And this has zero to do with RFI.
On 7/15/2019 2:56 PM, Richard F. DiDonna NN3W wrote:
When we discuss legality, we should be careful. If a product is
manufactured in China, and shipped to the Netherlands, and then simply
resold to the United States, you have -not- changed the country of
origin of the good. That is Customs Law 101. Duties and taxes
(including Section 301 duties) are based upon the country of origin of
the good. If you are telling me that the goods are Dutch in origin
(i.e., they were manufactured in the Netherlands), then there is no
issue. However, when you state that the product was simply "shipped
from the Netherlands" and that "this tactic is rather widely used", it
smells of a circumvention scheme.
And I could care less if a company is publicly traded. I have seen
enough custom fraud from some S&P 100 companies to make you question
why certain of their divisional vice presidents are not in jail for
extended periods of time.
73 Rich NN3W
On 7/15/2019 4:19 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
Huh? MANY manufacturers, distributors, and businesses of all sorts
have had to scramble to stay in business. According to the analysis
I've seen, their methods are legal. Arrow is a publicly traded
company and has been for many years, ARW on the NY Stock Exchange.
Like Farnell (Newark in the US), they have a large international
presence.
73, Jim K9YC
On 7/15/2019 12:59 PM, Richard F. DiDonna NN3W wrote:
I would urge caution in discussing customs fraud publicly.....
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