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Bahasa version: Amendment To The U.S. Lacey Act

Implications for Exporters of Indonesian Forest Products

By R. Juge Gregg, Amelia Porges - Sidley Austin LLP
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A new law gives the U.S. government the power to fine, and even jail, individuals and companies who traffic in illegally harvested wood products. The U.S. government can even use this law, called the Lacey Act, to impose significant penalties on individuals and companies who do not realize that their wood is tainted. This new law, and the new import declaration it requires, will affect manufacturers and exporters who ship a variety of products made from wood to the United States, including paper, furniture, lumber, flooring, plywood or even picture frames. The U.S. Department of Justice has already warned that it intends to use the Act to prosecute those who import timber taken or transported in violation of the laws of the country in which the timber was originally harvested. Penalties under the Act include civil administrative penalties, forfeiture of the trafficked goods, criminal fines or imprisonment. A Lacey Act violation may also trigger charges of smuggling or money laundering. The Lacey Act will now apply to the full range of imported wood products and species, far beyond those few species listed as endangered under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).