SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) field operations officers completed the seizure of 10,000 counterfeit toy dolls arriving in a shipment from China on November 12. The estimated domestic value of the shipment is $41,250.
CBP’s highly trained officers inspected a container whose contents appeared to be non-compliant U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) requirements. CBP import specialists examined samples of the items that were determined to be counterfeit.
“This high value seizure is one of many successes marking CBP’s longstanding commitment to combating importation of illicit merchandise bearing counterfeit trademarks in San Juan,” said Edward Ryan, Assistant Director of Field Operations for Trade in Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands. “Our CBP officers and import specialists are committed to preventing counterfeit goods from entering the commerce of the United States.”
In fiscal year 2015, the San Juan Field Office seized 287 shipments for violations of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), with a combined domestic value of $747,416.
Trade in these illegitimate goods is associated with smuggling and other criminal activities, and often funds criminal enterprises. CBP protects businesses and consumers every day through an aggressive IPR enforcement program
CBP targets and seizes imports of counterfeit and pirated goods, and enforces exclusion orders on patent-infringing and other IPR violative goods.
FBR to take emergency fiscal measures to meet annual revenue targets
LAHORE: The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has not achieved its revenue collection objectives for the second month in succession,...