CHAMPLAIN — U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers assigned to the Champlain Port of Entry Cargo Facility recently discovered seven Sasanian coins being shipped into the United States. CBP officers assigned to the cargo facility encountered a shipment manifested as documents on June 2 and found nine unrecognizable foreign coins upon further inspection of the package, according to a press release. A specialist from the American Numismatic Society was contacted in order to determine the origin and value of the coins, according to the release. The specialist determined two coins were minted in Armenia and the remaining seven in Iran. On June 23, CBP officers were notified that seven of the coins were from Iran, dated back to the fifth century, during the Sasanian Empire and have an appraised value of approximately $2,000, the release said. As a result, the release said, officers contacted the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Department of the Treasury who determined that the Iranian coins lacked the required licensing for importation. https://www.pressrepublican.com/new...cle_ecdf15f9-8103-5154-8791-71e3526db74a.html I think the actual problem was that the sender sent the coins manifested as documents, which probably annoyed the Customs agents, so they decided to teach him a lesson. He will probably get them back...eventually.
This link https://www.pressrepublican.com/new...cle_ecdf15f9-8103-5154-8791-71e3526db74a.html leads to this in the UK 451: Unavailable due to legal reasons We recognize you are attempting to access this website from a country belonging to the European Economic Area (EEA) including the EU which enforces the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and therefore access cannot be granted at this time. For any issues, contact news@pressrepublican.com or call (518) 561-2300.
Here's a link to the Customs and Border Protection press release https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/local-media-release/cbp-officers-discover-fifth-century-sasanian-coins and another report which includes a really bad photo of the seized coins https://www.freightbrokerlive.com/c...k-to-the-fifth-century-at-ny-border-crossing/
I love this quote from the US Customs and Border Patrol web site: “This is another example of how our officers continue to protect our country and its interests,” said Steve Bronson, Port of Champlain Port Director.
Last year I've had a similar problem selling ancient Persian coins. In my case, PayPay blocked my account when a buyer was paying for two Persis Kingdom obol coins via PayPal. These coins were originally minted and circulated in an area of south western Iran over 2,000 years ago and their value was no more than €40 (about US$44). It is presumed that online sites such as PayPal automatically scan all text for keywords which would have picked up the word PERSIAN, which the buyer wrote in the PayPal notes section when making payment. PayPay immediately blocked my account without warning or notification, as well as my buyer's account. Trying to plead with PayPal was in vain as it seemed like I was dealing with an automated system and it was a week before I got a reply that seemed to have come from a human being. Took 2 whole weeks before PayPal gave me and the buyer full access to our accounts. The coins were being sold in Ireland to a buyer who was also in Ireland. PayPal took the blocks off our accounts only after I could prove to them I purchased the coins from an eBay seller in England back in 2007. Thankfully, I still had records of the transactions. PayPal made no apology, no admittance of error nor gave any kind of reason why that happened. I can only presume it relates to an over-interpretation of US anti-Iran sanction rules?
It's not worth it for some companies outside the EU to appoint an EU representative, among other things, to meet GDPR. Easier just to block EU residents.
Very interesting. Seeing as this is related to a trade embargo and not just an MOU, I wonder if a simple statement from the seller still suffices as sufficient documentation? Where did the Sasanians primarily mint their coins? Ctesiphon the capital was located in present day Iraq, but arguing that would just get you another problem As VC says, if the package wasn't manifested fraudulently, they probably wouldn't of ever looked inside.
One caveat. Recently, a numismatist and collector told me about having bought a rare drahm of Ardaser II (379-383 ACE). Close inspection revealed first that he was looking at a die match, then the exact specimen, of an example from a "particularly rich hoard" which had been looted from the Kabul Museum. His only (ethical) recourse was to send it back to the seller, whose supplier, "I am afraid [,] just palmed it off to a less scrupulous collector." In that kind of context, one can sympathise with attempts from Customs, however belated and even misguided, to monitor this sort of thing. With Afghanistan in the shape it's in, it's really not okay to participate, however passively or even innocently, in the exploitation of its cultural heritage.
Was the issue a lack of paperwork? Or the generic sanction list that says "good of Iranian origin" are not allowed to enter? Ardashir called himself king of Iranians and non-Iranians, but can we talk about "Iranian goods" from the Sassanian period? How about Parthian and Seleucid coins? Does anybody have experience importing them?