United States v. 4,432 Mastercases of Cigarettes , 448 F.3d 1168 ( 2006 )


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  •                  FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,             
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    INTRIGUE TRADING, INC.,                     No. 04-55354
    
    Claimant-Appellee,             D.C. No.
    v.                         CV-01-10113-FMC
    4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES,
    More or Less,
    Defendant.
    
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,             
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    INTRIGUE TRADING, INC.,                     No. 04-55356
    
    Claimant-Appellant,             D.C. No.
    v.                         CV-01-10113-FMC
    4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES,
    More or Less,
    Defendant.
    
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,             
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    INTRIGUE TRADING, INC.,                     No. 04-56350
    
    Claimant-Appellee,             D.C. No.
    v.                         CV-01-10113-FMC
    4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES,             OPINION
    More or Less,
    Defendant.
    
    6015
    6016 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Florence Marie Cooper, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    November 16, 2005—Pasadena, California
    Filed June 2, 2006
    Before: Procter Hug, Jr. and Kim McLane Wardlaw,
    Circuit Judges, and James K. Singleton,* District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Wardlaw
    *The Honorable James K. Singleton, Senior United States District
    Judge for the District of Alaska, sitting by designation.
    6020 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    COUNSEL
    Brian M. Hoffstadt, Assistant United States Attorney, and Pio
    S. Kim, Assistant United States Attorney, Los Angeles, Cali-
    fornia, argued the case and were on the briefs for the
    appellants/cross-appellees.
    Eric Honig, Law Office of Eric Honig, Marina del Rey, Cali-
    fornia, argued the case and was on the briefs for the
    appellees/cross-appellants.
    Dennis Eckhart and Peter M. Williams, Office of the Attorney
    General, were on the briefs for amicus curiae California
    Board of Equalization.
    OPINION
    WARDLAW, Circuit Judge:
    This appeal and cross-appeal arise from the search and sei-
    zure by the United States Customs Service of over 44 million
    cigarettes, contained in 4,432 mastercases, for nonpayment of
    California cigarette taxes. The appeals require us to determine
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6021
    the extent of immunity from state and federal regulatory and
    taxing power that businesses can expect when they operate in
    foreign trade zones. We hold that an importer of goods des-
    tined for domestic consumption is not exempt from state
    excise taxes and administrative searches by federal Customs
    officials simply because it stores its merchandise in a foreign
    trade zone.
    I.   FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Between 1998 and 2000, Intrigue Trading, Inc.
    (“Intrigue”), a California corporation, was licensed by the
    Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms to import gray
    market cigarettes into the United States for domestic sale. The
    term “gray market cigarettes” refers to both American-made
    exported cigarettes that are re-imported into the United States,
    as well as American brands of cigarettes manufactured abroad
    for sale in foreign markets but then imported into the United
    States.1 Until the year 2000, importing gray market cigarettes
    was legal, as was their sale in California. See Tariff Suspen-
    sion and Trade Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-476, tit. IV,
    § 4002 (effective as amended Nov. 9, 2000, at 
    26 U.S.C. § 5754
    ) (banning importation of previously exported tobacco
    products); Act of May 5, 2000, S.B. 1038, § 1, Cal. Legis.
    Serv. 18 (codified as amended at 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 30163
    ) (making illegal in California the importation of ciga-
    rettes in violation of 
    26 U.S.C. § 5754
    , and the importation by
    third parties of American-branded cigarettes manufactured
    abroad). Throughout most of the period of Intrigue’s opera-
    tions, however, California law required cigarette distributors
    either to obtain a state distributor’s license or to pay use taxes
    on cigarettes placed into storage.
    1
    Collier, Shannon, Rill & Scott, PLLC, Memorandum to NACS, Ques-
    tions and Answers Relating to Gray Market Cigarettes (Sept. 10, 1999),
    available at http://www.nacsonline.com/NACS/Resource/Government/
    gray_market_cigs_091099.htm.
