U.S. Customs and Border Protection has announced new import restrictions on "Albanian coins" as part of another overbroad laundry list of import restrictions on anything and everything that may be found in Albania from 300,000 B.C. to 1913.
Effective date: March 17, 2022
Source: 87 FR 15079-15084 (March 17, 2022), available at https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2022/03/17/2022-05685/imposition-of- import-restrictions-on-categories-of-archaeological-and-ethnological-material-of
The Designated list of
coins subject to import restrictions is as follows.
8. Coins—This category includes coins of Illyrian, Greek, Macedonian, Roman provincial, Byzantine, Medieval, and Ottoman types that circulated primarily in Albania, ranging in date from approximately the 6th century B.C. to A.D. 1750. Coins were made in copper, bronze, silver, and gold. Examples are generally round, have writing, and show imagery of animals, buildings, symbols, or royal or imperial figures.
Comment: The designated list of coins is particularly
broad and includes coins that circulated regionally as well as
internationally. It goes far beyond coins that "primarily
circulated" within Albania. Despite the assumption contained in the
regulation, no Greek, Byzantine, and Ottoman types “circulated primarily”
within Albania or were even made there. As for Illyrian coins, hoard
evidence indicates that popular cow/calf coins from the Roman Republican period
“circulated primarily” in Romania, not Albania.
The only bright spot is that neither Roman Republican nor Roman Imperial
coins seem to be restricted.
A
case can be made that the “circulated primarily” standard is statutorily
deficient because it is contrary to the CPIA requirement that restricted items
must be first discovered within and subject to export control of a particular
country. There also is a fair notice issue because how is a typical
collector or dealer to know whether or not a particular issue “circulated primarily” in Albania or not?
It is frustrating that the State Department invites public comment, and then promptly ignores it. Both ACCG and IAPN prepared detailed papers about coin circulation in Albania, but either no one at the State Department bothered to read them or no one cared what facts were presented.
Another abuse of power designed to ensure the broadest possible import restrictions apply.
1 comment:
I am an American who has been collecting ancient coins for over 35 years.
Even more frustrating is my home town American Numismatic Society suddenly supporting these government restrictions on American coin collectors, now an ANS "society" openly in full support of all government imposed M.O.U. coin restrictions.
This frustration goes beyond the ANS President, using ANS letter head, to publicly support State Dept coin restrictions on U.S. coin collectors. The ANS is now hiring active anti-collecting "academics" with a questionable (stated) missions to demean ancient coins, first spreading this agenda (for political purposes) to college students, and now to the greater ANS community as a new Director.
Since the 1850's, Americans created the ANS, Americans built the vast ANS coin collections and Americans have financially supported the ANS. The recent government turn against American coin collectors is frustrating enough. The sudden political turn by the ANS to support coin restrictions on Americans & hire so-called "academics" with very questionable motives is most frustrating & very disappointing.
Gerard
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