Re: Exporting a rifle stock out of America
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: bmmau</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Wild Bill - stick to your day job and pacifier...
Purchasing parts of rifle stock is simply that - purchasing parts before it is assembled into an item and nothing more. Therefore if XLR chose they could as many other manufacturers in many industries do; sell constituent parts of the item. It is called 'business', clearly something you don't understand. And yes all prices on commodities are 'manipulated' or put another way price is 'managed' according to supply and demand of the perceived commodity.Which means in the above context that if x costs y and and x is broken up into its constituent elements, each element would have a value. That value could be z and z could be less USD $100.00. Only the business person knows if that is possible. My suggestion was that it may be possible and if so legal.
Remember Will Bill - it's called business.But your help is however appreciated</div></div>
The same sort of concept of structuring payments applies in the financial world, and in the US it's a federal crime to do so (because the IRS wants their share and all that). I guarantee that Customs, DDTC, and Commerce would all find it quite unacceptable if they found out that a manufacturer were structuring their prices just to avoid paying export fees and paperwork. The $100 limit is to keep them from being backlogged with paperwork for worthless items, not to allow significant military equipment to walk out of the country without a paper trail.
IIRC, a few people at a certain manufacturer in the US were arrested last year because they were shipping barrels overseas as "machine parts" to avoid export controls and fees...and now they're facing federal charges.
To you, having someone illegally ship a stock over in pieces is a way to save a couple hundred bucks, but if you're caught Customs is not going to be happy with you. And should the person on this side of the pond be caught, they're liable to lose their business, their livelihood, and the right to own firearms. All because you just can't pony up a few hundred bucks.
Most of the people on gun forums tend to be very law abiding, and there's more than a few law enforcement officers who are members here. Gun forums tend not to be the sort of place one goes for advise on growing marijuana or committing tax fraud, so it shouldn't be a shock that the people here aren't going to react well when you harass them to break import and export laws.