The Court of International Trade remanded the final results of the 2009-10 antidumping duty administrative review of polyethylene terephthalate film, sheet, and strip from Taiwan (A-583-837) for the International Trade Administration to reconsider the 74.34 percent adverse facts available rate it assigned to Nan Ya Plastics Corp. Nan Ya, which was assigned the AFA rate because of non-cooperation in the review, challenged the ITA’s corroboration of the rate. Given Nan Ya’s lack of participation in the review, as well as a change in the rate from the preliminary to the final results, Nan Ya didn’t have a chance to argue the final rate selection before the ITA. The final results should be remanded to allow the ITA to address Nan Ya’s arguments, the court said.
Allegedly importing hazardous and counterfeit toys from China resulted in federal indictments in Brooklyn, N.Y., against five individuals and five corporations, the Justice Department said. The five individual defendants were arrested Feb. 6, and search and seizure warrants were executed, Justice said. The 24-count indictment charges Chenglan Hu, 51, Hua Fei Zhang, 52, and Xiu Lan Zhang, 60, all Chinese nationals and residents of Queens, N.Y., and Guan Jun Zhang, 29, and Jun Wu Zhang, 28, both naturalized citizens and Queens residents, along with their closely held companies Family Product USA Inc., H.M. Import USA Corp., ZCY Trading Corp., Zone Import Corp. and ZY Wholesale Inc., with importing and trafficking hazardous toys in violation of the Consumer Product Safety Act and toys bearing copyright-infringing images and counterfeit trademarks, as well as smuggling, money laundering and structuring.
The Court of International Trade at last sustained the final results of the 2007 antidumping duty administrative review of wooden bedroom furniture from China (A-570-890), after the International Trade Administration lowered Chinese company Orient International Holding Shanghai Foreign Trade Co.’s AD rate to 83.55 percent. The final results had been the subject of three court remands. During the administrative review, Orient withdrew from participation, so the ITA found the company to be non-cooperative and assigned it an adverse facts available AD rate. But CIT in 2011 found the ITA’s original AD rate of 216.01 percent to be unreasonably high. On remand, the ITA lowered the rate to 130.81 percent, but the court said the ITA cherry-picked data, and the rate still wasn’t realistic. This time CIT said the new 83.55 percent rate is justified.
The Court of International Trade dismissed an action by Wuxi Seamless Oil Pipe to force the International Trade Administration to rescind the 2011 countervailing duty administrative review of oil country tubular goods from China (C-570-) for the company. Wuxi originally requested the review of itself, but later withdrew its request. The withdrawal of the request, however, came after the deadline for withdrawals, and the ITA rejected Wuxi’s request to extend the deadline. According to Wuxi, the ITA is illegally applying a new standard for extensions to the withdrawal period without requesting comments to the regulatory change: While the 19 CFR 351.213(d) provides for extensions when “reasonable to do so,” the ITA in the administrative review at issue said Wuxi needed to show “extraordinary circumstances.” Rather than confront that issue, however, the court said Wuxi’s challenge was premature. CIT found the residual Section 1581(i) jurisdiction under which Wuxi filed the challenge doesn’t apply, because the company didn’t show a challenge on 1581(c) grounds following completion of the review to be inadequate, and dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
The Court of International Trade ordered CBP to admit coaxial cable connectors imported by Corning Gilbert, but found by CBP to be subject to an International Trade Commission general exclusion order for patent infringement. Corning Gilbert was not a party to the ITC Section 337 investigation that resulted in the general exclusion order, and so the ITC never specifically found that the company’s connectors infringed the relevant patents. But CBP denied entry to Corning Gilbert’s connectors based on the exclusion order, and later issued a ruling letter confirming that the company’s connectors were to be refused entry. CIT found that CBP’s ruling letter was not entitled to deference because the agency didn’t adequately address the question of patent infringement. After examining the patent at issue and Corning Gilbert’s connector, CIT said the connector didn’t infringe the relevant patents and should not have been excluded.
The Coalition for American Solar Manufacturers is challenging the International Trade Administration’s antidumping and countervailing duty orders on solar cells from China before the Court of International Trade, according to a press release issued by the group. The heart of the court challenge is the ITA’s decision to exclude from the scope of the AD/CV orders solar panels assembled in China from third-country solar cells. CASM is also challenging the ITA’s determinations not to investigate certain Chinese subsidy programs, and its decisions to afford several Chinese companies separate rate status.
One fugitive has been captured and extradited to the U.S., and several federal fugitives continue to be sought in connection to a multi-million dollar export fraud scheme, said the Office of Inspector General (OIG) for the Export-Import Bank of the U.S. The OIG said its investigations found that the fugitives and several other defendants conspired to defraud the Ex-Im Bank of millions of dollars through various loan schemes resulting in over $22 million in claims paid by Ex-Im Bank. The fugitives have been charged with a variety of federal criminal violations to include conspiracy, wire fraud, and money laundering, it said.
Eagle Metals Distributors and Evergreen Solar appealed the Court of International Trade’s November decision affirming the all others rate from the countervailing duty investigation of aluminum extrusions from China. Eagle and Evergreen, two U.S. importers, had challenged the International Trade Administration’s calculation of the all others rate relying all available subsidy programs in China and 100% usage of those programs. On remand, CIT affirmed the ITA’s reliance of only some subsidy programs. The court also affirmed the usage rates for the subsidy programs, despite objections from Eagle and Evergreen, among others, that such high usage rates weren’t realistic.
R.T. Foods appealed a Harmonized Tariff Schedule classification case that resulted in its tempura battered vegetables being classified as vegetable preparations, dutiable at 11.2 percent, instead of as duty-free food preparations. The Court of International Trade said "vegetable preparations" specifically describes the product, which means it can’t fall into the “other” food preparations category. CIT’s ruling only applied to three of the 24 entries R.T. Foods had challenged, because the company waited too long to file its court challenge of 10 entries for which protests were denied, and lacked standing to challenge another 11 entries on constitutional grounds.
The Court of International Trade ruled that Customs correctly classified plaintiff The Pomeroy Collection’s decorative glass “pillar plates,” floor-, and wall-mounted vessels, designed for use as candle holders, as “Glassware of a kind used for . . . indoor decoration or similar purposes” under Harmonized Tariff Schedule heading 7013, dutiable at 4.3 to 18 percent. Pomeroy had attempted to argue that the merchandise was classifiable under heading 9405 (“Lamps and lighting”), or alternatively, heading 9403 (“Other furniture and parts thereof”), both of which enter duty-free from Mexico. CIT said heading 9405 did not apply because the merchandise was not shipped with candles and was not specifically designed to hold candles. Heading 9403 didn’t apply because the goods were decorative, not utilitarian, CIT said.