		 [August 25, 2018] 
		 By Karen Freifeld and Doina Chiacu 
 (Reuters) - U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur 
		Ross has appointed a former federal prosecutor to monitor China's ZTE 
		Corp <0763.HK> <000063.SZ> after people familiar with the matter said he 
		rescinded an offer to a former U.S. official for signing a "Never Trump" 
		letter before the 2016 presidential election.
 
 A new monitor for ZTE is required as part of a June settlement that 
		ended a ban on U.S. companies selling components to China's No. 2 
		telecommunications equipment maker. The ban threatened ZTE's survival 
		and became a source of friction in trade talks between Washington and 
		Beijing.
 
 Roscoe Howard, a former U.S. Attorney in Washington, will lead a 
		compliance team designed to help ensure that ZTE does not illegally sell 
		products with American parts to Iran and other sanctioned countries.
 
 
		
		 
		Howard, who got his law degree from the University of Virginia in 1977, 
		is a partner in Barnes & Thornburg's litigation department in 
		Washington, and served as associate independent counsel during the 
		Clinton and George H. W. Bush administrations.
 
 Howard was not the first choice of Commerce Department officials.
 
 Peter Lichtenbaum, a former assistant secretary for export 
		administration at the Commerce Department, received a letter on Aug. 15 
		offering him the post, sources said.
 
 Ross then learned that Lichtenbaum was among the dozens of former 
		national security officials who signed a letter in August 2016 saying 
		Trump was not qualified to be president and they would never vote for 
		him, the sources said on condition of anonymity.
 
 Last Friday, two days after making the offer, the department withdrew 
		it, the sources said.
 
 "This is the final decision. Period," a Commerce Department spokesman 
		said about Ross's decision to rescind the offer to Lichtenbaum and 
		choose Howard.
 
 Trump, a former real estate magnate and reality television star, drew 
		opposition from establishment Republicans who opposed his candidacy 
		during the 2016 presidential campaign. His administration has been known 
		to reject people who opposed him.
 
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			U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross attends a cabinet meeting at the 
			White House in Washington, U.S., July 18, 2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis 
            
			 
ZTE, which relies on American-origin components for its smartphones and computer 
networking gear, pleaded guilty last year to violating U.S. sanctions by 
illegally shipping U.S. goods and technology to Iran.
 The ban on ZTE was imposed in April after officials said the company made false 
statements about disciplining 35 employees tied to the wrongdoing.
 
 As part of the 2017 guilty plea, ZTE paid nearly $900 million. To lift this 
year's ban, it paid an additional $1 billion penalty, placed $400 million in 
escrow in case of future violations and installed a new board and senior 
management.
 
 Under the latest agreement, the Commerce Department is selecting a monitor to 
oversee compliance for ZTE and its worldwide affiliates for 10 years. Howard 
will have a staff of at least six people funded by ZTE, including at least one 
expert in export controls, the Commerce spokesman said.
 
 The government monitor has been designated as a "special compliance coordinator" 
to distinguish from another monitor for ZTE appointed by a U.S. judge in Texas 
when the company pleaded guilty last year.
 
 That monitor, James Stanton, a lawyer who has handled personal injury cases 
among others, was picked by U.S. District Judge Ed Kinkeade, sources told 
Reuters last year. Kinkeade has control over that monitor.
 
 
A key reason the Commerce Department sought a second monitor, according to 
sources, was to have a qualified person police the company and report directly 
to the department and the company.
 
 (Replaces comma with period in first paragraph)
 
 (Reporting by Karen Freifeld and Doina Chiacu in Washington; Editing by Jeffrey 
Benkoe)
 
				 
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