RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Amid a federal probe into whether Blackwater Worldwide smuggled weapons into Iraq, the private security contractor said Thursday it has established a panel of defense experts and former prosecutors to ensure it follows U.S. export laws.
In a move that acknowledges the company may not have adequately complied with those laws in the past, founder and CEO Erik Prince said the creation of a three-person oversight committee directly responds to some of the challenges the company has faced in following U.S. controls.
"Our company has experienced remarkable growth in the last few years," he said in a news release. "This growth, our work for the U.S. government around the world, and the nature of the services we offer have created compliance challenges."
Federal authorities have been investigating since last year whether Blackwater improperly brought weapons into Iraq, allegations the company has strongly denied. Earlier this year, two former employees were sentenced on gun-running charges after the company said they stole from Blackwater's armory. And in June, federal agents seized 22 automatic rifles from a company vault.
Export control laws limit how companies and individuals handle sensitive resources, including weapons and information.
Andrew Howell, Blackwater's general counsel, said the company has had trouble integrating compliance controls into a global business that works under tight time constraints and in dangerous environments.
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Showing posts with label export. Show all posts
Showing posts with label export. Show all posts
10/10/2008
Blackwater to check itself on US arms export law
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