USA V. SHIH, No. 23-3718 (9th Cir. 2024)
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Yi-Chi Shih, a UCLA electrical engineering professor, was convicted of violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) by exporting monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs) to China without a license. These MMICs, which amplify microwave signals, were used in collaboration with Chinese engineers for a military weapons development project. Shih misrepresented the export status of the MMICs to the U.S.-based foundry, Cree, to facilitate their manufacture and export.
The United States District Court for the Central District of California initially entered a judgment of acquittal on the IEEPA violation counts but later reinstated the conspiracy count upon reconsideration. At sentencing, the court applied a base offense level of 14, resulting in a 63-month sentence. Both parties appealed, and the Ninth Circuit reinstated the substantive IEEPA violation conviction and remanded for resentencing. On remand, the district court applied a base offense level of 26, concluding that Shih's conduct evaded national security controls, resulting in an 85-month sentence.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reviewed the case and affirmed the district court's decision. The court held that the export controls Shih evaded were implemented for national security reasons, as the relevant Export Control Classification Numbers (ECCNs) listed national security as a reason for control. The court rejected Shih's argument that the controls were solely for foreign policy reasons and his attempt to characterize his conduct as a mere recordkeeping offense. The Ninth Circuit concluded that the higher base offense level of 26 was appropriate and affirmed the district court's judgment.
Court Description: Criminal Law. The panel affirmed a sentence in a case which the district court applied a base offense level of 26 pursuant to U.S.S.G.
§ 2M5.1(a)(1) to a count on which a jury found Yi-Chi Shih, a UCLA electrical engineering professor, guilty of violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).
Shih violated the IEEPA by exporting to the People’s Republic of China, without a license, monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs), devices that amplify microwave signals. The offense arose out of Shih’s collaboration with engineers in China in conducting research for a Chinese enterprise that develops military weapons.
The base offense level of 26 prescribed in § 2M5.1(a)(1) applies if national security controls were evaded.
Shih argued that the Export Control Classification Numbers (ECCNs) associated with his MMICs are foreign policy controls, not national security controls, because they were added to a Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) Commerce Control List (CCL) to satisfy this country’s treaty obligations under the Wassenaar Arrangement (WA). The panel rejected this argument because, even if these ECCNs were added to the CCL to comply with the WA, it does not follow that the ECCNs cannot also be national security controls. The panel noted that (1) the treaty signatories’ reasons for subjecting them to regulation included the promotion of responsibility and transparency in the global arms trade and the prevention of destabilizing accumulations of conventional weapons, and (2) the BIS’s listed reasons for control were national security, missile technology, nuclear nonproliferation, and anti-terrorism. Thus, the district court did not err in finding that the export controls Shih evaded were implemented for national security reasons.
Shih also argued that the base offense level of 14 prescribed in § 2M5.1(a)(2) applies because the two-tiered structure of § 2M5.1(a) implies that the evasion of national security controls must involve conduct as egregious as the other conduct penalized by the higher base offense level. The panel rejected this argument as well as Shih’s attempts to cast his conduct as a recordkeeping or reporting offense.
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