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SUPPORTING
STATEMENT FOR
PAPERWORK
REDUCTION ACT SUBMISSIONS 
Disclosure
of Violations of the Arms Export Control Act
OMB
1405-0179
Form
DS-7787
A.
 Justification
1.
 Why
is this collection necessary and what are the legal statutes that
allow this?
The
Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC), Bureau of
Political-Military Affairs, U.S. Department of State, in accordance
with the Arms Export Control Act (AECA) (22 U.S.C. 2751 et
seq.)
and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) (22 CFR
Parts 120-130), has the principal missions of taking final action on
license applications and other requests for defense trade
transactions via commercial channels, ensuring compliance with the
statute and regulations, and collecting various types of reports.  By
statute, executive order, regulation, and delegation of authority,
DDTC is charged with controlling the export and temporary import of
defense articles, the provision of defense services, and the
brokering thereof, which are covered by the U.S. Munitions List
(USML).
ITAR
§127.12 encourages the disclosure of information to DDTC by
persons who believe they may have violated any export control
provision of the AECA, ITAR, or any order, license, or other
authorization issued under the AECA.  The information is analyzed by
DDTC to ultimately determine whether to take administrative action
concerning any violation that may have occurred.  The voluntary
nature of a disclosure may be considered a mitigating factor in
determining the administrative penalties, if any, that may be
imposed.  Failure to report a violation may result in circumstances
detrimental to the U.S. national security and foreign policy
interests and will be an adverse factor in determining the
appropriate disposition of such violations.  Also, the activity in
question might merit referral to the Department of Justice for
consideration of whether criminal prosecution is warranted.  In such
cases, DDTC will notify the Department of Justice of the voluntary
nature of the disclosure, but the Department of Justice is not
required to give that fact any weight.
Notification
of violations will be submitted to DDTC via form DS-7787, which was
developed by DDTC to allow respondents to submit disclosures directly
into DDTC’s new case management system (CMS). 
2.
What
business purpose is the information gathered going to be used for?
DDTC
uses the information to analyze industry compliance processes and
procedures, and to assess whether the activity in question might
merit penalties, administrative actions, sanctions, or referral to
the Department of Justice for possible prosecution.
3.
Is
this collection able to be completed electronically (e.g. through a
website or application)?
This
information collection will be submitted electronically via DDTC’s
new Compliance case management system. The data elements contained in
form DS-7787 will be developed into a web-based submission system
that will guide users through the disclosure process.
4.
Does this collection duplicate any other collection of information?	
The
Department of State is unaware of any other U.S. Government
requirements for the submission of this information.
5.
Describe any impacts on small business.
Export
control law and regulations are designed to safeguard U.S. Government
foreign policy and national security interests and to further world
peace.  The law and regulations are applicable equally to large and
small businesses or entities.  Only persons that believe they may
have violated a defense trade control provision of the AECA, ITAR, or
order, license, or other authorization issued under the AECA would
submit a disclosure.  Burdens have been minimized as much as
possible.
6.
What
are consequences if this collection is not done?
 	
The
absence of this provision for reporting possible violations of
defense trade control laws, regulations, or authorizations would
hinder DDTC’s mission of ensuring compliance with statutes and
its regulations.
7.
Are
there any special collection circumstances (e.g. responding in less
than 30 days, excessive record retention, or requiring submission of
proprietary trade secrets)?
Respondents
only report the information on the occasion of a possible violation.
Because of the need for DDTC to gather all relevant data, the
submission of proprietary trade secrets may be included. Separately,
ITAR Section 122.5 requires respondents to maintain all records for a
minimum period of five years from the expiration date of the license
or other approval (to include exports using an exemption) or from the
date of the transaction.
8.
Document
the publication (or intent to publish) a request for public comments
in the Federal Register.
The
Department published a notice in the Federal
Register
soliciting public comment on March 8, 2019 (84 FR  8558).  Several
comments were received and are outlined and addressed in Appendix B
of this Supporting Statement.  
9.
Are
any payments or gifts given to the respondents?
No
payment or gift has been promised or will be provided to any
respondent.
10.
Describe
any assurances of privacy/confidentiality.
 	
