Wisconsin importers pay $10M to settle customs fraud case

Companies allegedly submitted false invoices to minimize taxes

Engraved name of U.S. Customs and Border Protection over entrance door of building.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection says Precision Cable Assemblies and Global Engineered Products minimized how much they paid on import duties by submitting altered invoices. (Photo: Shutterstock/nyker)

Two Wisconsin-based industrial products suppliers and their owners have paid more than $10 million to resolve allegations that they submitted fraudulent commercial invoices to avoid millions of dollars in customs duties owed on imports from China.

Precision Cable Assemblies Inc., which sell wire harnesses, battery cables and other wiring products, and Global Engineered Products, which sells power distribution products, submitted false invoices to U.S. Customs and Border Protection that significantly undervalued goods imported from China from 2016 to 2021, the Department of Justice announced last week. The value and the tariff rate of a product are the primary factors in determining the amount of import duty.

The government alleged that two Chinese suppliers sent invoices in electronic spreadsheet format to Precision Cable Assemblies and Global Engineered Products with the full, actual price of the goods imported. The companies altered the spreadsheets to reduce the prices by about 70% and then handed them to their U.S. customs broker, which unknowingly submitted the false invoices to CBP. The practice was especially fruitful for the companies after the Trump administration imposed additional duties on many Chinese goods in 2018.

Global Engineered Products paid CBP $4.2 million in lost duties from the undervaluation scheme. The defendants paid an additional $6 million to the Justice Department to resolve liabilities for alleged evasion of duties under the False Claims Act.


“Companies that import goods into the United States must provide Customs and Border Protection with truthful information and pay all of the applicable duties owed. This settlement sends a strong message to companies and their owners that they must follow the customs rules,” said Gregory Haanstad, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, in a news release.

The case was brought to the attention of authorities by a former Precision Cable employee who took advantage of whistleblower protections in federal law to come forward. He received $1.2 million for initiating a fraud suit against the company, which the government ended up litigating. 

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