Bill Detail
S. 2677
Congress: 119
Title
A bill to expand the sharing of information with respect to suspected violations of intellectual property rights in trade.
Summary
This bill expands the authority of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to provide information to certain persons (e.g., trademark or copyright owners) regarding suspected violations of intellectual property rights in trade. Under current law, if CBP suspects that merchandise is being imported in violation of certain trademark and copyright laws, it may request assistance from specified persons when determining whether the merchandise is imported in violation of these laws. To permit the party to conduct examination and testing, CBP must provide them with specified information that appears on the merchandise and its packaging and labels. This bill (1) expands the definition of person to allow CBP to request assistance from any other appropriate party with an interest in the imported merchandise, and (2) expands the scope of information that CBP is authorized to share with others to include information on and images of packing materials and shipping containers. The bill allows CBP to request this assistance if it has a reasonable suspicion (currently, suspects) that the merchandise being imported is in violation of certain trademark and copyright laws. Additionally, CBP may provide a person with nonpublic information about the imported merchandise that was generated by an online marketplace or similar market platform, express consignment operator, freight forwarder, or any other entity that plays a role in the sale, importation, or facilitation of the merchandise into the United States and has been provided to, shared with, or obtained by CBP.
Sponsor
Sen. Chuck Grassley [R-IA]
Status
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Status as of May 28, 10:16 PM · synced 32d ago
Introduced
2025-08-01
Data source mode: congress-gov
Bill Engagement
This bill expands the authority of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to provide information to certain persons (e.g., trademark or copyright owners) regarding suspected v…
Lobbyists on the case
- Entertainment Software Association1 filing · 4 lobs
- American Intellectual Property Law Association (Aipla)1 filing · 1 lob
- Adriana Barajas2026 Q1
- Melissa Foxman2026 Q1
- Vincent Garlock2026 Q1
- Jason Mahler2026 Q1
- John Miceli2026 Q1