Other
than provisions for confidentiality or nondisclosure included in the
Freedom of Information Act, the ITAR, or other Federal statutes or
regulations, no promises of confidentiality have been made to the
respondent.
11.
Are
any questions of a sensitive nature asked?
The
Department of State is not soliciting any information regarding
matters commonly considered private.
12.
Describe
the hour time burden and the hour cost burden on the respondent
needed to complete this collection. 	
The
Department of State has reason to believe that the information
required is already available to respondents in some form due to the
nature of the disclosures and the 5-year recordkeeping requirement of
ITAR Section 122.5; by definition, the submission of this form would
presuppose the availability of information.  An estimated 700 annual
voluntary disclosures are expected from a pool of approximately
12,500 respondents.  Frequency of response is on occasion.  The
estimated time that the respondent devotes to each submission is
approximately 10 hours, making the estimated annual hour burden 7,000
hours. According to the U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor
Statistics website (www.bls.gov), the weighted wage rate category for
a “Compliance Officer” is $64.50
per hour ($31.25 average wage x 2 multiplier). Therefore, the
estimated annual burden hour cost to respondents is $451,500.00.
13.
Describe
any monetary burden on the respondent needed to complete this
collection.
There
are no anticipated costs to respondents to complete this information
collection.
14.
Describe
the cost to the Federal Government to complete this collection.
DDTC
has a full time staff of Compliance Specialists who review each
disclosure in the course of their normal duties. An average
Compliance Specialist GS-11 Step 10 rate is $43.34
plus benefits 31%
equals a fully loaded rate of $56.78 per hour.  The Compliance
Specialist spends 2,080 hours a year reviewing Disclosures so the
cost to the Federal Government to complete this collection is $
118,102.
15.
Explain
any changes/adjustments to this collection since the previous
submission.
This
information collection has been modified to include specific data
collection fields to meet the needs of a new case management system
(CMS), which DDTC recently acquired and is preparing to deploy. Prior
to this change request, disclosures were sent to DDTC by respondents
in conformance with requirements enunciated in the ITAR. In
developing its CMS, DDTC has created data fields for this information
collection to avoid taking unstructured data into its system.  Form
changes can be found in Appendix A under DS-7787 Summary of Changes.
 
16.
Specify
if the data gathered by this collection will be published.
 	
The
Department will not publish the information collected.
17.
Explain
the reasons for seeking approval to not display the OMB expiration
date.
DDTC
will display the expiration date for OMB approval of the information
collection on the form.
18.
Explain
any exceptions to the OMB certification statement.
The
Department of State does not seek any exception to the certification
statement.
B.
 Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods
This
collection of information does not employ statistical methods.
Appendix
A
DS-7787
Summary of Changes
	
	
	
	
	
		
			# 
		 | 
		
			Block # 
		 | 
		
			Field 
		 | 
		
			Change 
		 | 
	
	
		
			1 
		 | 
		
			1 
		 | 
		
			Identifying Information 
		 | 
		
			Removed
				‘Case Number’ field 
				Removed
				check box for ‘Not registered with DDTC’ 
				Added
				‘Registered with DDTC? Question; Yes, No 
				Removed
				‘Third Party Information’ 
				Allowed
				for entry of two Registration Codes 
				Added the question, “Does
				the submitter own, or otherwise control, any U.S. or foreign
				affiliates or subsidiaries that are involved in the disclosure of
				information to DTCC?” 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			2 
		 | 
		
			2 
		 | 
		
			Point of Contact Information 
		 | 
		
			
		 | 
	
	
		
			3 
		 | 
		
			3 
		 | 
		
			Disclosure Information 
		 | 
		
			
		 | 
	
	
		
			4 
		 | 
		
			4 
		 | 
		
			Violation Summary Information 
		 | 
		
			Removed
				‘Violation Type’ check boxes 
				Removed
				‘Number of Violations’ field 
				Removed
				‘Governmental program or contract’ question 
				Removed
				‘Subsidiary’ questions 
				Removed
				‘Natural Person’ questions 
				Removed
				‘Entity’ questions 
				Removed
				‘Suspended, denied, debarred, or otherwise ineligible’
				question 
				Removed
				‘All countries’ field 
				Removed
				‘How was the violation discovered’ question 
				Reorganized
				the order of the remaining fields 
				Changed the title from
				“Foreign Country/Nationality Involved” to “Foreign
				Country/Foreign Person Nationality.” 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			5 
		 | 
		