    6022 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    Intrigue is ninety percent owned by Andy Lee, who is also
    the majority shareholder of two other corporations that dealt
    in gray market cigarettes, National Trade Industry, Inc.
    (“NTI”) and Ampac, Inc. (“Ampac”). The companies were
    similarly structured and shared storage facilities, but each
    company served a particular purpose. For instance, only NTI
    was licensed to sell cigarettes in California. The companies
    are separately incorporated.
    Between 1998 and April 2001, Intrigue regularly stored
    gray market cigarettes, including the 4,432 mastercases at
    issue here, in a storage space rented under Ampac’s name at
    the Port Services Foreign Trade Zone in Carson, California.
    Foreign trade zones (“FTZs”) are discrete areas located adja-
    cent to ports of entry and authorized by Congress to receive
    preferential treatment under United States customs laws.
    BMW Mfg. Corp. v. United States, 
    241 F.3d 1357
    , 1359 n.1
    (Fed. Cir. 2001). Merchandise from foreign countries stored
    within an FTZ is not subject to United States customs duties
    so long as it remains in the FTZ. 19 U.S.C. § 81c. Congress
    thus allows international shippers to use American ports as a
    duty-free way station in international commerce. Companies
    operating within FTZs are also permitted to manipulate or
    alter these foreign goods (by repackaging, breaking up,
    assembling, sorting, mixing with other foreign or domestic
    parts, etc.) before reshipment abroad, without incurring Cus-
    toms duties unless they are entered into the United States for
    sale. Id. In addition, domestic merchants may use FTZs as a
    holding area for eventual exports, or to store “domestic sta-
    tus” merchandise, imported goods on which Customs duties
    have already been paid. See 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 146.43
    ; 146.44.
    Intrigue’s mastercases of cigarettes were “domestic status”
    goods.2
    2
    More information on the establishment and regulation of FTZs can
    be found at United States Customs & Border Protection, Foreign Trade
    Zones      Manual,      http://www.cbp.gov/xp/cgov/toolbox/publications/
    manuals_handbooks/, and United States Customs & Border Protection,
    About Foreign-Trade Zones & Contact Info, http://www.cbp.gov/xp/cgov/
    import/cargo_contr ol/ftz/about_ftz.xml.
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6023
    Intrigue purchased the 4,432 mastercases of Marlboro
    brand cigarettes between August 2000 and January 2001 from
    three different companies that had imported them through
    Miami, Florida. Importation documents indicated that the cig-
    arettes were manufactured in Switzerland. They had passed
    through Customs and all duties were paid. From Miami,
    Intrigue shipped the cigarettes to the Carson Port Services
    FTZ in California, where they were placed in storage for a
    planned eventual sale to LPC, Inc., a Missouri-based com-
    pany doing business under the name DirtCheapCigarettes-
    .com. This transaction never occurred because the United
    States Customs Service seized the cigarettes.
    Customs Service agents began searching FTZs in the Los
    Angeles and Long Beach area in early April 2001 as part of
    an investigation into counterfeit and contraband cigarettes
    they suspected were being stored there. Customs Inspector
    Rudolfo Villacana visited the Carson FTZ on April 3 or 4,
    2001, but was informed by Zone Operator John Yeskel that
    there were no cigarettes on-site. A day or two later, additional
    Customs Service agents visited the Carson FTZ and a differ-
    ent zone employee, in response to the agents’ questioning, led
    them to Intrigue’s space. There, they found a fenced-in,
    locked storage area covered with black tarp that obscured the
    contents of the pallets. Zone employees did not have a key to
    the storage space, nor could they locate documents detailing
    Intrigue’s admissions and removals of cigarettes from the
    FTZ. When the Customs inspectors threatened to cut the lock,
    an Intrigue employee, Nick Choi, was summoned. He had a
    key to the space and opened it for the inspectors to enter. Dur-
    ing this initial search, the inspectors found mastercases of cig-
    arettes wrapped in opaque black plastic. This combination of
    circumstances made one senior Customs inspector “very
    suspicious” of the nature of the cigarettes.
