Judge orders Trump administration to finalize goods entering US without assessing tariffs that were struck down

A US flag and a "tariffs" label are seen in this illustration taken April 10, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 05 March 2026
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Judge orders Trump administration to finalize goods entering US without assessing tariffs that were struck down

WASHINGTON: A US ​trade court judge on Wednesday ordered the government to finalize goods entries into the US without assessing tariffs that were struck down by the Supreme Court last ‌month, according ‌to a ​court ‌filing.

The ⁠order ​could affect ⁠millions of shipments of goods. As of December 10, there were 19.2 million entries into the US for which a final tariff ⁠or duty had ‌not been ‌assessed, which are known ​as unliquidated.

Richard ‌Eaton of the US ‌Court of International Trade ordered that all unliquidated entries were to be finalized without assessing the illegal ‌tariffs, known as IEEPA tariffs for the law which ⁠President ⁠Donald Trump used to try to impose them.

The US government collected more than $130 billion in illegal tariff payments but the Supreme Court did not provide guidance for issuing refunds, creating confusion over how importers ​would be ​reimbursed.