Illegally Exported Controlled Aircraft Components To Iran
Laura Wang-Woodford, a U.S. citizen
who served as a director of Monarch Aviation Pte Ltd., a Singapore
company that imported and exported military and commercial aircraft
components for more than 20 years, was sentenced Thursday in
federal court in Brooklyn to 46 months in prison for conspiring to
violate the U.S. trade embargo by exporting controlled aircraft
components to Iran. Wang-Woodford was also ordered to forfeit
$500,000 to the U.S. Treasury Department.
The sentencing was announced by David Kris, Assistant Attorney
General for National Security; Benton J. Campbell, U.S. Attorney
for the Eastern District of New York; Kevin Delli-Colli, Acting
Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Export Enforcement; and John T.
Morton, Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Wang-Woodford was arrested on Dec. 23, 2007, at San Francisco
International Airport after arriving on a flight from Hong Kong,
and has remained incarcerated since then. She and her husband,
Brian D. Woodford, a U.K. citizen who served as chairman and
managing director of Monarch, were originally charged in a 20-count
indictment returned in the Eastern District of New York on Jan. 15,
2003. Brian Woodford remains a fugitive. A superseding indictment
charging Wang-Woodford with operating Jungda International Pte
Ltd., a Singapore-based successor to Monarch, was returned on May
22, 2008.
According to the superseding indictment, between January 1998
and December 2007, the defendants exported controlled U.S. aircraft
parts from the United States to Monarch and Jungda in Singapore and
Malaysia and then re-exported those items to companies in Tehran,
Iran, without obtaining the required U.S. government licenses. As
part of the charged conspiracy, the defendants falsely listed
Monarch and Jungda as the ultimate recipients of the parts on
export documents filed with the U.S. government. The aircraft parts
illegally exported to Iran include aircraft shields, shears, "o"
rings and switch assemblies. The superseding indictment further
charged that the defendants arranged for the illegal export of U.S.
military aircraft components, designed for use in Chinook military
helicopters, to Monarch in Singapore.
At the time of her arrest in San Francisco, Wang-Woodford
possessed catalogues from a Chinese company, the China National
Precision Machinery Import and Export Corporation (CPMIEC),
containing advertisements for military technology and weaponry. The
products advertised included surface-to-air missile systems and
rocket launchers. CPMIEC has been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury
Department, Office of Foreign Assets Control, based, in part, on
CPMIEC's history of selling military hardware to Iran. All U.S.
persons and entities are prohibited from engaging in business with
CPMIEC.
"As today's sentence demonstrates,
those who export restricted American technology in violation of our
laws will be held accountable for their actions. Keeping sensitive
U.S. technology from falling into the wrong hands is a top priority
for the Justice Department," said Assistant Attorney General
Kris.
"We are committed to protect the American public from the
national security threat posed by those who would personally profit
from the illegal export of U.S. military technology," said U.S.
Attorney Campbell. Mr. Campbell thanked the Department of Commerce
Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) and the Department of
Homeland Security, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE),
the agencies responsible for conducting the government's
investigation.
"Shutting down diverters like Monarch Aviation to protect our
national security is our top priority, said Acting Assistant
Secretary of Commerce for Export Enforcement Delli-Colli. "This
case illustrates a successful, coordinated effort to stop the
illegal shipment of controlled aircraft parts to Iran."
"The illegal sale of military parts is not only a threat to our
national security, but to U.S. soldiers and allies," said Assistant
Secretary of Homeland Security for U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement Morton.
The government's case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Daniel S. Silver, Cristina M. Posa and Claire Kedeshian.