Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 4— - PROTECTION OF TIMBER, AND DEPREDATIONS › § 620d
People who buy, get, or move unprocessed timber from Federal lands west of the 100th meridian in the contiguous 48 States must tell the proper Secretary when they receive and when they pass on that timber. Before they transfer such timber, they must give the next person a written notice saying the timber came from Federal lands, get a written promise back that the recipient will follow the law, and send copies of those papers to the Secretary. The same rules apply for timber from public lands in a State under an export order by the Secretary of Commerce, except when a State is administering and enforcing a program under section 620c(d). The Secretaries must use the information to send a report to Congress by June 1, 1995 that analyzes how indirect substitution affects markets and log supply, offers any needed legal or rule changes, summarizes the data collected, looks at the effects of section 620b(b)(2)(C), and includes other appropriate information. If a Secretary finds after a hearing that someone willfully exported prohibited Federal or covered public-land timber, the Secretary may fine that person up to $500,000 per violation or 3 times the timber’s gross value, whichever is greater. For other violations, fines may be up to $75,000 if done in disregard of the rules, up to $50,000 if the person should have known it was wrong, or up to $500,000 for willful violations. The Secretary of Commerce has similar penalty authority for exports on or after June 1, 1993, except for timber from States running programs under section 620c(d). The agency must consider mistakes and other mitigating factors and can reduce, not impose, or suspend penalties. Minor violations should be fixed through the timber contract when possible. Penalties do not replace other legal remedies and can be reviewed in federal court. Agency heads may also debar violators from buying Federal timber for up to 5 years after a hearing, withhold awards during debarment proceedings, and cancel contracts. The penalty and debarment rules above do not apply to violations of section 620i.
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Citation
16 U.S.C. § 620d
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73