			5 
		 | 
		
			Disclosure of Relevant Document 
			 
			 
		 | 
		
			Added
				buttons for ‘Voluntary Disclosure Narrative 
				‘Empowered
				Official/Senior Officer Certification’ 
				‘Response
				to DDTC Inquiry’ 
				‘Extension
				Request Letter’ 
				‘Notification
				Letter’ 
				‘Exhibit’ 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			6 
		 | 
		
			6 
		 | 
		
			Submission Authorization 
		 | 
		
			Removed
				data fields ‘In accordance with ITAR…’,
				‘title’, and ‘capacity’ drop down 
				Added
				a check box for authorized employee 
				Signed certification from an
				empowered official or senior officer now as an attachment to
				submission 
			 
		 | 
	
Appendix
B
DS-7787
Public Comments Received During 60 Day Comment Period
	
	
	
	
	
		
			Commenter 
		 | 
		
			Reference 
		 | 
		
			Public Comment 
		 | 
		
			Response 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Block 1. Identifying Information 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Registration code 
		 | 
		
			Recommend
			allowing entry of multiple registration codes. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC accepts one commenter’s
			recommendation to allow two registration code entries. 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Company or Organization 
		 | 
		
			Change to field that includes
			sufficient character length to accommodate relationship of
			business to the Company or Organization. 
 
			 
			Rationale: All DDTC licensing
			requires that entities use their "legal name". This
			block should be consistent with applications filed with DDTC,
			which mandate the listing of a subsidiary in the applicant block,
			including when operating under the applicant code of the parent
			company. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC does not accept one commenter’s
			recommendation to increase the character length of the Company or
			Organization field to accommodate relationship of the business to
			the Company or Organization. The field should not include any
			information except for the legal name of the Company or
			Organization.  The submitter is the disclosing natural person or
			disclosing entity. 
			 
			 
			DTCC has
			added the question, “Does the submitter own, or otherwise
			control, any U.S. or foreign affiliates or subsidiaries that are
			involved in the disclosure of information to DTCC?”  If the
			answer is yes, the form will allow submitter to include affiliates
			or subsidiaries involved in this disclosure.  Select “Add”
			to include multiple subsidiaries or affiliates 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Address 
		 | 
		
			Recommend DDTC
			clarify if the "submitter's street address" refers to
			the registrant address included on the AECA registration or the
			specific address of the business element submitting the
			disclosure. 
 
			 
			Rationale:
			Currently, DDTC guidance for completion of DTrade forms is to
			include the address of the registrant as it appears on the
			registration in the applicant block on all DSP forms in DTrade. 
		 | 
		
			Use the address in your registration
			statement.  
			 
			 
			 
			DTCC has
			revised the form to allow the submitter to identify any U.S. or
			foreign affiliates or subsidiaries that are involved in this
			disclosure of information to DTCC. 
			 
			 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			State/Province,
			Zip/Postal Code, Website 
		 | 
		
			Comment:
			Recommend that these fields be optional vs. required. 
			 
			 
			 
			Rationale:
			Not all non-U.S. addresses include a state/postal code and not all
			companies maintain website. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC agrees to revise the form so the
			fields State/Province, Zip/Postal Code, and Website are optional. 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Block No. 2: Point of Contact
			Information 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Point of contact 
		 | 
		
			After "Point
			of Contact Information" add "of Person Certifying in
			Block 6"; add "Secondary Point of Contact Information,"
			which is not the person certifying and a field below that for
			selecting "Type" -
			e.g.,
			"Employee"
			"Outside
			Counsel" "Other" (and if "Other" allow
			write-in description) 
			 
			 
			 
			Rationale:
			Block 1 calls for "Point of Contact" information and
			does not appear to require that the Point of Contract be an
			empowered official or senior officer. The person certifying should
			provide point of contact information, be identified in Block 1,
			and (if applicable) be distinguished from a secondary point of
			contact. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC does not accept one commenter’s
			recommendation to add types of points of contact. The primary
			point of contact is not required to be an empowered official or
			senior officer. 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Name 
		 | 
		
			Clarify which
			entity should be listed in Block 1 -
			the
			registrant or affiliate -
			when
			the violation pertains to an affiliate. 
			 
