logo
Trump's DOJ puts companies on notice: Don't evade tariffs

Trump's DOJ puts companies on notice: Don't evade tariffs

Yahoo29-07-2025
The Justice Department is putting American companies on notice that they could be prosecuted if they chose to evade President Trump's tariffs, even as the legality of the president's "Liberation Day" duties remain unsettled in US courts.
The message came in a DOJ announcement earlier this month stipulating that prosecutors would step up investigations into suspiciously classified imports and charge those who misidentify products with fraud.
'While the DOJ has always taken some customs cases, this is a different, more aggressive, visible stance than they usually would,' said Thompson Coburn trade lawyer Robert Shapiro.
Read more: 5 ways to tariff-proof your finances
The plan — to be carried out by the DOJ's new Market, Government, and Consumer Fraud Unit — marks a shift in enforcement tactics from prior administrations that relied mostly on policing misconduct through administrative proceedings, even during Trump's first term in office.
The new Trump administration instead wants to prioritize criminal charges against companies and individuals that try to evade US tariffs.
The overarching strategy was first outlined by Matthew R. Galeotti, head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division, who wrote in a May memo that an increasing focus on white collar crime would include "trade and customs fraudsters, including those who commit tariff evasion."
At the same time, the Trump administration finds itself in the unusual position of defending the legality of the duties it pledges to enforce.
Oral arguments in a federal lawsuit challenging the president's tariffs are set to take place before the US Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., this Thursday.
The small business importers challenging the legal standing of the duties already proved it was possible to temporarily derail Trump's global tariffs with a lower court victory in May.
In a separate challenge, two toy manufacturers are scheduled to make their own arguments against Trump's tariffs before the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals on Sept. 30, following their own lower court victory.
'We're going to raise the ante'
Tariff violations can be prosecuted under civil or criminal laws. However, even fraud cases were often handled administratively by past administrations, according to Shapiro.
'I think the administration is just saying we're going to raise the ante on this,' Shapiro said.
University of Kansas School of Law professor Raj Bhala said laws against customs fraud have long been in force, but the appetite for the DOJ and US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to clamp down on violations has increased.
Historically, Bhala and other trade lawyers said, prosecutors focused government resources on suspected tariff violations by US adversaries such as China, Iran, and North Korea, and particularly on export controls meant to keep controlled items from shipping to those countries.
Producer-exporters, especially in China and other high-tariff regions, have been using evasion techniques for decades, mostly to skirt anti-dumping and countervailing duty orders, Bhala said.
But now, under more imposing tariffs, incentives to evade duties have spiked 'enormously.'
'What is clear is that a lot of companies are looking for a way to limit the impact of the duties,' Shapiro said.
In this new tariff and enforcement environment, trade experts suspect that corporate America and its trading partners are on high alert.
Erika Trujillo, a trade attorney with customs risk management firm SEIA Compliance Technologies, said the shift toward more enforcement happening at the DOJ and less through administrative procedures could increase politically motivated targeting of companies viewed as adverse to the Trump administration's interests.
'I do think trade restrictions were used as both a sword and a shield for foreign companies, or in terms of dealing with international trade,' Trujillo said.
Common tariff evasion techniques include misclassifying goods, falsely labeling a product's country of origin, making minor modifications to a product while it's in a lower-tariff jurisdiction to pass it off as manufactured there, and transhipping goods through lower-tariff jurisdictions.
Read more: The latest news and updates on Trump's tariffs
'It's hard to imagine that any well-run company that has supply chains stretching across the globe — particularly in higher-tariff jurisdictions like China or Cambodia — would not be having vigorous discussions to ensure every step in the supply chain is properly documented and audited,' Bhala said.
Bhala cautions that the stakes are high for importers subject to US jurisdiction.
'They're the importer of record and they're the ones who are liable for the tariffs,' he said. 'And false declarations are what we call 'go to jail stuff.''
For fraud, fines can also be assessed, up to the domestic value of the merchandise.
For civil violations made based on negligent actions, maximum penalties are two times the underpayment of duties, in addition to original duties. For violations based on gross negligence, penalties increase to four times the underpayment of duties.
For businesses looking to assess their risk, US Customs maintains an electronic system called the Automated Commercial Environment (ACT) that allows importers to view what their classification data looks like to customs.
Small and midsize companies may find it more difficult to evaluate their compliance risks compared to multinational firms.
'If you're an SME, you probably have one or two lawyers, and they're not necessarily trade specialists,' Bhala said. Plus, there are different rules for thousands of products. For example, a typical NAFTA good, he explained, traverses the US-Canada border roughly four times.
'It's really difficult for companies of that size to be dealing with this,' Trujillo said. One major challenge is finding affordable internal expertise.
'Almost every company I know is actively hiring for both customs and export controls, and sanctions. You're basically stuck going to law firms or other external consultancy, and the small and medium-sized firms are maybe not going to have the budget to pay $1,100 an hour.'
Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet
For certain suspected violations like those made by mistake, Shapiro said it doesn't make economic sense for the DOJ to get involved.
'They don't have the manpower for it,' he said. But a new enforcement policy seems to fit the Trump administration's broader tariff agenda, he added.
'If you're going to have this tariff policy, you're going to have to take a more aggressive stance, because it's a huge ocean of imports, and it's very hard for customs to enforce against everyone.'
Alexis Keenan is a legal reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow Alexis on X @alexiskweed.
Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Whatever Happened To The Affordable New Car?
Whatever Happened To The Affordable New Car?

