U.S. fines Maersk $1.9 million over detention charges

Maersk paid a $1.9 million fine to the Federal Maritime Commission for improper detention billing to non-contracting third parties. The post U.S. fines Maersk $1.9 million over detention charges appeared first on FreightWaves.
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Maersk has agreed to pay a $1. 9 million civil penalty to the Federal Maritime Commission over detention charges billed to third parties that had not agreed to Maersk’s bills of lading, service contracts, or tariffs.
The FMC said the settlement resolved allegations that Maersk assessed detention charges against third parties who had not consented to be bound by its contract terms. Maersk (OTC: AMKBY)did not admit to any violation. Under the settlement, Maersk agreed to stop the practice, amend its U. S.
tariff rules so “merchant” is limited to shippers, consignees, and beneficial cargo interests, and provide refunds and waivers to impacted third parties. The FMC also said the penalty payment goes to the U. S. General Fund, not to the FMC itself. For shippers and cargo interests, the key issue is who can legally be billed for detention charges.
This settlement suggests carriers need tighter billing practices and clearer alignment between tariffs, contracts, and the parties actually bound by them. Read more articles by Stuart Chirls here.
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This briefing is based on reporting from Freightwaves. Use the original post for full primary-source context.
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