			 
			 
			Rationale: In
			the DS-7787, the applicant can only provide one entity as
			applicant. In DTrade, applicants must provide both the registrant
			and, if applicable, the identification of the subsidiary. Since
			the creation of the DTRADE DSP forms; DDTC has added the 120.40
			Affiliate definition to the ITAR; affiliates are identified in
			block 10/11 of the DS-2032   registration. We recommend DDTC
			either provide direction as to which "entity"
			(registrant/affiliate) to list in the applicant field or provide a
			second affiliate field on the DS-7787 and other DDTC forms. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC accepts one commenter’s
			recommendation to clarify which entity should be listed in Block
			1.  DTCC has added the question, “Does the submitter own, or
			otherwise control, any U.S. or foreign affiliates or subsidiaries
			that are involved in the disclosure of information to DTCC?”
			 If the submitter answers yes, the form allows the submitter to
			include affiliates or subsidiaries involved in this disclosure. 
			Select “Add” to include multiple subsidiaries or
			affiliates 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Block 3:
			Disclosure Information 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Submission Type 
		 | 
		
			Add "Transaction
			Exception" as an option to submission type, or specify that
			DDTC has alternative plans to process Transaction Exception (TE)
			requests pursuant to § 127.1(d)(2)
			in a separate form. 
			 
			 
			Rationale:
			The proposed DS-7787 Form covers more than VDs (e.g., mandatory
			126-country notifications) and may be intended to address other
			DDTC Compliance needs. Submission
			Type, Other does
			not include a spot for 127.l(d)(2) TEs. At this time, the proposed
			DDTC Single Form currently under separate review does not have a
			section for TEs. Although this is an infrequent occurrence, we
			recommend DTCC provide guidance on which applicable form type to
			use for TE requests outside the licensing process. 
		 | 
		
			DDTC does not accept one commenter’s
			recommendation to add transaction exception as a submission type.
			The form is primarily designed for the submission of disclosures
			and related correspondence.  Transaction exceptions are submitted
			through the licensing system.  
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Block 4. Violation Summary Information 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			General Comments 
		 | 
		
			Recommend DDTC
			tailor the required information to the minimum required to process
			a request based on the submission type. Also, confirm these fields
			are optional when filing an initial voluntary disclosure. 
			 
			 
			 
			Rationale:
			For example, if an applicant submits an Extension Request, do not
			require the applicant to restate all the Summary Information
			required in block 4. The identification of the Disclosure Case
			Number should be sufficient for DDTC to correlate the request to
			the pending disclosure. Moreover, all the information requested in
			this block is not always known when an initial voluntary
			disclosure is filed. Per 22 CFR 127.12(c)(l), the person initially
			notifying DDTC may not have conducted a thorough review to
			ascertain all Block 4 information at the time of filing an initial
			voluntary disclosure. Optional fields would address this issue. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC confirms the violation summary
			information is optional when submitting an initial voluntary
			disclosure. 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Violation
			Start/End Date 
		 | 
		
			Recommend making
			these two fields optional or create the means to mark each field
			as estimated or unknown, similar to the SF 86 e-QIP form. In
			addition, recommend including an additional radio button "Select
			Add". 
			 
			 
			Rationale: At
			the time of submission, the applicant may not have dates or
			accurate dates depending on submission type (e.g. initial
			notification). Depending on the facts and circumstances, there may
			be multiple start and end dates. Unless State intends for entities
			to lump all circumstances into one "start"
			and
			"end"
			date,
			an entity may have, and disclose, multiple dates. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC agrees with one commenter’s
			recommendation and notes that the fields are optional.   DTCC
			refers the commenter to the DTCC DS-7787 instructions for guidance
			on how to input dates that are estimated or unknown.  Per the
			instructions, for the violation start date: “If known, enter
			the earliest date the violation occurred. If multiple violations
			are included in the disclosure, the date should be the date of the
			earliest violation. If the precise date is unknown, enter the
			first day of the month or the first day of the year and explain
			why the precise date is unknown in the Description of and
			Circumstances Surrounding the Violation field.”  For the
			violations end date: “If known, enter the latest date the
			violation occurred. If multiple violations are included in the
			disclosure, the date should be the date of the latest violation.
			If all violations occurred on the same day, enter the same date
			for both Violation Start Date and Violation End Date. If the
			precise date is unknown, enter the first day of the month or the
			first day of the year and explain why the precise date is unknown
			in the Description of and Circumstances Surrounding the Violation
			field.” 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Description of and Circumstances
			Surrounding Violation 
		 | 
		
