mustangdriver wrote:
The 20mm cannons arrived at the Port of Savannah, Ga., on Oct. 8, 2008, inside two 40-foot shipping containers being imported by Dixie Equipment. CBP officers discovered the cannons concealed in a wooden box, hidden under aircraft parts in the nose of one of the containers, although the cannons were not listed on the entry form, bill of lading, invoice or any other documentation submitted by Dixie Equipment.
CBP officers seized the cannons and aircraft parts on Oct. 15, 2008. The ICE HSI investigation following that seizure revealed the Skyraider aircraft had entered the United States illegally. ICE HSI agents seized the plane pursuant to a court order on April 24, 2009, at the Bessemer Airport, where it had been delivered to Hendrickson in August 2008.
Neither the State Department nor the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) had granted a permit, license or other written authorization for the importation of the Skyraider, the cannons or the aircraft parts at the time they entered the United States
The pilot, who was hired by Hendrickson to fly the plane from France into the United States, provided false information to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers at the Port of Buffalo, N.Y., to gain admittance into the country.
This is from the US Immigration and Customs website
If I'm understanding this right, the import permit was denied, but the guy tried to import it anyway. Then when the weapons shipped, they were not only concealed within a crate, but weren't even on the manifest?
I don't get it. If the facts above are true, I don't understand why the responsibility doesn't fall on the owner. Generally, when the government denies you a permit to do something, you don't do it anyway. The way the weapons were imported (hiding in the corner of a crate, not reported in the manifest) is shady if you're looking at this from the government's perspective. Given the post-9/11 world we live in, I would think someone would take extra care to make sure items that could be perceived as being of a sensitive nature are shipped properly and within regulation.
If the details about the denial of an import permit and the shipping are true, this is simply negligence on the part of the owner. I fail to see how that's the government's fault.
It sucks about the Skyraider, but if the above facts are true, I have a hard time feeling sympathy for the owner. Hopefully some sort of resolution can be found that keeps any harm from coming to the Skyraider.