    Customs Service officials returned to the FTZ again on
    April 5 and seized twelve sample cartons of cigarettes for test-
    ing. The next day, April 6, four officials at a Customs ware-
    6024 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    house performed a series of field tests on the cigarettes. Those
    tests indicated that the cigarettes were “likely counterfeit,”
    “possibly counterfeit,” or at least “appeared to be counterfeit.”
    Based on the field test results and the suspicious circum-
    stances of the cigarettes’ storage, the Customs Service
    decided to seize all the cigarettes in Intrigue’s storage area
    and move them to a secure Customs warehouse.
    The following Monday, April 9, 2001, Customs Specialist
    Trevor Rudalevige performed another test on packs of ciga-
    rettes from the sample cartons. The results of this second test
    (the “Rudalevige test”) were inconclusive. Officer Rudalevige
    recommended forwarding some of the samples to Phillip Mor-
    ris for further analysis. That same day, Customs officials
    began a detailed, week-long inventory of the cigarettes. On
    April 10, in the course of the inventory, agents found two
    boxes of cigarettes that bore Customs notations indicating that
    they had previously been denied importation into the United
    States. Sometime between April 10 and April 17, Customs
    officials also discovered evidence of country-of-origin viola-
    tions: some of the inventoried cigarettes were not from Swit-
    zerland, as Intrigue had claimed, but rather from the Czech
    Republic, Germany, Holland, and Malaysia.
    Phillip Morris responded to the Customs Service’s inquiry
    on April 19. Its tests established that the cigarettes in fact
    were not counterfeit, but it confirmed that three of the four
    cartons it reviewed were incorrectly labeled as manufactured
    in Switzerland. The Customs Service retained control of the
    cigarettes, asserting that it now had probable cause to believe
    that a large number of the cigarettes were imported in viola-
    tion of country-of-origin rules or imported despite having
    been previously denied entry. All but 408 mastercases ulti-
    mately were sold at a court-ordered interlocutory sale in Octo-
    ber 2002 for $450,000. The estimated domestic market value
    of the 4,432 mastercases of cigarettes was between $1.7 mil-
    lion and $5.5 million.
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6025
    In December 2001, the United States filed this civil forfei-
    ture complaint against the cigarettes as goods entered into the
    country in violation of law. See 19 U.S.C. § 1595a. The
    United States initially alleged only country-of-origin and
    unlawful importation violations but amended its complaint in
    December 2002 to add charges under the Contraband Ciga-
    rette Trafficking Act (“CCTA”), 
    18 U.S.C. § 2341
     et seq. The
    CCTA claim alleged that the cigarettes could be seized
    because they were “found” in California without bearing “evi-
    dence of the payment of applicable State cigarette taxes.” 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 2341
    , 2344.
    Intrigue moved to suppress the cigarettes as fruits of an ille-
    gal search and seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
    The district court denied the suppression motion, holding that
    “there is no legitimate expectation of privacy in imported
    merchandise located in [an FTZ],” and that “imports released
    from Customs’ custody may still be subject to Customs sam-
    pling or additional examination after they are released.”
    After the government withdrew five of its eight original
    claims, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
    The district court denied summary judgment to Intrigue on the
    country-of-origin and unlawful importation claims but granted
    summary judgment in its favor on the CCTA claim. The dis-
    trict court held that California cigarette taxes were not due on
    Intrigue’s mastercases because such taxes are preempted by a
    provision of the Foreign Trade Zones Act (“FTZ Act”) that
    prohibits the imposition of state and local ad valorem taxes
    against goods stored in FTZs. See 19 U.S.C. § 81o(e). It con-
    cluded that California’s imposition of a tax on cigarettes des-
    tined for sale in another state “transform[s] a tax on the sale
    or distribution of cigarettes in California into an ad valorem
    property tax.”
    The parties entered into a consent judgment in December
    2003. In return for the government’s agreement to drop its
    remaining country-of-origin claims, Intrigue agreed that the
    6026 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    government preserved its right to appeal the CCTA judgment.
    In turn, Intrigue preserved its right to appeal the denial of its
    motion to suppress. Thereafter, the district court awarded
    Intrigue $491,000 in attorney fees. The government appeals
    that award, arguing only that if we reverse the grant of sum-
    mary judgment on the CCTA claim, Intrigue will not be a
    “prevailing party” and the fee award should be vacated. We
    consolidated these timely appeals.
    II.   MOTION TO SUPPRESS
    We review the denial of a motion to suppress de novo, see
    United States v. Willis, 
    431 F.3d 709
    , 713 n.3 (9th Cir. 2005),
    although we accept the district court’s underlying findings of
    fact in the absence of clear error, see 
    id.
     We hold that the dis-
    trict court properly denied Intrigue’s motion to suppress the
    4,432 mastercases of cigarettes as fruits of an illegal search
    and seizure.
    Intrigue argues that the warrantless search of its locked
    cage and sealed cigarette cases on April 4 or 5, 2001, and the
    related seizure of twelve sample cartons of cigarettes for test-
    ing, violated the Fourth Amendment. It further contends that
    the United States lacked probable cause when it seized all
    4,432 mastercases of cigarettes on April 6. Lastly, Intrigue
    contends that the government’s continuing retention of the
    mastercases after the inconclusive Rudalevige test on April 9
    was unconstitutional, because any probable cause that may
    have arisen at earlier points in the Customs Service investiga-
    tion dissipated at the conclusion of the second, inconclusive
    test.
    A.   Initial Search
    It is undisputed that Customs agents searched Intrigue’s
    storage area within the Port Services FTZ and seized twelve
    sample cartons of cigarettes without a warrant. We conclude,
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6027
    however, that this initial search and sampling was a constitu-
    tional administrative search.3
    [1] As a general rule, searches and seizures violate the
    Fourth Amendment unless they are based on probable cause
    and executed pursuant to a valid search warrant. See Katz v.
    United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 357 (1967). The protection
    against unreasonable searches and seizures extends to com-
    mercial premises, see Tucson Woman’s Clinic v. Eden, 
    379 F.3d 531
    , 550 (9th Cir. 2004), and it also applies in the con-
    text of civil forfeiture proceedings, see One 1958 Plymouth
    Sedan v. Pennsylvania, 
    380 U.S. 693
    , 696 (1965).
    [2] The United States Supreme Court, however, has carved
    out a limited number of contexts within which a warrant is not
    required. Administrative searches of “closely regulated”
    industries are one such exception and may be conducted with-
    out a warrant, so long as they meet certain standards of rea-
    sonableness. See, e.g., New York v. Burger, 
    482 U.S. 691
    ,
    702-03 (1987). We do not require a warrant in such situations
    because “the federal regulatory presence is sufficiently com-
    prehensive and defined that the owner of the commercial
    property cannot help but be aware that his property will be
    subject to periodic inspections undertaken for specific pur-
    poses.” Donovan v. Dewey, 
    452 U.S. 594
    , 600 (1981). Indus-
    tries deemed “closely regulated” under this doctrine include
    liquor distribution, Colonnade Catering Corp. v. United
    States, 
    397 U.S. 72
     (1970); sale of sporting weapons, United
    States v. Biswell, 
    406 U.S. 311
    , 316 (1972); stone quarrying
    and mining, Donovan, 
    452 U.S. at 606
    ; and automobile junk-
    yards, Burger, 
    482 U.S. at 703-04
    ; United States v. Argent
    Chem. Labs., Inc., 
    93 F.3d 572
    , 575 (9th Cir. 1996) (veteri-
    nary drugs); United States v. V-1 Oil Co., 
    63 F.3d 909
    , 911
    (9th Cir. 1995) (transportation of hazardous materials). The
    3
    Intrigue does not independently contest the constitutional validity of
    the sampling. Therefore, we consider the initial search and sampling
    together.
    6028 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    Supreme Court, in Burger, upheld a warrantless search and
    inspection regime for automobile junkyards that allowed
    police officers to inspect not only a company’s business
    records but also the cars and auto parts stored on its property.
    In reaching its determination that automobile junkyards are
    closely regulated, the Court focused on “the pervasiveness
    and regularity of the federal regulation and the effect of such
    regulation upon an owner’s expectation of privacy.” Burger,
    
    482 U.S. at 701
     (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
    Tucson Woman’s Clinic, 
    379 F.3d at 550
    .
    The United States contends that FTZs are a “closely regu-
    lated” industry and that Customs Service regulations suffi-
    ciently authorize warrantless searches. As a result, those who
    store property within FTZs have a diminished expectation of
    privacy and adequate notice of the likelihood of warrantless
    inspections. We agree that, given the closely regulated nature
    of FTZs, a warrant is not required, so long as the search is
    otherwise reasonable.
    Although storing cigarettes in an FTZ is more akin to a
    “business activity” than an “industry,” we have previously
    approved administrative searches premised on the “closely
    regulated” nature of a particular commercial activity, even
    where the entire industry might not be tightly regulated. In V-
    1 Oil, we evaluated the constitutionality of a warrantless
    search provision in the federal Hazardous Materials Transpor-
    tation Act. Although V-1 acknowledged that it was regulated
    by 331 different state and federal agencies, the company
    argued that it could not be subject to administrative searches
    because it was not part of the railroad industry or any other
    industry that could be deemed “closely regulated.” V-1 Oil, 
    63 F.3d at 911
    . We disagreed, focusing not on the industry to
    which V-1 belonged but rather on the closely regulated nature
    of its business activity: “V-1 has a reduced expectation of pri-
    vacy because it transports, sells, and stores propane gas.” Id.;
    see also United States v. Gonsalves, 
    435 F.3d 64
    , 67 (1st Cir.
    2006) (holding that “[w]hatever the status of the [medical]
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6029
    profession in the abstract,” the manufacture, storage, and dis-
    pensation of pharmaceuticals is closely regulated). Therefore,
    we need only decide whether the activity of storing merchan-
    dise in an FTZ is closely regulated.
    [3] We first note that the regulation of FTZs is pervasive.
    An FTZ may be established only with the consent and autho-
    rization of a federal agency, the Foreign Trade Zones Board.
    19 U.S.C. § 81b. Entities seeking to admit merchandise to an
    FTZ must submit an application and numerous supporting
    documents, 
    19 C.F.R. § 146.32
    ; they must do so again if they
    wish to manipulate, manufacture, exhibit, or destroy their
    merchandise, 
    id.
     § 146.52; and they must gain permission yet
    again from the Port Director to remove their merchandise
    from a zone, id. § 146.71. Each of these steps is tightly con-
    trolled, requires documentation, and is subject to Customs
    supervision. Detailed regulations also address safety condi-
    tions, security, and recordkeeping responsibilities within
    FTZs. See id. §§ 146.4, 146.21-26; 
    15 C.F.R. § 400.46
    . Most
    importantly, the statute and accompanying regulations clearly
    authorize the Customs Service to monitor, search and inspect
    items stored therein. Customs Service officers have primary
    responsibility for policing the admission of foreign goods into
    customs territory. See 19 U.S.C. § 81d; 
    19 C.F.R. § 146.3
    .
    FTZ operators must “permit any Customs officer access to a
    zone,” 
    19 C.F.R. § 146.4
    (b), and once on-site, those officers
    may examine any merchandise stored in an FTZ so long as
    “the examination is considered necessary to facilitate the
    proper administration of any law, regulation, or instruction
    which Customs is authorized to enforce.” 
    Id.
