The Court of International Trade in a Feb. 14 order granted an injunction until the conclusion of litigation against the liquidation of two plaintiffs' mattress imports. The Department of Justice pushed back against that timeline. It urged an end date of April 30, the same end date as the first administrative review period of the antidumping duty order the plaintiffs are contesting. Judge Gary Katzmann said that the plaintiffs, Best Mattresses International and Rose Lion Furniture International, sufficiently showed a likelihood to succeed on the merits of the case and that they would be irreparably harmed without the indefinite injunction.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Feb. 14 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
Producers of goods that use polyethylene terephthalate (PET) resin told the International Trade Commission during a Jan. 27 sunset review that the antidumping duty and countervailing duty orders on PET resin from Canada, China, India and Oman should be revoked in light of the domestic industry running at 100% capacity and current supply chain snarls. Domestic PET resin producers disagreed, saying a revocation of the duties would harm the industry because cheap Chinese and Indian imports would flood the market.
The Commerce Department reasonably derived the separate rate respondents' dumping margin in an antidumping duty investigation by averaging the mandatory respondents' zero percent and adverse facts available rates, petitioner Coalition for Fair Trade in Hardwood Plywood said in a Feb. 3 reply brief at the Court of International Trade. Responding to arguments made by the plaintiffs, led by Linyi Chengen Import and Export Co., Celtic Co. and Taraca Pacific, the coalition said that Commerce properly relied on the information laid out in the petition to derive the rates since it was already vetted by Commerce as part of the pre-initiation phase of the investigation (Linyi Chengen Import and Export Co. v. United States, CIT Consol. #18-00002).
The effective dates of the Commerce Department's partial revocation of the antidumping and countervailing duties on solar cells from China ran contrary to the agency's stated practice, because they excluded unliquidated entries that weren't subject to the final results of an administrative review or automatic liquidation at the time, importer Source Global said in a Feb. 11 complaint at the Court of International Trade (Source Global, PBC v. United States, CIT #22-00009).
The Court of International Trade granted Best Mattresses International Company and Rose Lion Furniture International Company an indefinite injunction against the liquidation of their mattress entries in a Feb. 14 order. The injunction bid faced opposition from the DOJ, which argued that the injunction should only run until April 30, 2022 -- the end date of the first administrative review of the AD order in question. The companies are plaintiffs in a challenge to the AD order on mattresses from Cambodia. Judge Gary Katzmann said that the injunction was justified since the plaintiffs showed a likelihood of irreparable harm and success on the merits of the case.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Feb. 11 on AD/CV duty proceedings:
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit found that the entry of appearance for plaintiff-appellee PT. Kenertec Power System's counsel was not in compliance with the court's rules. In particular, the court said that the contact information for Daniel Robert Wilson and Kang Woo Lee of Arnold & Porter "does not match the information associated with the user's account." Up-to-date contact information is needed for the two attorneys, the court said. The case is an appeal by the Wind Tower Trade Coalition over a Court of International Trade decision that sustained the Commerce Department's decision to ultimately find no countervailable subsidization in a countervailing duty investigation of utility scale wind towers from Indonesia (PT. Kenertec Power System v. U.S., Fed. Cir. #22-1408).
Dominican aluminum extrusion manufacturer Kingtom Aluminio is guilty of evading the antidumping and countervailing duty orders on aluminum extrusions from China, CBP said in a Feb. 4 evasion determination. Already party to two Enforce and Protect Act evasion inquiries as a producer, Kingtom was found guilty of evasion in a separate case where it acted as the importer of record. In fact, CBP used the fact that Kingtom began importing aluminum extrusions into the U.S. itself following the other two EAPA cases as evidence of Kingtom's alleged evasion.
The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission published the following Federal Register notices Feb. 10 on AD/CV duty proceedings: