The Department of Homeland Security is pouring more resources into export enforcement with a new task force headquartered in Detroit, a CBP official said. Officials are calling the enforcement body a Global Trade Task Force: a DHS-led effort with cooperation from several other customs agencies, including CBP and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The task force, which launched in February, will use resources from multiple customs agencies to further tighten vulnerabilities in the commerce stream, said CBP Director of Field Operations Christopher Perry. “Each agency has unique capabilities and authorities,” Perry said. “By leveraging these capabilities, it helps us act as force multiplier.”
Testing for the State Department’s new system for commodity jurisdiction (CJ) requests began March 20, according to a recent post on the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls website. “The application incorporates the existing web-based system into the updated [Defense Export Control and Compliance System] platform, while maintaining user ability to submit CJ requests electronically. The system will be open through March 26th to collect user feedback,” DDTC said. Questions may be directed to the IT Modernization Team at PM_DDTCProjectTeam@state.gov, DDTC said.
Mexico is preparing an overhaul of its customs procedures and port infrastructure, according to recent reports. At an event at the Port of Manzanillo, Mexican General Administrator of Customs Ricardo Peralta Saucedo said he is preparing a new National Customs Strategy for presentation to the Mexican Cabinet and President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador that will set forth changes to customs operations to facilitate trade, said a March 19 report in the Mexican logistics news site T21. Other officials at the event also announced port modernization initiatives.
The United Kingdom "will now not leave on time with a deal on 29 March," U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May said in a March 20 statement, expressing "great personal regret" for a requested Brexit delay despite formal approval not having yet been granted by the European Union for an extension.
The European Union will offer the United Kingdom a Brexit delay of until May 22 if the U.K. Parliament passes the twice rejected EU-U.K. transition deal next week, or until April 12 if the deal is not passed, according to a statement from EU Council President Donald Tusk. Even if the transition deal doesn’t make it through Parliament, the UK will still “have a choice of a deal, no-deal, a long extension” or deciding not to leave the UK, Tusk said. But if the U.K. doesn’t inform the EU that it plans to hold European Parliament elections by April 12, “the option of a long extension will automatically become impossible,” Tusk said. European leaders met March 21 in Brussels to decide whether to offer the U.K. an extension on its withdrawal from the European Union, currently scheduled for March 30.
In the March 19 edition of the Official Journal of the European Union the following trade-related notices were posted:
The European Union on March 19 published a new regulation governing the recognition of supply chain due diligence schemes for conflict minerals. Under regulations issued in 2017, EU importers of tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold must exercise due diligence beginning in 2021 “to provide transparency and certainty as regards the supply practices of Union importers and of smelters and refiners sourcing from conflict-affected and high-risk areas.” That regulation provides for the recognition of voluntary schemes by the EU that, “when effectively implemented by a Union importer of minerals or metals, enables that importer to comply,” the EU said. The March 19 regulation establishes “methodology and the criteria to be used by the Commission to determine whether a scheme should be granted recognition," and takes effect April 8.
The U.S. and Brazil will initiate a mutual recognition agreement for trusted trader programs between the two countries at the instructions of President Donald Trump and President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil, the White House said in a March 19 announcement. An MRA "will reduce costs for American and Brazilian companies," it said. Brazil will also "implement a tariff rate quota, allowing for the annual importation of 750 thousand tons of American wheat at zero rate," the White House said. The U.S. will also "expeditiously schedule a technical visit" by the Food Safety and Inspection Service "to audit Brazil’s raw beef inspection system, as soon as it is satisfied with Brazil’s food safety documentation," the White House said. "Commensurate with its status as a global leader, President Bolsonaro agreed that Brazil will begin to forgo special and differential treatment in World Trade Organization negotiations, in line with the United States proposal," the White House said.
Thailand extended the timeline for “full implementation” of the country’s new procedures for alcohol imports by six months, according to a March 18 report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The new procedures require a “Certificate of Analysis” for alcohol imports, USDA said, mandating that all importers “submit COA documentation or submit samples for COA testing and receive the results before applying for an import permit.” Under the extension, Thailand’s Excise Department will allow COA documentation to be submitted within 30 days from the date of import, USDA said. The extension expires Sept. 14, 2019.
Richard Luthmann, a Staten Island, New York, lawyer, pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy and extortion on March 18, the Justice Department said in a news release. "Beginning in summer 2015, Luthmann, co-defendant George Padula and the victim participated in a scheme in which they contracted with overseas companies to sell and ship them containers of valuable scrap metal, but instead packed the containers with cheap filler material, such as concrete blocks," the DOJ said. "As part of the scheme, Luthmann registered shell companies, including Omni Metal Corporation, with the New York Department of State and recruited a client of his law practice to be the nominal president of Omni." In late 2016, the victim was threatened with a gun in the presence of Padula not to contact police.