     § 146.10. The
    Foreign Trade Zones Manual, which serves as a comprehen-
    sive guidebook for zone users and operators, further empha-
    sizes the breadth of the Customs Service’s authority:
    To properly enforce the laws and regulations, Cus-
    toms officers are given considerable authority to
    conduct searches, arrest suspected violators, and
    seize merchandise and articles. . . . Merchandise may
    6030 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    be seized by any Customs officer who has reason-
    able cause to believe that any law or regulation
    enforced by Customs has been violated, by reason of
    which the merchandise has become subject to sei-
    zure or forfeiture.
    United States Customs & Border Protection, Foreign Trade
    Zones Manual 197-98 (2003) (citing 
    19 C.F.R. § 162.21
    ).4
    These numerous and specific regulations should have pro-
    vided sufficient notice to Intrigue “that its property and
    records will from time to time be inspected by government
    officials,” V-1 Oil, 
    63 F.3d at 912
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted), and that its goods might be subject to occasional
    sampling.
    [4] The duration and regularity of this scheme also supports
    our conclusion that the commercial activity of storing mer-
    chandise in FTZs is “closely regulated.” Customs supervision
    has been part of the scheme for FTZs since they were con-
    ceived in 1934. Section 146.10, which enables warrantless
    searches of merchandise in FTZs by Customs Service agents
    has been in place since 1969,5 and was not modified during
    the period of Intrigue’s operations. Moreover, the Carson FTZ
    zone operator testified that Customs officials inspected
    Intrigue’s inventory and manipulation activity “two to three
    times a year” during the thirty months Intrigue rented space
    there.
    Intrigue correctly points out that “domestic status” goods,
    like Intrigue’s cigarettes, which have come through Customs
    4
    http://www.cbp.gov/~xp/cgov/toolbox/publications/manuals_
    handbooks/.
    5
    From 1970 to 1984, a regulatory provision with almost identical lan-
    guage was located at 
    19 C.F.R. § 146.6
    . See 
    49 Fed. Reg. 28,855
    , 28,878
    (July 17, 1984); 
    35 Fed. Reg. 9262
    , 9263 (June 13, 1970). Between 1969
    and 1970, the provision authorizing Customs Service examinations of
    merchandise in FTZs could be found at 
    19 C.F.R. § 30.6
    . See 
    34 Fed. Reg. 4957
     (Mar. 7, 1969).
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6031
    and on which duties have been paid, are subject to less scru-
    tiny and regulation than goods in international transshipment
    or domestic goods bound for export. That fact, however, does
    not relieve Intrigue from most of the FTZ regulations, includ-
    ing especially the search provisions of sections 146.4 and
    146.10. In Burger, the Supreme Court held that a regulatory
    scheme far less comprehensive and enacted more recently
    nonetheless rendered automobile junkyards “closely regulat-
    ed.” The New York statute, less than five years old when the
    warrantless inspection occurred, Burger, 
    482 U.S. at 705
    , was
    comparatively limited in scope. It required junkyard owners
    to obtain a license and keep records of vehicles coming into
    and leaving their possession, and allowed police officers to
    examine the records or the vehicles during normal business
    hours. 
    Id.
     at 694 nn.1 & 3. The regulatory regime for “domes-
    tic status” goods in FTZs is at least as pervasive and well-
    established.
    Next, we disagree with Intrigue that the FTZ regulations
    fail to clearly authorize warrantless searches. In support of its
    contention, Intrigue cites a statutory provision detailing obli-
    gations for Customs Service officers:
    If any officer or person authorized to make searches
    and seizures has probable cause to believe that—(A)
    any merchandise . . . which has been otherwise
    brought into the United States unlawfully . . . is in
    any dwelling house, store, or other building or place,
    he may make application, under oath, to any [autho-
    rized judge], and shall thereupon be entitled to a
    warrant to enter . . . and to search for and seize such
    merchandise or other article described in the warrant.
