There are special rules for products made from endangered wildlife. Many wildlife and wildlife products are prohibited either by U.S. or foreign laws from import into the United States, and you risk confiscation and a possible fine if you attempt to bring them into the U.S. when you return. Watch out for the following prohibited items:
All products made from sea turtles
All ivory, both Asian and African elephant, and rhinoceros
Furs from spotted cats
Furs from marine mammals
Feathers and feather products from wild birds
Most crocodile and caiman leather
Most coral, whether in chunks or in jewelry
You may import an object made of ivory if it is an antique. To be an antique the ivory must be at least 100 years old, and you will need documentation that authenticates the age of the ivory. You may import other antiques containing wildlife parts under the same conditions: they must be accompanied by documentation proving they are at least 100 years old. Certain other requirements for antiques may also apply.
http://www.blogger.com
Search This Blog
Pages
Followers
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(78)
-
▼
October
(17)
- "Too much of a good thing""Toward long-term success"
- " Many leading UK businesses already play a large ...
- " Robot fruit pickers could one day replace huma...
- Paulson: China Should Move Faster on Yuan"" Ahmadi...
- Media pushes 'success' of experimental GSK malaria...
- abroad information4
- Twitter Founder: Can’t Compete in China,Soul-searc...
- 10GbE shipments will not exceed 1GbE shipments unt...
- Analysis of the Smartphone Application Storefront ...
- Instrumentation
- 2.67 Gigabit RoHS Compliant DWDM SFP (FWLF1631xx)
- Cat
- the history of Royal Geographical Society
- Council of Europe
- U.S. Customs Restrictions – What You Cannot Bring ...
- How long does it take to forget first love?
- Choy San Yeh - The military god of wealth
-
▼
October
(17)
Labels
About Me
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment