Arcelormittal Stainless Belgium N.V objected to the International Trade Administration’s ruling on the scope of the AD and CVD orders on stainless steel plate in coils from Belgium and whether it includes steel in coils with a nominal thickness of 4.75 millimeters but an actual thickness less than 4.75 mm. The ITA’s interpretation of the scope in this regard has varied at times, but now, the Court of International Trade has upheld the agency’s redetermination on remand that the 4.75 mm thickness measure applies to nominal dimensions allowing for agreed-upon tolerances. As a result of the ruling, stainless steel in coils with nominal thickness of 4.75 mm, but actual thickness less than 4.75 mm, now falls within the scope of the orders. (Slip Op. 11-82, dated 07/12/11)
Chinese producer/exporter Qingdao Taifa Group Co., Ltd. challenged the third remand results following the December 2005-November 2006 AD administrative review of hand trucks and certain parts thereof from China, in which the International Trade Administration assigned the uncooperative firm a total adverse facts available rate of 383.60%, the country-wide rate reflecting a presumption of government control. In the third remand results, the ITA reversed itself and assigned Qingdao Taifa a separately calculated rate of 145.90%, corroborated by a portion of the rates the agency calculated and verified for the same company in the original investigation, and the Court of International Trade upheld this revised result. (Slip Op. 11-83, dated 07/12/11)
On July 13, 2011, the Justice Department announced that it had entered into a non-prosecution agreement with Armor Holdings Inc., which will pay a $10.29 million penalty to resolve violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act involving an Armor subsidiary's commissions to a third-party sales agent which were knowingly passed on to a United Nations procurement official.
The Court of International Trade has ruled in The Pomeroy Collection, Ltd., v. U.S., that two glass components from Mexico are parts of articles (lamps) which are classifiable under Harmonized Tariff Schedule heading 9405 because the lamps could not function without the glass components and because the glass components are dedicated solely for use with the lamps.
On July 13, 2011, the Justice Department announced that six defendants have been charged in a superseding indictment for their alleged roles in a foreign bribery, wire fraud, and money laundering scheme involving illegal payments made to Haitian officials of a state-owned telecommunications company, in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
Following the May 1993 - April 1994 AD administrative review period for ball bearings from Japan, the International Trade Administration issued liquidation instructions to U.S. Customs and Border Protection that included customer-specific liquidation rates for merchandise produced by Nankai Seiko Co. Importer Shinyei Corporation of America at first provided entry documents that did not list a U.S. end customer in a way readily decipherable by Customs, and Customs refused to consider invoices Shinyei subsequently gave that were dated after the entry date. Customs then did not liquidate the merchandise according to the ITA’s instructions, but at a higher rate. The Court of International Trade ruled that CBP erred in failing to automatically apply the customer-specific AD duty rate in the ITA’s liquidation instructions, and ordered CBP to refund the excess deposits to the company with interest. (Slip Op. 11-69, dated 06/15/11)
The District Court for the District of Colombia has ruled that a case against Honeywell International Inc. regarding false claims, fraud, and unjust enrichment in the sale of Zylon body armor shields - to be incorporated into Z Shield bullet proof vests - may proceed, denying Honeywell's motion to dismiss. The U.S. is alleging, among other things, that Honeywell failed to reveal data indicating problems with the protective qualities of the shields (e.g. degradation in tensile strength when exposed to light, etc.), and instead maintained that none of its data should cause Armor Holdings, Inc. to reconsider marketing or selling the Z Shield vests. Civil Action No. 08-961 (dated 07/08/11).
Japanese producers1 appealed a ruling by the Court of International Trade upholding the final results of the May ’06 -- April ’07 AD administrative review of ball bearings and parts thereof from Japan, as to various aspects of model matching and the use of zeroing in the margin calculation (disregarding the value of non-dumped sales in the average dumping margin). The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit upheld all of the International Trade Administration’s model matching decisions but, citing its own recent decision challenging zeroing in Dongbu Steel Co. Ltd. v. United States, the CAFC remanded the zeroing issue to the CIT for further explanation by the ITA on why it is reasonable to use zeroing in reviews but not in investigations. (See ITT’s Online Archives or 04/04/11 news, 11040408, for BP summary of Dongbu decision challenging the continued use of zeroing)
In the third AD administrative review of floor-standing, metal-top ironing tables and certain parts thereof from China, the International Trade Administration discovered Chinese producer Since Hardware (Guangzhou) Co. Ltd. had provided falsified documents in that review as well as the two preceding reviews, which were still in litigation at the time. At the Court of International Trade, U.S. manufacturer Home Products International, Inc. lost a bid to overturn the results of the two preceding reviews in light of the false information discovered by the ITA. However, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit overruled the CIT and directed it to issue a remand for a new second review; now the higher court has applied the same ruling to the earliest of the three successive reviews, covering the period February 3, 2004 through July 31, 2005. (See ITT’s Online Archives or 02/11/11 news, 11021110, for BP summary of prior court decision.) (Decision 2010-1194, decided 06/22/11)
In the third new shipper review of certain frozen fish fillets from Vietnam (covering the period August 1, 2007 through January 31, 2008 and producers Hiep Thanh Seafood Joint Stock Company and Asia Commerce Fisheries Joint Stock Company), the International Trade Administration determined that sales to a Mexican customer of Hiep Thanh stayed in the U.S. and should be counted as U.S. sales. The Mexican customer had trans-shipped some, but not all, of its purchases to Mexico, but Hiep Thanh claimed no knowledge of the U.S. destination. The Court of International Trade faulted the ITA for “too many internal inconsistencies and unexplained conclusions,” and in a new remand, it again ordered the agency to summarize the sales more clearly, and suggested the ITA provide an interpretation for the phrase “exportation.” (Slip Op. 11-74, dated 06/23/11)