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1595
    (a)(1). In United States v. Mendoza-Ortiz,
    
    262 F.3d 882
    , 885 (9th Cir. 2001) (per curiam) we held that
    
    19 U.S.C. § 1595
    (a) required Customs officers to obtain a
    warrant to search a private warehouse, even though they had
    probable cause to believe drugs were located on the site. 262
    6032 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    F.3d at 885. An FTZ, however, is not private property. It is
    a heavily regulated, government created and controlled loca-
    tion at which only particular commercial activity, defined by
    the government, is allowed. Business activities that otherwise
    would be private fall under extensive federal control and Cus-
    toms supervision when they are conducted in FTZs. Our deci-
    sion in Mendoza-Ortiz turned on the fact that the search
    involved private activity at a private facility, one that typically
    would be shielded from government intervention. Indeed, in
    Mendoza-Ortiz, we were careful to note that the officers could
    have intercepted the drugs at the border or at any place en
    route to the private warehouse without a warrant; it was only
    “[a]t the moment the planks were unloaded into Space G” that
    a warrant became necessary. 
    Id.
     Furthermore, the specific
    statute and regulations giving Customs search and inspection
    power over merchandise in FTZs, 19 U.S.C. § 81d; 
    19 C.F.R. §§ 146.3
    , 146.4, 146.10, trump the more general statute
    requiring a warrant in the majority of situations, 
    19 U.S.C. § 1595
    . See Bonneville Power Admin. v. FERC, 
    422 F.3d 908
    ,
    916 (9th Cir. 2005) (describing the “basic principle of statu-
    tory construction . . . that the specific prevails over the gener-
    al”).
    We also reject Intrigue’s similar argument that the statute
    and regulations do not authorize a “warrantless search and
    seizure” because they do not use those particular terms. Nei-
    ther of the statutes held to authorize administrative searches
    in Burger and V-1 Oil used the words “warrantless search and
    seizure.” In Burger, the statute allowed “any police officer
    . . . to examine” vehicle records, vehicles, and vehicle parts.
    
    482 U.S. at
    694 n.1 (citing 
    N.Y. Veh. & Traf. Law § 415
    -a5
    (McKinney 1986)). In V-1 Oil, the statute empowered “any
    officer, employee, or agent to enter upon, inspect, and exam-
    ine, at reasonable times and in a reasonable manner, the
    records and properties of persons [relating to transportation or
    shipment of hazardous materials].” 
    63 F.3d at
    912 (citing 
    49 U.S.C. § 1808
    (c) (1988)). We decline to hold that the words
    “warrantless search and seizure” are talismanic.
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6033
    [5] Even though we conclude that the FTZ regulations
    clearly authorize inspections without warrants and that the
    storage of goods in FTZs is “closely regulated” commercial
    activity, to satisfy the Fourth Amendment, the administrative
    search must also be reasonable. In Burger, the Supreme Court
    held that a warrantless search is nevertheless reasonable if
    three conditions are satisfied: 1) the underlying regulatory
    scheme advances a substantial government interest; 2) war-
    rantless inspections are “necessary” to further the regulatory
    scheme; and 3) the inspection program provides a “constitu-
    tionally adequate substitute for a warrant.” Burger, 
    482 U.S. at 702-03
     (internal quotation marks omitted); V-1 Oil, 
    63 F.3d at 911
    . Each of these conditions is met here.
    [6] First, the underlying regulatory scheme for FTZs
    advances the government’s substantial interest in ensuring
    that duties are paid, that consumers are protected from coun-
    terfeit or adulterated cigarettes, and that country-of-origin
    labels are reviewed. Second, it is plain that a warrantless
    inspection program is necessary to further the regulatory
    scheme, because here, as in V-1 Oil, advance notice of inspec-
    tions could permit those violating American customs laws “to
    temporarily correct violations and frustrate enforcement
    efforts.” 
    63 F.3d at 912
    . This is particularly the case for so-
    called “domestic status” goods, like Intrigue’s cigarettes,
    because they can be moved in and out of FTZs without per-
    mits. See 
    19 C.F.R. § 146.71
    .