			Recommend
			increasing the number of characters allowed within the box to
			accurately capture the circumstances surrounding the violation. 
			 
Rationale:
			The text box should be able to expand to accommodate a full
			description of the circumstances. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC does not accept one commenter’s
			recommendation to increase the number of characters in the
			“Description of and Circumstances Surrounding Violation.”
			 This form facilitates the capture of information as required in
			Section 127.12 of the ITAR. If the form does not allow sufficient
			space, submitters may provide a narrative of the requested
			information by attaching a separate document. If providing a
			narrative, submitters should provide complete information by
			uploading a document in Block 5 by choosing “Voluntary
			Disclosure Narrative” for Document Type.  
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Boeing 
		 | 
		
			Classified Information 
		 | 
		
			Block 4 includes
			a box to indicate if classified information is involved, and the
			instructions direct exporters to follow DDTC guidelines for the
			submission of classified information. We recommend that DDTC make
			easily available detailed instructions for providing classified
			information to the Directorate, including in relation to voluntary
			disclosure submissions. 
		 | 
		
			Please refer to DDTC’s website
			for guidance. 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Foreign Country/Nationality Involved 
		 | 
		
			Recommend DDTC
			change field titles that reference Foreign country/Nationality to
			Foreign Person Nationalities. 
			 
			 
			Rationale: A
			Foreign Person is a defined term within the ITAR that covers both
			natural persons and companies or organizations. The change would
			also capture all nationalities of a natural person since it is
			plural (e.g. dual nationals). 
		 | 
		
			DTCC accepts one commenter’s
			recommendation to change the title from “Foreign
			Country/Nationality Involved” to “Foreign
			Country/Foreign Person Nationality.” 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			126.1
			Country/National Involved 
		 | 
		
			Recommend DDTC
			remove the question. 
 
			 
			Rationale:
			The prior question, Foreign Country/Nationality Involved, can be
			used by DDTC to determine if a 126.1 country/national is involved
			in the disclosure. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC does not accept one commenter’s
			recommendation to remove the question about 126.1 country/national
			involved as this field enhances accuracy, enhances analytics
			capabilities, and provides more flexibility in assessing
			disclosures. 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Related to Previous Disclosure? 
		 | 
		
			Delete this
			question and related instructions. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC partly agrees with one’s
			commenter’s recommendation. DTCC amends the instructions as
			follows: “Identify the case numbers, if known, of previously
			submitted disclosures within the past five (5) years related to
			this disclosure. This may include disclosures with substantially
			similar circumstances such that prior corrective actions should
			have prevented the violation being disclosed in this submission;
			and disclosures with the same or related fact patterns.” 
			DTCC does not accept one commenter’s recommendation to
			delete the field related to previous disclosures. 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Boeing 
		 | 
		
			Circumstances surrounding the
			violation; identity and address of persons involved; corrective
			actions taken; and root cause 
		 | 
		
			We again
			recommend that the fields requesting details of the violation (the
			circumstances surrounding the violation; identity and address of
			persons involved; corrective actions taken; and root cause) be
			removed from the form, or that their completion is made optional,
			with pointers to an attached narrative. Depending on the matter,
			this information may be more appropriately communicated in a
			narrative presenting the full picture for DDTC review. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC agrees with one commenter’s
			recommendation to have a narrative document.  Submitter may attach
			a narrative document in Block 5.  DTCC does not accept one
			commenter’s recommendation to remove the fields requesting
			details of the violation as the intended use of the form is to
			facilitate the capture of information as required in Section
			127.12 of the ITAR.  The uniform data fields in the form
			facilitate greater search and analytics capabilities and
			readability in the compliance case management system.  
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Block 5. Disclosure or Relevant
			Documents 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Document Type 
		 | 
		
			Document Types
			"Voluntary Disclosure Narrative," "Empowered
			Official/Senior Officer Certification," "Response to
			DTCC Inquiry," "Extension Request Letter," and
			''Notification Letter" should not be required attachments,
			but should be allowable. In general, it would be beneficial for
			all parties if only the fields required under 22 CFR 127.12(c)(2)
			be required on the form. 
			 
			 
			Rationale:
			The intent of asking for other relevant information is to provide
			substantiating documentation, as defined in Sec. 127.12. Many of
			the document types referenced here (e.g, audit reports) might be
			excessive and unnecessary for this purpose. A requirement to
			provide audit reports and compliance program manuals could result
			in a substantial amount of paperwork that is not necessary for
			understanding the nature and circumstances of the potential
			violation. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC clarifies that all attachments
			listed in Block 5 are optional, except when submitting a full
			disclosure, the document type, “Empowered
			Official/Senior Officer Certification” is required. 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Block 6.
			Submission Authorization 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			LM 
		 | 
		
			Submission authorization 
		 | 
		
			This field must
			be changed from: "I am an authorized employee of the company
			cited in Block 1, or an authorized third party as indicated in
			Block 2 to submit on behalf of the company in Block 1. I certify
			to the accuracy and completeness of the submission, and have not
			knowingly omitted information." To:
			"I
			am a/an (check one): empowered official (see 22 CFR §120.25)
			or a senior officer (e.g. chief executive officer, president,
			vice-president, comptroller, treasurer, general counsel, or member
			of the board of directors) of the company cited in Block 1. I
			certify that all of the representations made in connection with
			the voluntary disclosure are true and correct to the best of my
			knowledge and belief." 
			 
			 
			Rationale:
			The certification must match the language of22 CFR 127.12(e). The
			ITAR does not require or define "completeness,"
			or
			"information" that is relevant or which must be
			included. The term "authorized
			employee"
			suggests a departure from the IT AR requirement that an empowered
			official or senior officer certify. Moreover, Block 1 calls for
			"Point
			of
			Contact
			information
			and does not appear to require that the Point of Contract be an
			empowered official or senior officer. 
		 | 
		
			DTCC explains that the
			DS-7787 form is used to collect other correspondences that is not
			a voluntary disclosure (e.g., extension request, notification,
			other).  The Block 6 Submission Authorization applies to all
			submissions types collected under this form.  Block 6 is mandatory
			for all submission types except for Notification. 
 
			 
			The purpose
			of 22 CFR 127.12(e) certification is for voluntary disclosures
			only. For voluntary disclosures, submitters should submit a
			certification in accordance with 22 CFR 127.12(e).   Under Block
			5, relevant documents, submitter should upload the certification
			under the document type, “Empowered Official/Senior Officer
			Certification.”. 
			 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Misc. 
		 | 
	
	
		
			Boeing 
		 | 
		
			Mitigating factors 
		 | 
		
			We also
			reiterate our recommendation that the form include a way to
			indicate whether the disclosure contains mitigating factors, and a
			field for describing/summarizing those. Since these factors are
			crucial to DDTC’s review of a matter, exporters should have
			the opportunity (though not a requirement) to provide this
			information on the intake form. 
		 | 
		
			One commenter remarked that DTCC
			should include a field to allow respondents to include
			‘‘mitigating information’’ regarding the
			particular matter they are disclosing. DTCC notes that the form,
			as written, contains all of the information required by ITAR
			§127.12. Determinations of exactly what constitutes
			‘‘mitigating information’’ is made solely
			by DTCC; therefore, such a separate field will not be added to the
			form.  The submitter is encouraged to provide detail of remedial
			measures and mitigating factors by uploading a document in Block 5
			by choosing “Voluntary Disclosure Narrative” for
			Document Type.  
			 
		 | 
	
	
		4
	
	
 
| File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document | 
| Author | Watkins, Pamela K | 
| File Modified | 0000-00-00 | 
| File Created | 2021-01-15 |