Federal prosecutors and U.S. Customs and Border Protection are intensifying their pursuit of companies circumventing trade laws on kitchen cabinets and vanities. The recent seizure at the Port of Norfolk, where 781 cartons of Chinese-made products were disguised to bypass antidumping duties, highlights the scale of systemic misclassification. These enforcement efforts are bolstered by the Enforce and Protect Act, which grants authorities the power to suspend shipments and levy heavy penalties against non-compliant businesses.
The administration’s crackdown has already reached the courtroom. In California, Uni-Tile & Marble and Uni-Stone & Cabinet face charges for a conspiracy to evade $109 million in duties, with federal officials seeking $222.5 million in penalties. Betsy Natz, president of the American Kitchen Cabinet Alliance, warned that ignorance is no longer a defense, noting that downstream suppliers and importers risk personal liability and criminal charges if they fail to verify the true origin of their goods. With the Trade Fraud Task Force now actively coordinating these investigations, the government is signaling that any entity connected to the supply chain will be held accountable for tariff evasion.




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