Forbes

timea few seconds ago

  • Forbes

Whatever Happened To The Affordable New Car?

New vehicle prices are showing no end to their meteoric rise, with the average manufacturer's suggested retail price (MSRP) now standing at over $51,000, according to Kelley Blue Book. That represents a 2.3% boost over the past year and is well over $10,000 more than the average car cost in 2020. And there's still no telling how much new-vehicle prices will increase moving forward with President Trump's tariffs being levied on imported cars, steel and components. Aside from inflation and changing market forces, today's stratospheric new-vehicle prices can be attributed to how they're being equipped. The days are long gone since an 'economy car' meant one that came with manual locks, roll-up windows and just an AM/FM radio. Today it's tough to find a given model on a dealer's lot that isn't loaded with profit-padding perks that were until only recently limited to top-shelf luxury cars. With the Kia Rio and Mitsubishi Mirage having left the U.S. market the number of cars that start at less than $20,000 is down to just one, the Nissan Versa at $17,190, though one would be hard-pressed to find a base model with a manual transmission in a given dealer's inventory. What's more, Cars Commerce reports that the number of new vehicles selling for under $30,000 is now down to 13.6% of the market as compared to 38% in pre-pandemic 2019. And since 92% of the lowest-stickered vehicles are imported, there's likely to be even fewer sub-$30,000 models up for grabs in a tariff-tempered economy. If the Future Attribute Demand Study (FADS) conducted by the research firm AutoPacific is any indication, automakers may need to return to the days of basic transportation by building more models and trims that eschew some flashier new-vehicle features for the sake of maintaining more-reasonable MSRPs. The company surveyed over 14,000 new vehicle intenders to gauge their interest in more than 160 current automotive features and found that shoppers looking to spend no more than $35,000 on a new vehicle are less likely to demand widely offered upscale features than more affluent buyers. 'Front wheel drive, base stereos, cloth seats with various manual adjustment, and analog gauges are 'in,' for these more frugal shoppers,' says Robby DeGraff, AutoPacific's manager of product and consumer insights, 'so the array of standard equipment found on entry- and mid-level trims of today's popular vehicles within the $25,000 to $35,000 price range may need to be reexamined as consumers tighten their belts in the face of economic uncertainty.' The study determined that more price-conscious consumers remain open to consider a conventionally powered sedan that sticks close to the basics, with cloth upholstery, manual seat adjustments, an analog gauge cluster and easy-to-use physical buttons and dials. They say they can do without navigation, elaborate interactive displays and nearly-autonomous driving features. Those who can afford more than $35,000 say they favor more-fanciful amenities like driver profile settings, a household 110v outlet, and rear-window sunshades. On the other hand, shoppers in both price ranges said they items like want wireless charging pads, heated and ventilated front seats and potentially life-saving active safety features like automatic emergency front and rear braking and lane- change assist. The least sought-after features among both groups include premium-branded audio systems, head-up displays and subscription-based immersive services. While market demands may trigger a renaissance of more basically-equipped new cars, trucks and SUVs for the sake of cash-strapped buyers, don't expect to see crank-up windows, front bench seats, cigarette lighters or steering-column shifters returning to the market any time soon. In the meantime, here's a list of the new cars and SUVs for 2025 that can still be found starting for less than $25,000, not including the destination charge, taxes, fees and options:

OpenAI to Give Away Some of the Technology That Powers ChatGPT
OpenAI to Give Away Some of the Technology That Powers ChatGPT

