International Trade

  • January 22, 2024

    WTO Reports Less Wheat In Suez Canal Over Red Sea Attacks

    Reports of cargo ship attacks in the Red Sea have caused wheat-carrying ships to avoid the Suez Canal, according to the World Trade Organization, which said wheat shipments through the canal fell nearly 40% over the past two weeks.

  • January 22, 2024

    US Co. Urges Fed Circ. To Yank Magnets' Duty-Free Status

    Magnum Magnetics Corp. urged the Federal Circuit to overturn a trade court's decision to back duty-free treatment on magnetic shelf dividers from China, arguing that the court unlawfully classified flexible magnets as being as inflexible as the products they were bonded to.

  • January 22, 2024

    Task Force To Tackle Global Carbon Pricing Framework

    A task force created by many of the largest intergovernmental organizations will hold its first meeting Jan. 30 to develop a global framework for carbon pricing that governments can use to compare policies, the World Trade Organization's director said Monday.

  • January 22, 2024

    Second Finnegan Alumnus Rejoins Firm In 2024

    Finnegan Henderson Farabow Garrett & Dunner LLP has rehired its second attorney of 2024, who first joined the firm as a summer associate more than a decade ago, the firm announced Monday.

  • January 22, 2024

    MoFo Adds Sanctions Expert From Deutsche Bank As Partner

    Morrison Foerster LLP has hired an expert in sanctions compliance as a partner to its national security group in London as the firm looks to bolster its practice during a period of geopolitical turmoil.

  • January 19, 2024

    Law360 Names Firms Of The Year

    Eight law firms have earned spots as Law360's Firms of the Year, with 55 Practice Group of the Year awards among them, steering some of the largest deals of 2023 and securing high-profile litigation wins, including at the U.S. Supreme Court.

  • January 19, 2024

    Law360 Names Practice Groups Of The Year

    Law360 would like to congratulate the winners of its Practice Groups of the Year awards for 2023, which honor the attorney teams behind litigation wins and major deals that resonated throughout the legal industry this past year.

  • January 20, 2024

    Treasury Targeting Year's End For 2nd Round Of Green Credits

    The U.S. Treasury Department is targeting the end of 2024 to wrap up the second round of applications from manufacturers seeking investment tax credit allocations for new or refurbished factories that largely support the green economy, a department official said.

  • January 19, 2024

    GAO Calls For Better Foreign Farmland Data Management

    The U.S. Government Accountability Office has called on the U.S. Department of Agriculture to improve how it collects, tracks and reports data on foreign purchases of U.S. farmland, after finding flaws with its current process.

  • January 19, 2024

    House Passes Bill To Create Customs 'Global Trade Specialist'

    The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bipartisan bill to create a global trade specialist position at U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which the legislation's sponsors say would enable the agency to be more nimble in enforcing U.S. trade policy.

  • January 19, 2024

    Fed. Circ. Backs ITC Loss For Roku In Patent Case

    The Federal Circuit has backed a U.S. International Trade Commission decision finding that the original software for Roku Ultra streaming products infringed a Universal Electronics Inc. patent even though the updated models didn't.

  • January 19, 2024

    Feds Maintain Glycine Duty Evasion Stance, Despite New Info

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection is standing by its initial finding that a trio of importers routed glycine through Indonesia to avoid Chinese duties, finding that new evidence added to the record hadn't undermined its original conclusions.

  • January 19, 2024

    Commerce Removes 3 Foreign Cos. From 'Unverified List'

    Three companies from China, the United Arab Emirates and Canada can now receive U.S. products including sensitive technology and software because the U.S. Department of Commerce has cleared them from its list of entities whose ultimate use of the products can't be verified as needed for national security reasons.

  • January 19, 2024

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    The past week in London has seen a bankrupt English local council bring a construction claim against property maintenance company Axis, a Cypriot cheese trade protection body appeal a UK IPO decision granting trademark registration for "Grilloumi" and employees of supermarket giant Morrison’s shop around for compensation in a claim over equal pay. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • January 19, 2024

    Tire Importer Says Customs Hit It With Disputed Duty

    An importer of Chinese tires accused U.S. Customs and Border Protection of forcing it to pay preliminary tariffs on its imports, even though the levies were actively in dispute in the federal courts.

