David LaPlante wrote:
Ok, here is something that was written by a very well known guitar dealer (and maker) here in the US.
Anyone willing to take on the accuracy of his assertions?
(Lance?)
Yes. I will take the accuracy on. But only for the sake of discussion and to gain a better understanding. You don't say who the author is when it was written or where his info comes from but it looks to be based on worst case scenario. I will comment and hope someone else will also.
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"The mere fact that it is a stringed musical instrument made of wood requires full Lacey declaration completion and filing of PPQ form 505 with APHIS.
This makes it sound like they Lacey is singling out stringed musical instruments. No so, the law applies to anything made out of wood.
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This form according to its own front page is estimated to take 1.5 hours to complete, and requires listing of ALL genus and species of ANY plant and/or animal materials contained in the instrument.
The form is not complicated. The time estimate on the front page does not estimate 1.5 hours to fill it out. The time estimate includes all the time it takes to learn how to fill out the form the first time. Once you know how it probably takes less than 10 minutes to fill out. And why is 1.5 hours a huge problem considering the hours invested in building a guitar? A Customs agent probably will charge $20 extra to fill out the form.
Here is a link to the form...
http://www.aphis.usda.gov/plant_health/ ... onform.pdf Quote:
Failure to correctly complete the form may result in a 400K fine, and willful failure to comply or intentional obfuscation of any listed species or other statements on the form will result in jail time + 400K fine.
Not
WILL result...
MAY result.
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While ALL items containing any plant or animal species are now controlled by the Lacey Act in the USA, only stringed musical instruments currently are required to have PPQ form 505, a blatant singling out of our industry to say the least, which is why I have been vigorously warning all my clients about any overseas travel with their instruments or attempts to import instruments on their own.
This is not correct. PPQ Form 505 is required for all Plant Products not just stringed instruments.
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Stringed musical instruments are SPECIFICALLY on the radar of US border control agents.
This is correct. Probably because the majority of stringed musical instruments crossing international borders contain some form of restricted species?
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If you doubt this, remember that Gibson Inc. has already been raided by Federal agents for Lacey violation, along with other raids by ARMED Federal agents on other musical establishments, and seizures of incoming stringed musical instruments, some of which were actually manufactured here in the USA (C. F. Martin guitars).
From what I understand all the raids were based on improperly filled out documents and involve restricted species.
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Unfortunately too many musicians (and dealers, luthiers, etc) are confusing the provisions of Lacey with those of CITES which is a completely separate treaty of laws and regulations governing international trade in endangered species. Unfortunately, the nexus of the two laws potentially places any US citizen in violation of Lacey if they possess any item with CITES banned species for which they do not have a pre-CITES certificate of exemption from the US Dept of Fish and Wildlife.
No. Possessing an undocumented item is not a violation of Lacey unless you obtained the item through illegal actions.
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For instance, any guitar made with Brazilian rosewood which was made after June 11, 1992 would be in violation of CITES, and therefore its owner would be in violation of Lacey.
No. There is legal BRW that can be made into a guitar even today. So to say any guitar made with BRW after 1992 is a violation is not correct.
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It doesn't matter if the wood used was certified pre-CITES. From the standpoint of the government the date of legality for the object is the date of its CREATION, NOT the date of harvest of the materials. A pre-CITES certified set of Brazilian rosewood remains legally pre-CITES only as long as it remains in the raw form in which it was certified.
No, not correct. The pre-CITES certificate wood can be transformed into something else. And that new item can be certified by showing the certificate for the source material.
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Once re-worked into a new object, the reference date is the date of creation of the object, and if that date is AFTER the elevation of the species to CITES appendix I, then it is in violation.
No, for the above reason. Use the original certificate to obtain a new certificate.
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Lacey address not only importation of plant and animal species, but also interstate commerce and even physical possession.
Lacey only address possession if you took possession through illegal means, knowingly.
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You don't have to be making an importation to violate Lacey, mere possession is sufficient.
Not correct.
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Obviously, under the current law, every stringed musical instrument dealer in the USA is in violation of Lacey.
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I don't know what more to do to make this clear to makers, dealers and musicians.
Is it clear yet?
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So far it seems almost none have a grasp of the mechanics of the law nor its implication, and most seem to be under some kind of delusion that if their instrument is old enough or made without certain woods that somehow the law does not apply to them. That is NOT the case.
The "law" does not apply to them for possession.
CITES applies if the are importing or exporting restricted species.
Lacey applies if they are importing.
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There is NO exemption for age in reporting requirements, although the director of APHIS has allowed for a slightly streamlined process of compliance in filling out PPQ 505 for instruments made prior to May 22, 2008, but none the less one still has to fill out the form. Failure to do this will result in confiscation and possible criminal prosecution, not to mention a hefty fine and legal fees."
Yes you have to fill out the form if the form is required for your activity or item. But it is not the end of the world.