New York Times

timea few seconds ago

  • New York Times

OpenAI to Give Away Some of the Technology That Powers ChatGPT

In a move that will be met with both applause and hand-wringing from artificial intelligence experts, OpenAI said on Tuesday that it was freely sharing two of its A.I. models used to power online chatbots. Since OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT three years ago, sparking the A.I. boom, it has mostly kept its technology under wraps. But many other companies, looking to undercut OpenAI, have aggressively shared their technology through a process called open source. Now, OpenAI hopes to level the playing field and ensure that businesses and other software developers stick with its technology. OpenAI's shift adds more fuel to a long-running debate between researchers who believe it is in every company's interest to open-source their technology, and national security hawks and A.I. safety pessimists who believe American companies should not be sharing their technology. The China hawks and A.I. worriers appear to be losing ground. In a notable reversal, the Trump administration recently allowed Nvidia, the world's leading maker of the computer chips used to create A.I. systems, to sell a version of its chips in China. Many of the San Francisco company's biggest rivals, particularly Meta and the Chinese start-up DeepSeek, have already embraced open source, setting OpenAI up as one of the few A.I. companies not sharing what it was working on. The models being offered by OpenAI, called gpt-oss-120b and gpt-oss-20b, do not match the performance of OpenAI's most powerful A.I. technologies. But they still rank among the world's leading models, according to benchmark test results shared by the company. If people use those newly open-source models, OpenAI hopes they will also pay for its more powerful products. 'If we are providing a model, people are using us,' Greg Brockman, OpenAI's president and one of its founders, said in an interview with The New York Times. 'They are dependent on us providing the next breakthrough. They are providing us with feedback and data and what it takes for us to improve that model. It helps us make further progress.' Open source has been a common practice among software companies for decades. As OpenAI and other companies began developing the kind of technology that would eventually drive chatbots like ChatGPT nearly a decade ago, they often open-sourced them. 'If you lead in open source, it means you will soon lead in A.I.,' said Clément Delangue, chief executive of Hugging Face, a company that hosts many of the world's open-source A.I. projects. 'It accelerates progress.' But after OpenAI shared a technology called GPT-2 in late 2019, it stopped open-sourcing its most powerful systems, citing safety concerns. Many of OpenAI's rivals followed its lead. When OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT in late 2022, a growing chorus of A.I. experts argued that open-source technologies could cause serious harm. This kind of technology can help spread disinformation, hate speech and other toxic language. Many researchers also worry that they could one day help people build bioweapons or wreak havoc as governments and businesses connected them to power grids, stock markets and weapons. But the public conversation started to shift in 2023, when Meta shared an A.I. system called LLama. Meta's decision to go against the grain fueled a growing open-source ecosystem in the United States and other parts of the world. By late 2024, when DeepSeek released of a technology called V3, China had shown that its open-source systems could challenge many of the leading U.S. systems. (The New York Times has sued OpenAI and its partner, Microsoft, accusing them of copyright infringement of news content related to A.I. systems. OpenAI and Microsoft have denied those claims.) OpenAI said that it has released open-source systems in part because some businesses and individuals prefer to run these kinds of technologies on their own computer hardware, rather than over the internet. One of the new systems, gpt-oss-20b, is designed to run a laptop. The other, gpt-oss-120b, requires a more powerful system equipped with the specialized computer chips used to build the leading A.I. systems. Mr. Brockman acknowledged that. A.I. can be used to both harm and empower people. But he said that the same is true of any powerful technology. He said that OpenAI has spent months — even years — building and testing its new open-source systems in an effort to reduce any harm. The debate over open source is expected to continue as companies and regulators weigh the potential harm against the power of the time-tested tech method. Many companies have changed strategy over the years, and will continue to do so. After creating a new superintelligence lab, Mark Zuckerberg and his fellow executives at Meta are considering their own shift in strategy. They might abandon the A.I. technology that the company has freely shared with researchers and businesses, called Behemoth, and move toward a more guarded strategy involving closed source software.

Venezuelan Little League World Series team gets exemption to President Trump's travel ban
Venezuelan Little League World Series team gets exemption to President Trump's travel ban

New York Times

timea few seconds ago

  • New York Times

Venezuelan Little League World Series team gets exemption to President Trump's travel ban

