19 April 1999
Source: http://www.usia.gov/current/news/latest/99041604.llt.html?/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml


USIS Washington File
_________________________________

16 April 1999

U.S. ANNOUNCES CIVIL PENALTIES FOR CUBA TRAVEL

(Magazine and charter services fined for embargo violations)  (390)

WASHINGTON -- Following is the text of an April 15 U.S. Treasury news
release announcing civil penalties for three firms that failed to
comply with U.S. restrictions on travel-related transactions with
Cuba:

(begin text)

TREASURY NEWS
FROM THE OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 15, 1999

TREASURY ANNOUNCES CIVIL PENALTIES FOR CUBA TRAVEL VIOLATIONS

The Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)
recently settled claims for embargo travel violations to Cuba by two
Miami airline charter companies and a national magazine.

-- C&T Charters, Inc., paid a $125,000 penalty settlement to OFAC for
allegations of acting as the operator of charter flights between
Nassau, Bahamas and Havana, Cuba, without OFAC authorization, and for
record keeping deficiencies found during compliance audits by OFAC.

-- Wilson International Services, Inc., paid $61,000 to settle alleged
record keeping deficiencies found during OFAC audits. In September,
1998 following an investigation, OFAC suspended the licenses of both
companies to provide travel-related services to Cuba.

-- Harper's Bazaar paid $31,000 in settlement of allegations that it
engaged in unlicensed payments for travel expenses in 1998 for a photo
shoot in Cuba.

"These penalty settlements serve to emphasize our strong commitment to
fully enforce travel restrictions to Cuba, even as we work to
implement new humanitarian measures under the embargo in support of
the Cuban people, said OFAC Director Richard Newcomb.

All travel-related transactions involving Cuba by persons subject to
U.S. jurisdiction remain highly regulated and travel for tourism and
unlicensed business purposes remains strictly prohibited. OFAC
investigates several hundred reports of unlicensed travel to Cuba each
year, with many of these cases resulting in a civil penalty
proceeding.

Economic sanctions were imposed against Cuba in 1963 to exert
financial pressure against Fidel Castro's regime. Most economic
transactions are prohibited, unless otherwise authorized by OFAC.
Criminal penalties for violation of these sanctions range up to 10
years in prison, $1 million in corporate fines and $250,000 in
individual fines. Civil penalties of up to $55,000 per violation may
also be imposed. Since October 1992, the effective date of OFAC's
civil penalty authority, Treasury has collected more than $2 million
in civil monetary penalties for Cuba embargo violations.

(end text)