U.S. Customs and Border Protection plays an indispensable role in ensuring our nation’s economic prosperity by facilitating legitimate trade and enforcing our trade laws. As we know here at CBP, economic security is national security. Every day, we tackle issues that threaten our economic security, values, and well-being as a country.
As Executive Director for Trade Remedy Law Enforcement at CBP’s Office of Trade, I am responsible for key operational functions focused on detecting high-risk activity, deterring trade non-compliance, and disrupting fraudulent behavior and illicit activity to protect American consumers and American businesses from unsafe and unfair trade practices and products. Our team makes use of technology, outreach, allegations, intelligence, data analysis, and more to identify and investigate unlawful activity. As global trade evolves and supply chains become more complex and opaque, we will continue to innovate, leveraging ideas and technology into strategies that address emerging threats.
CBP Combats Forced Labor
One of CBP’s top priorities is to combat forced labor. Forced labor is a human rights abuse that affects almost 28 million men, women, and children globally. CBP is one of the few government agencies in the world granted legal authority to enforce against imported goods produced wholly or in part with forced labor. Our enforcement not only improves the living and working conditions of workers around the world but also protects law-abiding businesses from unfair competition.
In addition, CBP’s implementation of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) has set an international precedent for customs administrations around the world in addressing the ongoing genocide and crimes against humanity against Uyghurs and other religious and ethnic minorities in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region by the People’s Republic of China.