Youth baseball players from Venezuela, one of 19 countries on President Trump's travel ban list, have been granted a 'national exemption' to participate in this month's Little League World Series, an event official told The Athletic. Securing the exemption last week required the intervention of a Trump-aligned U.S. senator and the personal sign-off of Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Advertisement Before then, the Venezuelan team's participation had been in limbo thanks to a visa process that had often been complicated by strained diplomatic relations with the United States. Venezuela's recent inclusion in the travel ban only added another layer of complexity. Last month, the policy blocked another youth baseball team from Venezuela from playing in a less prominent tournament in South Carolina, a situation that drew the ire of the St. Louis Cardinals' Willson Contreras. In an interview on Monday, Contreras, a three-time All-Star and one of baseball's most prominent Venezuelan players, lamented the perceived fallout from the travel restrictions. 'To be treated like we are criminals here, we're not,' Contreras told The Athletic. 'We're here to provide for our family, to chase our dreams, to do the right things.' The Venezuelan Little League team learned of its exemption from the travel ban on Friday, just six days before it was scheduled to play in the tournament, which showcases players ages 10-12 and remains a signature event that is nationally televised on ESPN. 'The dream of our children will soon come true,' the team said in a translated Instagram post. 'Williamsport, here we come.' In a statement, Little League spokesman Brian McClintock said, 'We are grateful for all those who supported these players throughout this process, including the U.S. Department of State.' While the exemption was ultimately granted, it highlighted a shifting landscape for some international athletes entering the U.S. under the Trump Administration. Under the travel ban instituted in June, exemptions have been made for certain high-profile sporting events, such as the upcoming 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles and next year's World Cup. But those carve-outs did not cover other events like the Little League World Series. Advertisement Sen. David McCormick, a Republican elected from Pennsylvania in 2024 and a political ally of Trump's on immigration policy, offered the Venezuelan team an assist. A native of central Pennsylvania who lives less than an hour's drive from the longtime site of the tournament, Williampsort, McCormick worked with the State Department to help ensure approval of the visas. 'I am thrilled my team and I were able to play a small role in making sure young athletes are able to chase their dreams and participate in this timeless Pennsylvania tradition,' McCormick said in a statement to The Athletic. But even with McCormick's backing, securing an exemption ultimately required a green light from Rubio. 'In very limited circumstances, the Secretary may find an individual's travel would serve a United States national interest, consistent with Executive Order 14150, 'America First Policy Directive to the Secretary of State,'' a state department spokesperson said in a statement. 'These exceptions may only be approved by the Secretary of State or his designee in coordination with the Secretary of Homeland Security or her designee.' The visa process has typically been more complicated for Venezuela than for other teams attending the Little League World Series. In 2019, political and diplomatic tensions in the country prompted the U.S. to suspend operations at its embassy in the Venezuelan capital of Caracas. Teams seeking entry to the U.S. have instead had to travel to a neighboring country, Colombia, where the capital Bogotá is hosting the diplomatic mission to Venezuela. Once there, players and staff are subjected to interviews ahead of approval. The travel ban has introduced another layer of uncertainty. On July 18, Cacique Mara, a different youth team from Venezuela, could not travel to South Carolina for the Senior League Baseball World Series (ages 13-16) after its visas were denied. In a photo of a letter from the U.S. government to the team from Cacique Mara — posted to the team's since deactivated Instagram account — the reason given was the 'Immigration and Nationality Act,' which the letter said serves to restrict 'the Entry of foreign Nationals to Protect the United States from Foreign Terrorists and Other National Security and Public Safety Threats.' Advertisement 'What pisses me off is they earned the right to be here,' Contreras said of the team that was barred last month. 'They are little kids chasing dreams. I put myself in their shoes because I was a kid once, and I dreamed of being in the Little League World Series once.' Major League Baseball, which has been officially partnered with Little League International since 2017, declined to comment on that case. So did the state department, though a spokesperson noted the ability to 'make a determination regarding a national interest exception on a case-by-case basis.' Another recent exception, McClintock said, cleared the way for a different youth baseball team from Venezuela, this one from the city of Valencia, to secure visas ahead of a Little League Intermediate Tournament in Livermore, Calif. Since Trump's return to office, the Dodgers have made an official visit to the Oval Office. The league also reinstated Pete Rose from its permanently ineligible list, a move that came after Trump publicly called for it. And in the wake of Trump administration policy changes targeting such programs, MLB removed official language surrounding Diversity, Equity and Inclusion initiatives from the league's website. Still, MLB remains the largest and most diverse baseball league in the world. Its teams employ dozens of Venezuelan players. And when the league hosts the Little League Classic between the Mets and Mariners in Williamsport on Aug. 17, the game will feature Venezuelan players like Eugenio Suárez and Francisco Alvarez. MLB officials were in communication with their Little League counterparts regarding the visa process for the Little League World Series, according to a source briefed on the matter, and offered assistance if needed. On Monday, with the Barquisimeto-based Venezuelan team now bound for historic Williamsport, Contreras made a similar offer. Advertisement 'I'm here for them,' Contreras said. 'If something happens, I want them to know not to hesitate to reach out to me. I'm outspoken for justice. They are kids chasing the dream. Their dream is to come to Williamsport. That could be my brother out there. But I'm glad everything worked out and I'm glad they're going to be allowed to come to the United States.' (Photo of 2024 LLWS signage: Dylan Buell / Getty Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store