  • January 19, 2024

    Chinese State-Owned Bank Fined $32.4M By Fed, NY

    U.S. regulators said Friday that Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd., one of the largest banks in the world, will pay more than $30 million in penalties to resolve investigations into alleged anti-money laundering compliance deficiencies and mishandling of confidential supervisory information.

  • January 18, 2024

    Wash. Justices Grapple With Price Gouging In Amazon Case

    Washington State Supreme Court justices on Thursday pressed counsel for a group of consumers seeking to hold Amazon liable for price gouging during the pandemic, expressing confusion about how the high court might instruct a judge or jury to distinguish unethical price hikes from those driven by supply and demand.

  • January 18, 2024

    Trade Commission Reaffirms Fertilizer Import Injury

    The U.S. International Trade Commission has doubled down on its determination that phosphate fertilizer from Russia and Morocco has harmed U.S. producers, repeating the outcome of its 2021 vote following a U.S. Court of International Trade remand.

  • January 18, 2024

    ​​​​​​​Va. Man Gets 2 Years For Skirting Iran Export Sanctions

    A Virginia man was sentenced in Georgia federal court to two years in prison for shipping large construction equipment to Iran by routing the shipment through the United Arab Emirates in an attempt to skirt sanctions and regulations, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a statement Thursday.

  • January 18, 2024

    Green Group Backs Mich. In Pipeline Challenge Venue Spat

    An environmental policy and law center is backing the Michigan attorney general in her appeal of Enbridge Energy's removal to federal court of a state lawsuit seeking to shut down a pipeline that crosses through the state's water, saying it undermines the role of states to protect their interest in natural resources.

  • January 18, 2024

    Canada To Challenge US Lumber Duties Under Trade Pact

    Canada renewed its calls for a panel of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement to rule against duties on Canadian softwood lumber after the U.S. Court of International Trade declined to sunset the five-year tariffs last November.

  • January 18, 2024

    Man Sent Sensitive Tech To Sanctioned Russian Co., Feds Say

    A businessman was arrested Wednesday in Los Angeles and subsequently charged for allegedly shipping microchips and other sensitive technology without licenses to a Russian electronics and intel company that's been sanctioned over its role in assisting the Russian military's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the U.S. Justice Department announced.

  • January 18, 2024

    US Sanctions Emirati Shipper For Oil Price Cap Violations

    The U.S. Department of the Treasury on Thursday sanctioned a United Arab Emirates-based owner of a ship that transported Russian crude oil above a $60 per barrel price cap, marking the department's first oil price cap enforcement action of the new year.

  • January 18, 2024

    20 Judicial Noms Advance To Full Senate After Heavy Debate

    Twenty of President Joe Biden's judicial nominations that were resubmitted to the Senate at the beginning of the year advanced out of committee Thursday, some with bipartisan support and others despite staunch Republican opposition — with particularly heavy debate on Third Circuit candidate Adeel Mangi.

  • January 18, 2024

    International Trade Expert Rejoins Greenberg Traurig In DC

    The former chairman of Greenberg Traurig LLP's international trade practice is rejoining the firm he spent 16 years with in Washington, D.C., after most recently working for a Mexico-based steel company, the firm announced Thursday.

Expert Analysis

  • Sanctions Compliance In Era Of Record Enforcement Action

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    The recent record-breaking penalties in separate actions against British American Tobacco and Seagate amid a sanctions violation crackdown are a reminder to prioritize factors emphasized by the National Security Division and other enforcement agencies, say attorneys at Buchanan Ingersoll.

  • 5 Insider-Threat Reminders After Recent DOJ Prosecutions

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    Three recent U.S. Department of Justice actions may well lead to much greater scrutiny of companies in which insiders engage in a variety of corporate misconduct, including conducting or enabling cybercrimes, which will likely fall not just on government contractors, but across industries and geographies, say attorneys at Paul Weiss.

