[pianotech] Feds confiscating musical instrument materials

Rob & Helen Goodale rrg at unlv.nevada.edu
Sat Aug 27 10:49:56 MDT 2011


?Recently the Gibson Guitar Company was raided by federal agents asserting that the company has been using illegally obtained banned lumber from protected forests.  It also discusses ivory from piano keys being confiscated by agents.  A very interesting, (and scary) concern about how the government is, (likely), over-stepping their boundaries.  Even if it is from a piano built before ivory is banned you are at their mercy because you don't have paperwork proving it is pre-ban ivory, (and how are you supposed to produce that?  A sales receipt from 1926?).  Failure to have such a document can not only result in the materials being confiscated, but also facing heavy fines and possibly even jail time.

While the government has responsibilities to ensure that banned materials such as ivory do not enter the country, it seems like that authority should be limited to boarder agents and customs inspectors, not demanding proof of origin on a vintage piano.  As far as Gibson is concerned, they claim they have proof that all of their wood is legal and purchased from a "Forest Stewardship Council certified supplier".  The concern here doesn't appear to be whether or not possessing wood, ivory, or other materials is legal, but rather the laws being too broadly and not properly defined.  Possessing pre-band ivory and wood is not a crime, importing new material is the crime.

Read here:  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111904787404576530520471223268.html





Rob Goodale, RPT
Las Vegas, NV
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