The Commerce Department is giving advance notice that in automatic five-year sunset reviews scheduled to begin in June it will consider revoking the antidumping duty duty orders on cement and cement clinker from Japan (A-588-815), and steel concrete reinforcing bar from Japan (A-588-876), Taiwan (A-583-859) and Turkey (A-489-829), as well as the countervailing duty order on steel concrete reinforcing bar from Turkey (C-489-830). These orders will be revoked unless Commerce finds that revocation would lead to dumping and the International Trade Commission finds that revocation would result in injury to U.S. industry, Commerce said in a notice released April 29.
CBP released its April 27 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 56, No. 16), which includes the following ruling actions:
In the April 13 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 56, No. 14), CBP published a proposal to revoke rulings on a men's vest/sleeveless jacket.
In the April 13 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 56, No. 14), CBP published a proposal to revoke rulings on a men's full-zip hoodie and polyetheretherketone powder
CBP released its April 13 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 56, No. 14), which includes the following ruling actions:
In the March 23 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 56, No. 11), CBP published a proposal to revoke rulings on step stools and sushi ginger.
CBP released its April 6 Customs Bulletin (Vol. 56, No. 13), which includes the following ruling actions:
The Commerce Department is giving advance notice that in automatic five-year sunset reviews scheduled to begin in May it will consider revoking the antidumping duty and countervailing duty orders on finished carbon steel flanges from India (A-533-871/C-533-872), as well as the antidumping duty orders on finished carbon steel flanges from Italy (A-475-835) and Spain (A-469-815); frozen warmwater shrimp from China (A-570-893), India (A-533-840), Thailand (A-549-822) and Vietnam (A-552-802); and welded stainless steel pipe from Taiwan (A-583-815) and South Korea (A-580-810). These orders will be revoked unless Commerce finds that revocation would lead to dumping and the International Trade Commission finds that revocation would result in injury to U.S. industry, Commerce said in a notice published April 1.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission began five-year sunset reviews of the antidumping and countervailing duty orders on HEDP from China (A-570-045/C-570-046) and sulfanilic acid from India (A-533-806/C-533-807), as well as the antidumping duty orders ferrovanadium from South Korea (A-580-886), helical spring lock washers from China and Taiwan (A-570-822, A-583-820) and sulfanilic acid from China (A-570-815), Commerce said in a notice April 1.
The Court of International Trade dismissed a case brought by the U.S. government seeking the collection of over $5.7 million in unpaid duties from Katana Racing on passenger vehicle and light truck tires from China. In a March 28 opinion, Judge Thomas Aquilino granted Katana's motion to dismiss based on an expired statute of limitations. The judge ruled that Katana was allowed to revoke an earlier statute of limitations waiver and concluded that without the waiver, any action by CBP is barred by the passage of time (United States v. Katana Racing Inc., d/b/a Wheel & Tire Distributors, CIT #19-00125).