  • What Tax-Exempt Orgs. Need From Energy Credit Guidance

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    Guidance clarifying the Inflation Reduction Act’s credit regime, expected from the U.S. Department of the Treasury this summer, should help tax-exempt organizations determine the benefits of clean energy projects and integrate alternative energy investments into their activities, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • FCA Can Be An Effective Tool For Fighting Customs Fraud

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    Appeals pending before the U.S. Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit may affect the scienter and jurisdictional aspects of False Claims Act cases alleging customs fraud, which can provide an avenue to alert U.S. Customs and Border Protection and potentially help clients to recover losses from unfair competitors, say Ellen London at London & Stout and former Assistant U.S. Attorney Li Yu.

  • Some Client Speculations On AI And The Law Firm Biz Model

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    Generative artificial intelligence technologies will put pressure on the business of law as it is structured currently, but clients may end up with more price certainty for legal services, and lawyers may spend more time being lawyers, says Jonathan Cole at Melody Capital.

  • Would Congress' Proposed ITC Reforms Thwart NPEs?

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    The recently reintroduced Advancing America's Interests Act intends to curb the growth of nonpracticing entity activity at the U.S. International Trade Commission, and a closer examination of three provisions shows where it may be successful and where pitfalls could exist, say attorneys at Axinn.

  • Why Ericsson DPA Breach Is Precedent-Setting

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    Swedish telecommunications company Ericsson recently faced several penalties for breaching a deferred prosecution agreement, revealing a sobering new precedent for when the U.S. Department of Justice will find an entity in noncompliance, so companies should be prepared to revisit pre-resolution disclosures, say James Koukios and Sarah Maneval at MoFo.

  • A Deep Dive Into EU Unified Patent Court Policy

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    Robert Sterne at Sterne Kessler offers a detailed analysis of the EU's Unified Patent Court and the unitary patent, which go live on June 1, discussing what U.S. practitioners need to know from an enforcement and freedom-to-operate perspective.

  • US Security Exception Proposal May Undermine The WTO

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    A U.S. proposal, floated earlier this month, to clarify that the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade's essential security exception is wholly self-judging would provide an unfettered ability for a country to avoid any of its World Trade Organization obligations, further destabilizing the WTO and international rule of law, say attorneys at Akin Gump.

  • A Lawyer's Guide To Approaching Digital Assets In Discovery

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    The booming growth of cryptocurrency and non-fungible tokens has made digital assets relevant in many legal disputes but also poses several challenges for discovery, so lawyers must garner an understanding of the technology behind these assets, the way they function, and how they're held, says Brett Sager at Ehrenstein Sager.

  • Opinion

    High Court's Ethics Statement Places Justices Above The Law

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    The U.S. Supreme Court justices' disappointing statement on the court's ethics principles and practices reveals that not only are they satisfied with a status quo in which they are bound by fewer ethics rules than other federal judges, but also that they've twisted the few rules that do apply to them, says David Janovsky at the Project on Government Oversight.

  • G7 Russia Restrictions May Further Complicate Compliance

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    New sanctions and export controls announced at the G7 summit targeting parties that help Russia circumvent existing restrictions signal continued multilateral commitment to intensifying economic pressure on Russia, and underscore the increasing compliance challenges for companies that pursue Russia-related opportunities, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.

  • Opinion

    Time For Law Schools To Rethink Unsung Role Of Adjuncts

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    As law schools prepare for the fall 2023 semester, administrators should reevaluate the role of the underappreciated, indispensable adjunct, and consider 16 concrete actions to improve the adjuncts' teaching experience, overall happiness and feeling of belonging, say T. Markus Funk at Perkins Coie, Andrew Boutros at Dechert and Eugene Volokh at UCLA.

  • Investment Arbitration May Aid Stakeholders In Russian Cos.

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    Though Russian countermeasures against international sanctions have caused many foreign investors' assets to become trapped in Russia, arbitration mechanisms provide investors with opportunities to recover significant monetary damages for their losses, say Eric Leikin and Photeine Lambridis at Freshfields.

  • The Nuts And Bolts Of IRS Domestic Content Tax Credit

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    Recent IRS guidance provides specifics on how renewable energy projects can qualify for bonus tax credits by meeting U.S. domestic content rules, but also creates a qualification framework that will be complicated for project developers to navigate, say Scott Cockerham and Wolfram Pohl at Orrick.

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