The International Trade Commission published notices in the Sept. 12 Federal Register on the following AD/CV injury, Section 337 patent, and other trade proceedings (any notices that warrant a more detailed summary will appear in another ITT article):
The Commerce Department published notices in the Sept. 12 Federal Register on the following AD/CV duty proceedings (any notices that announce changes to AD/CV duty rates, scope, affected firms, or effective dates will be detailed in another ITT article):
The International Trade Commission published notices in the Sept. 11 Federal Register on the following AD/CV injury, Section 337 patent, and other trade proceedings (any notices that warrant a more detailed summary will appear in another ITT article):
The Commerce Department published notices in the Sept. 10 Federal Register on the following AD/CV duty proceedings (any notices that announce changes to AD/CV duty rates, scope, affected firms, or effective dates will be detailed in another ITT article):
The ITC is seeking comment on a final initial determination by an administrative law judge involving wireless consumer electronics devices and components thereof (Ref:13091002). The devices were imported by Acer, Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble, Garmin, HTC, Huawei, Futurewei, Kyocera, LG, Nintendo, Novatel, Samsung and ZTE. Comments are due Oct. 7. Further information: Megan Valentine, 202-708-2301.
The Commerce Department issued the final results of its antidumping duty administrative review of frozen warmwater shrimp from Vietnam (A-552-802]). Commerce decided not to grant Nha Trang's and Minh Phu's requests for revocation. The new rates are effective Sept. 12, and will be implemented by CBP soon.
The Commerce Department issued the final results of its antidumping duty administrative review of frozen warmwater shrimp from China (A-570-893), calculating a AD rate of zero for Zhanjian Regal, and assigning Hilltop International to the China-wide entity. The new rates are effective Sept. 12 and will be implemented by CBP soon.
The International Trade Commission published notices in the Sept. 6 Federal Register on the following AD/CV injury, Section 337 patent, and other trade proceedings (any notices that warrant a more detailed summary will appear in another ITT article):
The Commerce Department published notices in the Sept. 10 Federal Register on the following AD/CV duty proceedings (any notices that announce changes to AD/CV duty rates, scope, affected firms, or effective dates will be detailed in another ITT article):
It would be "great" to abolish the ITC, or curb its use of the import injunctive power, or remove the agency from the patent infringement process, said William Watson, a trade policy analyst with Cato's Herbert A Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies in a blog post. Another "modest possibility," he said, is to require that decisions whether infringement has occurred be made by a court, but then allow a victorious plaintiff to seek an import ban from the ITC. He said that proposal was considered by the U.S. Trade Representative decades ago but rejected by Congress.