CERNUDA
v. HEAVEY, (S.D.Fla. 1989)
720
F. Supp. 1544
Ramon
CERNUDA and Editorial Cernuda, Inc., Petitioners, v. George D.
HEAVY,
Regional Commission, United States Customs Service, and Department
of
Treasury, United States Customs Service, Respondents.
No.
89-1265-Civ.
United
States District Court, S.D. Florida, Miami Division
September
18, 1989.
Charles V.
Senatore, Frank Burt, Tew, Jorden Schulte &
Beasley, Miami,
Fla., for petitioners.
Dexter W.
Lehtinen, U.S. Atty., Thomas A.W. Fitzgerald,
Asst. U.S.
Atty., Miami, Fla., for respondents.
ORDER GRANTING
PETITION FOR RETURN OF SEIZED PAINTINGS
RYSKAMP,
District Judge.
I. INTRODUCTION
THIS MATTER
is before the court on a petition filed June
19, 1989,
pursuant to Rule 41(e) of the Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure,
seeking the return of approximately 200 paintings
and other
property seized by the U.S. Customs Service
("the Service")
on May 5, 1989.
The court heard argument on that
petition on July 28, 1989.
For the reasons
discussed below, the petitioners' petition
for return
of the seized property is hereby GRANTED.
II. FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
The Service
seized the aforementioned property as being
violative
of the Trading With the Enemy Act, 50 U.S.C.A.App.
§ 5(b)
(1968 and Supp. 1989) ("the TWEA"), and the
Cuban Asset Control
Regulations promulgated thereunder, 31 C.F.R.
Pt. 515 (1963,
amended 1989) ("the Regulations").
This seizure
is part of an on-going controversy surrounding
the exhibition
and auction of Cuban art organized by the Cuban
Museum in
Miami. See
generally
Memorandum of Law in Support of Petition
for Return of Property Pursuant to Rule 41(e),
Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure ("Petitioners' Memorandum")
at 5-11;
Appendix 2; Appendix 8. Petitioner Cernuda has
served the museum
in various executive capacities during the last
eleven years.
Beginning in late 1987, dissension arose among
museum directors
and in the community concerning the museum's
exhibition
and auction of art created by artists now living
in Cuba
or those who have not renounced allegiance to
Fidel Castro.
The dissension
focused on a benefit auction planned for
April 1988,
which was to include such art. Those opposing
the auction
suggested that it would violate the TWEA, at
which point
auction organizers withdrew the disputed art
to avoid any
possible legal violations. Id.
at 8.
Despite withdrawal
of the works from the auction, the controversy
continued regarding the museum. Cernuda and
other museum
directors were the subject of death threats.
A bomb exploded
on May 3, 1988, damaging a director's car and
the museum
itself. Seventeen incumbent board members, opposed
to the
museum's dealings in art associated with Castro's
Cuba, also
resigned that month. Because of the controvery,
the museum
was subjected to city and state audits, which
failed to uncover
financial impropriety. Nevertheless, the Florida
Legislature
withdrew its financial support for the museum
on May
18, 1988.
After the
April 1988 auction, petitioners attempted to
comply with
the TWEA by seeking licenses to exhibit Cuban
works. Thus,
in December 1988, Cernuda wrote to the Office
of Foreign
Asset Control ("OFAC"), the federal agency responsible
for enforcing
the TWEA, requesting permission to exhibit the
work of a
Cuban dissident artist. OFAC never responded
to this request.
Id.
at 13.
The next
contact Cernuda had with government officials
was on
May 5, 1989, when agents of the U.S. Customs
Service searched
his personal residence and the office of his
company, Editorial
Cernuda, pursuant to duly executed warrants.
The agents
seized approximately 200 paintings that appeared
to be of
Cuban-origin.
This seizure is the subject of this petition.
At present,
the government has issued no criminal
indictments
against petitioners for TWEA violations
surrounding
the importation of the disputed paintings,
although more
than four months have passed since its agents
seized the
paintings.
Nonetheless, Rule 41(e) gives this court
the discretion to hear pre-indictment requests
for the return
of unconstitutionally seized property. See
DiBella v. United
States,
369 U.S. 121,
131, 82 S.Ct. 654, 660, 7 L.Ed.2d 614,
621 (1962); Richey
v. Smith,
515 F.2d 1239,
1243 (5th Cir. 1975).
III. THE
STATUTORY AND REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
A. The
Trading With the Enemy Act Before Its 1988
Amendment
The Trading
With the Enemy Act, 50 U.S.C.A.App. § 5(b),
originally
provided the President with broad authority
to impose
comprehensive embargoes on commerce with foreign
countries,
during both peacetime emergencies and wartime.
Trading With
the Enemy Act of 1917, ch. 106, 40 Stat. 411
(amended 1977,
1988); Regan
v. Wald,
468 U.S. 222,
225-26, 104 S.Ct.
3026, 3029, 82 L.Ed.2d 171, 175-76 (1984).
In 1977,
Congress amended section 5(b) so that it no
longer applied
to emergency situations during peacetime. Act
of December
28, 1977, Pub.L. No. 95-223, 91 Stat.
1625 (1977). But the 1977 amendment contained
a grandfather
clause, which allowed for the continuation of
economic measures
taken pursuant to section 5(b) before 1977.
See
De Cuellar v. Brady,
881 F.2d 1561,
1562-63 (11th Cir. 1989).
Pertinent
to the present case, the TWEA was the basis
for a 1962
embargo on all trade with Cuba after the ascendancy
of Fidel
Castro. See
Proclamation 3447 of Feb. 3, 1962, 27
Fed.Reg. 1085
(1962), 3 C.F.R. 1959-1963 Comp., p. 157. Under
authority
provided by the embargo, the Secretary of the
Treasury promulgated
the Cuban Assets Control Regulations to
aid in enforcing
the TWEA. 31 C.F.R. Pt. 515 (1963). The
Regulations
generally prohibited any "dealings" in property
in which
a Cuban national has, or had, a direct or indirect
interest after
July 8, 1963, in order to prevent the transfer
of wealth
to Cuba. See
31 C.F.R. § 515.201 (general prohibition
as to certain
countries and nationals); § 515.305 (Cuba
designated
as national under TWEA); see
also Tagle v. Regan, 643 F.2d 1058,
1059 (5th Cir. 1981) (generally describing
Regulations
applicable to TWEA as amended in 1977).
Notwithstanding
the general prohibition of section 515.201,
the Regulations
prior to 1988 provided for general licenses
by application
to the Secretary in Subpart E and for specific
licenses at
the Secretary's discretion in Subpart B.
See
31 C.F.R. § 515.801(a), (b). Subpart E
provided that a general
license could be obtained for the importation
of "[b]ooks
and other publications, films, phonograph records,
tapes, photographs,
microfilm, microfiche and posters of Cuban
origin." 31
C.F.R. § 515.545. Imports of these materials
for educational
purposes had to be approved by the Librarian
of Congress
or the National Science Foundation, while similar
imports for
commercial purposes were allowed if the licensee
deposited
funds into a blocked account and filed certain
reports. Id.
§ 515.545(a), (b). If the Regulations did
not provide
for a general license, an individual could seek
a specific
license through either OFAC or the Federal Reserve
Bank of New
York. Id.
§ 515.801(b).
B. The
TWEA After Its 1988 Amendment
1.
Statutory Language.
In 1988, Congress passed the Omnibus
Trade and
Competitiveness Act, which amended TWEA section
5(b) by
adding new section 5(b)(4). See
Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness
Act of 1988, Pub.L. No. 100-418, § 2502(a)(1),
1988 U.S.Code
Cong. & Admin.News
(102 Stat.) 1107, 1371
(codified
at 50 U.S.C.A.App. § 5(b)(4) (Supp. 1989)).
This 1988 amendment
expressly revoked presidential authority to
regulate or
prohibit the importation or exportation of certain
materials.
In pertinent part, it provides that:
The authority
granted to the President in this
subsection does not include the authority to
regulate
or prohibit, directly or indirectly, the
importation
from any country, or the exportation
to any country,
whether commercial or otherwise,
of publications, films, posters, phonograph
records,
photographs, microfilms, microfiche,
tapes, or
other informational materials, which
are not otherwise
controlled for export under
section 5 of the Export Administration Act of
1979 [section
2404 of this Appendix]
or with
respect to which no acts are prohibited by
chapter 37
of title 18, United States Code.
2.
Legislative History.
The Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness
Act of 1988,
which amended the TWEA, was not itself the subject
of legislative
debate, as it was derived largely from a
predecessor
bill vetoed because it included a subtitle relating
to plant closings.
See
1988 U.S.Code
Cong. & Admin.News
1547. Nevertheless,
the 1988 act
specifically provides that the legislative
history for
the predecessor bill, H.R. 3, generally is treated
as its own
legislative history.
Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness
Act of 1988, Pub.L. No. 100-418, § 2, 1988
U.S.Code
Cong. & Admin.News
(102 Stat.) 1107, 1119.
Unfortunately,
the conference report for H.R. 3 provides
little insight
as to the interpretation of amended TWEA
section 5(b)(4),
beyond the bare words of the statute.
See
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 576, 100th Cong., 1st Sess.,
reprinted
in 1988
U.S.Code
Cong. & Admin.News
1547, 1872. The report merely states
that the conference agreement was identical
to the House provision,
which "clarifie[d] that the Trading with the
Enemy Act
and the International Emergency Economic Powers
Act do not authorize
regulations on the export or import of informational
material not
otherwise controlled under the Export
Administration
Act." Id.
The conference report noted that the
Senate amendment
contained no provision relating to section
2502 of the
trade act. Id.
Despite the
conference report's brevity, the legislative
intent behind
new TWEA section 5(b)(4) may be discerned from
a report of
the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, which
accompanied
H.R. 3. See
1988 U.S.Code
Cong. & Admin.News
1547 (listing
various House reports related to Public Law
100-418). According
to the Committee:
The committee
notes that the American Bar
Association House of Delegates approved, in
February
1985, the principle that no prohibitions
should exist
on imports to the United States of
ideas and information if their circulation is
protected
by the First Amendment. That principle
applies with
equal force to the exportation of
ideas and information from this country to the
rest of the
world. Accordingly, these sections
also exempt informational materials and
publications
from the export restrictions that
may be imposed under these acts.
H.R.Rep. No.
40, 100th Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 3, at 113 (1987).
3.
Regulatory Amendments.
After the 1988 TWEA amendment, OFAC amended
its regulations to reflect the statutory change.
See
Cuban Asset
Control Regulations, 54 Fed.Reg. 5229 (1989)
(to be codified
at 31 C.F.R. Pt. 515). The regulations became
effective
February 2, 1989. Id.
at 5230.
Paralleling
the statute, the new regulations completely
exempt from
prohibition or regulation "[t]he importation
from any
country, and the exportation to any country,
whether commercial
or otherwise, of informational materials, as
defined in
section 515.332." Id.
§ 515.206.
Section 515.332(a)
then defines "informational materials,"
which the
statute itself had not defined:
For purposes
of this part, the term
"informational materials" means information
recorded
in tangible form, i.e.,
publications,
films, posters, phonograph records, photographs,
microfilms,
microfiche, tapes, and other tangible
informational
articles. Id.
§ 515.332(a).
Again paralleling
the statute, the regulation provides that
"informational
materials" do not include items controlled
under the
Export Administration Act of 1979 or prohibited
by Title
18 of the United States Code. Id.
§ 515.332(b)(1). Further,
the regulation provides that "informational
materials" do
not include "[i]ntangible items, such as telecommunications
transmissions."
Id.
§ 515.332(b)(2).
Along with
these new regulatory provisions, OFAC provided
various examples
of transactions permissible under the new
regulations.
These examples include a United States publisher
that ships
books from Cuba; an arrangement whereby a Cuban
party exports
the single master copy of a Cuban motion picture
to the United
States and thereafter sets up a licensing
arrangement
under which the U.S. party distributes,
duplicates,
and generally exploits the film; a U.S. recording
company that
contracts to purchase and import preexisting
recordings
by a Cuban musician or to copy the recordings
in the
United States and pay royalties; and a subpublication
agreement
licensing the right to public performance,
adaptation
and arrangement of a Cuban musical composition.
