The Department of Homeland Security's Office of Inspector General has issued a report1 stating that CBP lacks adequate controls over its single transaction bond (STB) process. OIG states billions of dollars in STBs may be at risk, jeopardizing CBP’s ability to use STBs to meet its revenue collection and enforcement goals. In response, CBP stated it would incorporate requirements for bond automation in ACE Cargo Release, develop a risk-based bonding methodology for high-risk imports, etc.
The International Trade Administration has initiated administrative reviews of the antidumping duty orders below, for certain specified companies listed in the initiation notice.
Comcast and the Justice Department may revisit terms of a consent decree clearing the cable operator’s multi-billion-dollar purchase of NBCUniversal (CD Jan 19 p1) after a judge who must approve the settlement expressed concerns, antitrust lawyers predicted. Judge Richard Leon of U.S. District Court in Washington, in a fairness hearing Wednesday afternoon, criticized an arbitration clause in the antitrust pact for online video distributors (OVD), The Wall Street Journal reported. Such rebukes are extremely rare, and all antitrust lawyers we interviewed said they couldn’t recall a single instance where that happened in such a hearing. Comcast and Bloomberg, meanwhile, continued to trade filings at the FCC on the first company’s adherence to one of the agency’s deal conditions.
The Court of International Trade has ruled in Ocean Duke Corporation v. U.S., that the time limit to file suit for relief from enhanced continuous bond requirements that were applied to shrimp imports subject to AD/CV duties began when CBP required Ocean Duke Corporation to post the higher, enhanced bonds, and not when CBP denied Ocean Duke's requests to cancel them.
Comcast and the Justice Department may revisit terms of a consent decree clearing the cable operator’s multi-billion-dollar purchase of NBCUniversal (WID Jan 19 p2) after a judge who must approve the settlement expressed concerns, antitrust lawyers predicted. Judge Richard Leon of U.S. District Court in Washington, in a fairness hearing Wednesday afternoon, criticized an arbitration clause in the antitrust pact for online video distributors (OVD), The Wall Street Journal reported. Such rebukes are extremely rare, and all antitrust lawyers we interviewed said they couldn’t recall a single instance where that happened in such a hearing. Comcast and Bloomberg, meanwhile, continued to trade filings at the FCC on the first company’s adherence to one of the agency’s deal conditions.
The International Trade Commission has voted to institute a section 337 patent-based investigation on certain video analytics software, systems, components thereof, and products containing same (used to detect, track and analyze images on a video stream), pursuant to a complaint filed by ObjectVideo, Inc., of Reston, VA against Robert Bosch GmbH of Germany; Bosch Security Systems, Inc., of Fairpoint, NY; Samsung Techwin Co., Ltd., of Korea; Samsung Opto-Electronics America, Inc. (d/b/a Samsung Techwin America, Inc.) of Ridgefield Park, NJ; Sony Corporation of Japan; and Sony Electronics, Inc., of San Diego, CA (Inv. No. 337-TA-795).
The International Trade Commission has voted to institute a section 337 patent-based investigation on certain electronic devices, including wireless communication devices (such as smartphones), portable music and data processing devices, and tablet computers, pursuant to a complaint filed by Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., of Korea, and Samsung Telecommunications America, LLC, of Richardson, TX, against Apple, Inc., of Cupertino, CA. (Inv. No. 337-TA-794).
During the Bureau of Industry and Security’s 2011 Update Conference on July 19-21, 2011, various officials from BIS, the Census Bureau, the State Department, and other agencies gave presentations on numerous topics.
In June 2011, the TSN Trade Leadership Committee voted to approve changes to the TSN’s ACE Priorities document (such as accelerating eBond and ensuring summary edits) and ideas for minimizing programming costs.
The International Trade Commission has voted to institute a section 337 patent-based investigation on certain static random access memories and products containing the same (such a telecommunications and networking equipment incorporating such memories), pursuant to a complaint filed by Cypress Semiconductor Corporation of San Jose, CA, against 15 companies, including Cisco Systems, Inc. of San Jose, CA; Hewlett Packard Company / Tipping Point of Palo Alto, CA; Motorola Solutions, Inc., of Schaumburg, IL; Motorola Mobility, Inc. of Libertyville, IL; Nokia Siemens Networks US, LLC of Irving, TX; and Nokia Siemens Networks BV of the Netherlands. (Inv. No. 337-TA-792).