[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 19, Volume 1]

[Revised as of April 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 19CFR102.24]



[Page 481-482]

 

                        TITLE 19--CUSTOMS DUTIES

 

   CHAPTER I--BUREAU OF CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF 

              HOMELAND SECURITY; DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

 

PART 102_RULES OF ORIGIN--Table of Contents

 

                        Subpart B_Rules of Origin

 

Sec.  102.24  Entry of textile or apparel products.



    (a) General. Separate shipments of textile or apparel products, 

including samples, which originate from a country subject to visa or 

export license requirements for exports of textile or apparel products, 

arriving in the customs territory of the United States for one



[[Page 482]]



consignee on the same conveyance on the same day, the combined value of 

which is over $250, will not be entered under the informal entry 

procedures set forth in subpart C, Part 143 or procedures set forth in 

Sec.  141.52 of this chapter. Port directors will refuse separate 

informal entries and require a formal entry and visa or export license, 

as appropriate, for all such merchandise. A consignee for purposes of 

this section is the ultimate consignee and does not include a freight 

forwarder or Customs broker not importing for its own account.

    (b) Denial of entry pursuant to directive. Textile or apparel 

products subject to section 204 of the Agricultural Act of 1956, as 

amended (7 U.S.C. 1854), whether or not the requirements set forth in 

Sec.  102.21 or Sec.  102.22, as applicable, have been met, will be 

denied entry where the factory, producer, manufacturer, or other company 

named in the entry documents for such textile or apparel products is 

named in a directive published in the Federal Register by the Committee 

for the Implementation of Textile Agreements as a company found to be 

illegally transshipping, closed or unable to produce records to verify 

production. In these circumstances, no additional information will be 

accepted or considered by CBP for purposes of determining the 

admissibility of such textile or apparel products.



[CBP Dec. 05-32, 70 FR 58013, Oct. 5, 2005]