See
id.
at 5233.
IV. ANALYSIS
A. Statutory
Construction and Legislative History
Petitioners
argue that the term "informational materials"
as used
in the amended TWEA and accompanying Regulations
is premised
on First Amendment principles and encompasses
original works
of art, thus exempting the acquisition of Cuban
paintings
from TWEA prohibition or regulation. The government
responds with
two arguments: first, that the TWEA amendment
does not include
all First Amendment activity; and, second,
that original
art is not "informational" but merely aesthetic
and thus not
exempt from the TWEA.
Certainly,
"art" in the form of paintings is not expressly
exempted under
the amended statute. The amended statutory
language enumerates
a list of other specific items now exempt
from the TWEA,
followed by the general words "and other
informational
materials." See
Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act
of 1988, Pub.L. No. 100-418, § 2502(a)(1)
(102 Stat.) 1107, 1371
(codified as amended at 50 U.S.C.A.App. §
5(b)(4)).
The general
term "informational materials" first appeared
in the
1988 amendment. Before 1988, the TWEA contained
no specific
exemptions from its prohibitions, and the
accompanying
regulations provided licenses for only a finite
list of items,
which did not include the general term
"informational
materials." See
31 C.F.R. § 515.545.
Accordingly,
the legislative history must be considered to
determine
what Congress intended when it used the term
"informational
materials." In explaining the act, the House
Foreign Affairs
committee expressly noted that the American
Bar Association
House of Delegates, the ABA's representative
body, had
approved "the principle that no prohibitions
should exist
on imports to the United States of ideas and
information if
their circulation is protected by the First
Amendment." H.R.Rep.
No. 40, 100th Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 3, at 113
(1987).
Artwork,
like other forms of expression, is within the
ambit of
speech that receives First Amendment protection.
See
Serra v.
U.S. General Services Administration,
847 F.2d 1045,
1048 (2d
Cir.1988); Piarowski
v. Illinois Community College District
515,
759 F.2d 625
(7th Cir.1985), cert.
denied,
474 U.S. 1007, 106
S.Ct. 528, 88 L.Ed.2d 460 (1985). As the court
in Piarowski
stated:
[T]he freedom
of speech and of the press
protected by the First Amendment has been
interpreted
to embrace purely artistic as well as
political
expression (and entertainment that
falls far short of anyone's idea of "art," such
as the topless
dancing in Doran
v. Salem Inn., Inc.,
422 U.S. 922,
932-34 [95 S.Ct. 2561, 2568-69,
45 L.Ed.2d 648] (1975)), unless the artistic
expression
is obscene in the legal sense. Piarowski,
759 F.2d at 628.
The government
concedes that artwork has First Amendment
protection.
Government's Memorandum at 16 (citing
Serra,
847 F.2d at 1048).
Notwithstanding what seems
the clear import of the committee report, the
government argues
that the committee "only noted" the ABA recommendation
and that if
Congress truly intended to exempt all materials
implicating
the First Amendment, it would have done so.
Government's
Memorandum at 11.
The government offers no support
for this argument, which seems to ignore the
plain language
of the report and the obvious First Amendment
orientation
of the words "informational materials."
Attempting
to discount references to the First Amendment
in the
legislative history, the government retreats
to the statutory
language itself, arguing that "informational
materials"
is a more restricted category than of materials
protected
by the First Amendment. Id.
at 11-12 (citing Schad
v. Mount
Ephraim,
452 U.S. 61,
65, 101 S.Ct. 2176, 2180, 68 L.Ed.2d
671 (1981)).
Specifically, the government argues that
original works of art are not informational
but limited to a
mere aesthetic dimension. See
Government's Memorandum at 11.
The government
offers no support for this assertion, other
than common
sense. But common sense provides no support.
Art conveys
information through its unique form of expression,
often political
expression. For example, Eugene Delacroix
celebrated
liberty, equality, and fraternity in "Liberty
Leading the
People." Pablo Picasso decried the brutality
of fascism
in "Guernica." On a perhaps more everyday level,
those who
view political cartoons in daily newspapers
are both targeted
with a political message and impressed by the
craftsmanship
of a Herblock or Jeff McNelly.
