Title 19 › Chapter 28— TRADE FACILITATION AND TRADE ENFORCEMENT › Subchapter I— TRADE FACILITATION AND TRADE ENFORCEMENT › § 4318
Create methods to spot cargo that might break U.S. customs and trade laws. The National Targeting Center, working with the Office of Trade when needed, must build risk-assessment rules and use them to issue Trade Alerts. It should use public information, data from systems like the Automated Commercial System, Automated Commercial Environment, Automated Targeting System, Automated Export System, the International Trade Data System, TECS, ICE case files, successor systems, and information from the private sector. The Center must take in tips from private companies about possible violations, send those tips to the right CBP offices, and tell the company when any civil or criminal action results. The Executive Director of the National Targeting Center may send Trade Alerts telling port directors to do more inspection, physical checks, or testing of specific goods. A port director may refuse a Trade Alert if port security requires it, but must tell the Assistant Commissioner of the Office of Field Operations the decision and reasons within 48 hours. The Assistant Commissioner must make an annual summary of those refusals, review how Trade Alerts are used, and send the summary to Congress by December 31 each year. Inspection — a CBP review (not a physical exam) to assess duties, find restricted or banned items, and check compliance.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 4318
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60