That the
paintings at issue here convey information is
belied by
the statements of the very persons who oppose
their exhibition
and auction at the Cuban Museum. The buyer of
a painting
at a museum auction, who later set it afire,
announced
that his act was one "of revulsion against
Marxist-Leninist
propaganda." See
Appendix to Emergency Motion for
Return of Property Pursuant to Rule 41(e) and
Memorandum of Law
in Support, at 7 ("Appendix"). Those who protested
against the
museum's auctions of Cuban art were photographed
displaying placards
that read "Art, Yes! Propaganda, No!" Id.
at 7. Admittedly,
those who view this art as propaganda would
claim that
it conveys skewed information. Yet, this is
information nonetheless.
In contrast
to the government's unsupported contention that
art is only
aesthetic, petitioner cites numerous authorities
for the proposition
that art is informational as well. See
generally
Appendix at 18.
Exemplary is a passage from a recent
art history survey:
Great works
of art are more than aesthetically
pleasing objects, more than feats of human skills
and ingenuity:
they deepen our insight into
ourselves and others, they sharpen our awareness
of our own
and other religious beliefs, they
enlarge our comprehension of alternative and
often alien
ways of life — in short they help us
to explore
and understand our own human nature.
H. Honour
& J. Fleming, The
Visual Arts, A History
15 (2d ed. 1986).
B. OFAC
Interpretation and Licensing Procedures
The government
argues that this court should abide by OFAC
interpretation
of the statutory amendments, as it is the
agency charged
with administering the TWEA. Government's
Memorandum
at 13. This court agrees that OFAC's decisions
are
entitled to
great deference and should be reversed only
if arbitrary
and capricious. See
De Cuellar v. Brady, 881 F.2d 1561,
1565 (11th Cir.1989). If OFAC's interpretations
of TWEA provisions
are reasonable, this court must not substitute
its own
construction of the statute. Id.
As evidence
of OFAC's statutory interpretation, the
government
points to a September 1988 letter from an OFAC
official,
which purportedly interprets the amended TWEA
to not exempt
artwork as a class. Id.
at 9 (citing Appendix at 20).
The court
does not find the September 1988 OFAC letter
a reasonable
construction of the statute, for two reasons.
First, the
letter itself is nonsensical, notwithstanding
the cogency
the government has ascribed to it. In regard
to Cuban-origin
paintings, the letter states that OFAC "has
not, and
will not, interpret the term 'publication' to
include artwork,
as a class." Petitioners do not attempt to argue
that artwork
is a publication, so as to be exempt under the
first enumerated
item of the TWEA. Simply put, the OFAC letter
fails to
address the question, which is whether the general
term "informational
materials" included in the 1988 TWEA amendment
encompasses
artwork as a class, even though it is not
specifically
enumerated.
The second
reason the 1988 letter constitutes an
unreasonable
interpretation of the TWEA is that the OFAC
regulations
themselves, published in February 1989, call
for a
more generous reading of the statute. See
54 Fed.Reg. at 5233.
The new regulations enumerate what informational
materials
include, ending that enumeration with the words
"and other
informational articles." See
54 Fed.Reg. § 515.332(a)(1). OFAC
provides various "examples" of now permitted
transactions following
the regulations, drawing from the list of exemplary
categories
in the regulations. Thus, the enumerative list
in the
Regulations seems merely exemplary and not exclusionary.
Indeed, it
is difficult to see any crucial distinction
between the
instant case and that
presented in Example 2, allowing a U.S. party
to import the
master copy of a Cuban film and license it for
distribution
and duplication. First, Example 2 appears to
undercut the
government's argument that allowing the
importation
of reproductive forms is sufficient to pass
constitutional
muster. See
Government's Memorandum at 14, 20; Plaintiff's
Reply at 7 and n. 4. Albeit, title does not
pass to the
American party in Example 2, but a "master"
copy has been imported
nonetheless. Despite the fact that title has
not passed,
substantial monies would pass to Cuba in exchange
for the
privilege of a licensing arrangement. In essence,
the sole distinction
between the situation presented in Example 2
and that
of petitioners is that "film" is a specifically
enumerated exemption
within the 1988 amendment.
Beyond OFAC's
statutory interpretation, agency action, or
rather inaction,
regarding Cernuda's licensing requests was
arbitrary
and capricious. Under procedures that existed
even prior
to the 1988 amendment, Cernuda could seek a
permit for importing
the Cuban artworks, for either educational or
commercial
purposes. See
31 C.F.R. § 515.545. On December 1,
1988, Cernuda
wrote OFAC requesting permission to exhibit
the works
of a Cuban dissident artist who had been persecuted
under Castro's
regime. Petitioner's Memorandum at 12 and Appendix
at 5.
Cernuda expressed hopes that the exhibit would
"serve to denounce
the lack of freedom of expression and artistic
freedom that
prevails in Castro's Cuba." Id.
OFAC never responded to Cernuda's
letter. Id.
at 13. Nor has it denied ever receiving
the letter.
The government
defends OFAC's failure to approve, or even
respond to,
Cernuda's request as being unnecessary.
See
Government's Memorandum at 17-18. According
to the government,
the museum was aware when it sought te permit
that the
exhibition of Cuban works did not require approval,
although an
auction of such works did. Id.
and at n. 11. But the
government cannot separate the sale and exhibition
of the disputed
paintings. If the paintings are not informational
materials,
they are subject to the TWEA and both their
exhibition
or auction is prohibited absent a license. On
the other
hand, if the paintings are informational materials,
the government
can regulate neither their exhibition nor auction
under the
1988 TWEA amendment, which provides for the
importation
of such materials "whether commercial or
otherwise."
See
Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988,
Pub.L. No.
100-418, § 2502(a)(1), 1988 U.S.Code
Cong. & Admin.News
(102 Stat.) 1107, 1371 (codified as amended
at 50 U.S.C.A.
App. § 5(b)(4)). The government cannot
have it both ways.
Nor was this
the only instance of arbitrary OFAC behavior.
Besides requesting
a license to exhibit specific works,
Cernuda also
sought a retroactive license for his auctions
of Cuban
paintings during a visit to OFAC in late May
1989. See
Petitioner's Memorandum at 14. Cernuda advised
OFAC that he had
not knowingly violated the TWEA, as required
for a criminal violation
to occur.
OFAC conceded that precedent existed
for a retroactive
license. See
31 C.F.R. §§ 515.203(c), 515.502.
Nonetheless, OFAC also failed to respond in
any meaningful
way to this licensing request. Instead, in June
1989, OFAC's
director delivered a speech to a group of Cuban
Americans
who had criticized Cernuda and the Cuban Museum,
pledging to
work with those who opposed the museum's
activities.
Petitioner's Memorandum at 14-15.
Such activity
constitutes arbitrary and capricious action
by the
agency charged with evenhandedly administering
a statute and
its regulations. Considering such activity and
the unreasonableness
of OFAC interpretation of the TWEA, this
court will
not defer to that interpretation.
Instead, the
court holds that statutory construction and
the legislative
history of the 1988 TWEA amendment show that
Congress amended
the TWEA to exempt "informational materials,"
in order to
prevent the statute from running afoul of the
First Amendment.
Original paintings fall within the statutory
exemption.
This construction avoids serious questions
about the
constitutionality of the TWEA. See
NLRB v. Catholic Bishop
of Chicago,
440 U.S. 490,
500, 99 S.Ct. 1313, 1318-19, 59
L.Ed.2d 533, 541 (1979). Accordingly, this court
need not reach
the constitutional issues briefed by the parties
in this case,
following the axiom of abstention from constitutional
decision-making
when statutory interpretation suffices. Id;
Tagle
v. Regan,
643 F.2d 1058,
1067 (5th Cir.1981).
VI. RETROACTIVITY
OF THE 1988 AMENDMENT
While petitioner
Cernuda's exhibition and auction of Cuban-origin
paintings is exempt from the TWEA under its
1988 amendment,
some question remains whether the amendment
is retroactive
so as to reach violations that may have occurred
before its
effective date.
Retroactivity
is generally not a favored concept. See
Government's Memorandum at 15, n. 10 (citing
Bowen
v. Georgetown
University Hospital,
___ U.S. ___, 109 S.Ct. 468, 476,
102 L.Ed.2d 493, 500 (1988)). Therefore, congressional
enactments
and legislative regulations will not be considered
retroactive
unless their language so requires. Bowen,
109 S.Ct. at
476. Notwithstanding, this court agrees with
petitioner that the
1988 TWEA amendment was intended to be retroactive.
See
Petitioner's
Memorandum at 21-22. This is explicit in section
2502(a)(2)
of the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act
of 1988:
The authorities
conferred upon the President by
Section 5(b) of the Trading With the Enemy Act
which
were being exercised with respect to a
country
on July 1, 1977,
as a result of a national
emergency declared by the President before such
date, and
are being exercised on the date of the
enactment
of this Act, do not include the authority
to
regulate or prohibit any activity
[exempt as
involving informational materials].
Omnibus Trade
and Competitiveness Act, Pub.L. No. 100-418,
§ 2502(a)(2),
1988 U.S.
Code Cong. & Admin.News
(102 Stat.) 1107,
1371 (emphasis added).
The preamble
to the new OFAC Regulations also indicates that
the change
is retroactive: "Under section 2502(a)(2) of
the Trade
Act, the
new limitation
on the President's authority under
TWEA applies
to existing and future sanctions programs.
This rule
makes revisions to the Regulations necessary
to conform
them to this new limitation on Presidential
authority under
TWEA." 54 Fed.Reg. at 5230 (emphasis added).
Furthermore,
the law of this circuit provides that if a
statutory
change is definitional, the change is retroactive.
See
United States v. Kolter,
849 F.2d 541,
544 (11th Cir.1988).
The government attempts to argue that the 1988
amendment
did not change the definition of property covered
by the
regulations but only removed certain classes
of property from
regulation. Government's Memorandum at 15 n.
10. The court agrees
with petitioners that the government's characterization
of the change
wrought by the 1988 amendment is incredible,
at best.
See
Petitioners' Reply to Government's Response
to Motion For
Return of Property, at 9 n. 5.
Accordingly,
the court holds that the amended TWEA applies
retroactively,
so as to reach possible violations that
occurred before
1988.
V. CONCLUSION
This case
has turned on the construction of a statutory
amendment.
But not far beneath the surface of its language
lies a constitutional
principle central to American life and
law: the First
Amendment. As the Supreme Court has noted,
"[i]f there
is a bedrock principle underlying the First
Amendment,
it is that the Government may not prohibit the
expression
of an idea because society finds the idea itself
offensive
or disagreeable." See
Texas v. Johnson,
___ U.S. ___, 109
S.Ct. 2533, 105 L.Ed.2d 342 (1989) (First Amendment
protects even
burning of American flag when done as means
of political
expression). This is true whether a large or
small segment
of society finds the idea offensive.
Admittedly,
the principle enshrined in the First Amendment
has been the
root of bitter controvery and debate in this
country, as
in the Johnson
case itself. Yet, that principle is one
that courts and philosophers have considered
fundamental to a
free society. See,
e.g., New York Times v. Sullivan, 376
U.S. 254,
279 n. 19, 84 S.Ct. 710, 725 n. 19, 11 L.Ed.2d
686, 706 n. 19
(1964) (quoting J.S. Mill, On
Liberty
(1st ed. 1859) ("[e]ven
a false statement may be deemed to make a valuable
contribution
to public debate, since it brings about 'the
clearer perception
and livelier impression of truth, produced
by its collision
with error'")).
Some in the
community may dislike the information conveyed
in the art
exhibited and auctioned by the Cuban Museum.
The museum
may find that future support and funding may
not be as forthcoming,
if it continues to buck the wishes of those
who helped
found it. Nonetheless, that is not the affair
of this court.
Nor can the government dictate whether petitioners
and the
Cuban Museum may exhibit or auction paintings
of Cuban origin.
Such activity is not illegal. On the contrary,
it is expression
protected by the First Amendment and exempted
from regulation
under the 1988 amendment to the TWEA.
Accordingly,
after careful consideration of this matter,
it is
hereby:
ORDERED AND
ADJUDGED that the petitioner's petition be,
and is,
hereby GRANTED, and that the U.S. Customs Service
is ordered
to return the remaining property seized from
Mr. Cernuda
to him forthwith.
DONE AND
ORDERED.
[fn1] Of the
approximately 200 paintings seized, thirty-two
were returned
to petitioners on July 24, 1989. See
Reply to Government's
Response to Motion for Return of Property,
Affidavit
of Ramon Cernuda, para. 7.
[fn2] After
the May 1989 seizure, Cernuda requested a
retroactive
license for his paintings, as provided in 31
C.F.R. §§
515.203(c), 515.502. See
Petitioners' Memorandum at 14.
This request also went unanswered. See
infra
at page 1552.
[fn3] The
government and petitioners disagreed as to whether
all paintings
seized were subject to the Cuban embargo, and
the government
retained an art expert to analyze the disputed
works. See
Government's Memorandum at 2 n. 2. Nearly two
months after
the seizure, the government returned thirty-two
paintings to
petitioners. See
supra
note 1. According to petitioners, the
government's
return of certain of these paintings was
inconsistent
with its asserted stance on the TWEA. See
Reply to Government's
Response to Motion for Return of Property,
Affidavit
of Ramon Cernuda, para. 7. After this decision,
further appraisal
of petitioners' paintings will be
unnecessary.
[fn4] It is
unclear whether those people who actually imported
the disputed
paintings will be prosecuted. The government
admits that
its yearlong investigation revealed that
petitioner
Cernuda did not himself purchase the paintings
from anyone
in Cuba. See
generally
Government Memorandum at 3; Petitioners'
Memorandum at 3 n. 3. Cernuda purchased a small
number of
paintings from Jerry Scott, a United States
Public Affairs
officer formerly based in Havana. Scott brought
the paintings
into the United States in February 1988, without
declaring
them to U.S. Customs inspectors. Cernuda also
purchased
various Cuban paintings from Guido Adriaenssens,
a Belgian
diplomat, in May and November 1987, also without
obtaining
prior Treasury approval. Adriaenssens brought
approximately
120 pieces of Cuban art into the United States
between 1980
and 1983.
Thus, the
record reveals that Cernuda's dealings in Cuban
art were purely
domestic transactions and that he did not
himself "trade
with the enemy." The government maintains that
the TWEA prohibits
even such secondary commercial transactions,
in order to prevent a domestic market from
developing
"which is likely to fuel illicit importation
and stymie
enforcement efforts." Government's Memorandum
at 20 n. 13.
But the government
seeks to quash this domestic market through
selective enforcement. Cernuda is the only art
dealer subjected
to government seizure of his collection. The
directors
of Latin American art for the New York auction
houses of
Sotheby's and Christie's claim they never acquired
licenses to
auction works by Cuban artists before this
controversy
arose. Petitioner's Memorandum at 11 and Appendix
15. In the
last seven years, these two houses have sold
approximately
900 such paintings. Id.
at 11 and Appendix 6. The Modern
Art Museum at the Organization of American States
in Washington,
D.C., also exhibited the works of Cuban artists.
Id.
at 12 and Appendix 6.
[fn5] Presidential
power to take peacetime economic measures
that do not
fall under the grandfather clause of the 1977
amendment
are governed by the International Emergency
Economic Powers
Act, Pub.L. No. 95-223, §§ 202 et
seq., 91 Stat. 1626 (codified
in 50 U.S.C. § 1701
et seq.) (1977, amended 1988) ("the
IEEPA"). See
De Cuellar,
881 F.2d at 1563 n. 1.
[fn6] Section
2404 allows the President to prohibit or curtail
the export
of goods or technology to protect U.S. national
security.
50 U.S.C.A.App. § 2404 (1951 and Supp.1989).
[fn7] Chapter
37 enumerates crimes involving espionage and
the disclosure
of classified information. See
18 U.S.C.A. §§ 792-799
(1976 and Supp.1989).
[fn8] The
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