    [7] Third, the FTZ regulations provide a “constitutionally
    adequate substitute for a warrant.” As the Supreme Court
    explained in Burger,
    the regulatory statute must perform the two basic
    functions of a warrant: it must advise the owner of
    the commercial premises that the search is being
    made pursuant to the law and has a properly defined
    scope, and it must limit the discretion of the inspect-
    ing officers.
    6034 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    
    482 U.S. at 703
    ; see also Argent Chem. Labs., 
    93 F.3d at 576
    .
    The FTZ regulations provide adequate notice that inspections
    will occur in accordance with the law. 19 C.F.R. sections
    146.4 and 146.10 identify who will be performing the
    searches (“any Customs officer”), the object of the search
    (“merchandise”), the timing of searches (“at the time of
    admission to a zone, or at any time thereafter”), and the cir-
    cumstances under which searches are allowed (only as “nec-
    essary to facilitate the proper administration of any law,
    regulation, or instruction which Customs is authorized to
    enforce”). Furthermore, the record indicates that Customs
    officials inspected Intrigue’s storage area two to three times
    per year. The “certainty and regularity” of these searches indi-
    cate that Intrigue was aware that its property would be subject
    to lawful periodic inspections. See Burger, 
    482 U.S. at 703
    ;
    Donovan, 
    452 U.S. at 600
    .
    Although the FTZ regulations place few limits on the dis-
    cretion of searching officers, we are confident that they are
    sufficient. The Supreme Court’s opinion in Burger instructs
    that we should review the scheme’s limitation on officer dis-
    cretion in context. The Burger Court upheld the New York
    vehicle-dismantling statute, even though it did not indicate
    how often searches would occur, provided virtually no limita-
    tion on the scope of the search within automobile junkyards,
    and failed to “provide[ ] limits or guidance on the selection”
    of businesses for inspection. 
    482 U.S. at 722-23
     (Brennan, J.,
    dissenting). The Court instead relied on the restriction of the
    searches to certain types of businesses and certain types of
    items that could be inspected. 
    Id. at 711
     (majority opinion).
    The same basic limitations are present in the FTZ statute and
    regulations.
    Moreover, because companies operating in FTZs do not
    have the expectation of privacy one would have in a private
    home or business, we require fewer safeguards to satisfy us
    that the search is reasonable. In Rush v. Obledo, we struck
    down as unconstitutional a regulation that enabled warrantless
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6035
    searches of family-home day care facilities because it failed
    to place any limits on the time of searches, the area that could
    be searched, or the regularity of searches. 
    756 F.2d 713
    , 721
    (9th Cir. 1985). The overbroad search provision would have
    authorized searching anywhere within day care providers’ pri-
    vate residences, even in areas unconnected to the provision of
    day care, at any time of day. As we explained, constitutionally
    adequate searches “must be directly connected with the envi-
    ronment the Legislature seeks to regulate—i.e., the areas of
    the home used by children when the children are present.” 
    Id.
    Similarly, in Argent Chemical Laboratories, we concluded
    that a statute authorizing warrantless FDA searches of veteri-
    nary drug manufacturers was reasonable, because notice was
    furnished at the time, the statute limited the scope of what
    could be inspected and what could be seized, and most sei-
    zures required approval from a district office before items
    could be seized. 
    93 F.3d at 576-77
    . In that case, allowing
    searches of pharmaceutical plants without those limitations
    would have far exceeded the FDA’s interest in regulating the
    “safety and effectiveness” of veterinary drugs. 
    Id. at 576
    .
    Here, unlike the situation in Rush, the area in which searches
    are authorized (FTZs) is the same area subject to regulation.
    There is minimal risk that Customs Service officers will go
    beyond the scope prescribed by the FTZ regulations, because
    virtually all the activities that take place within an FTZ fall
    within the scope of Customs inspection and monitoring. See
    A.T. Cross Co. v. Sunil Trading Corp., 
    467 F. Supp. 47
    , 51
    (S.D.N.Y. 1979).
    Finally, we note the settled expectations that surround the
    use and control of FTZs. It is long-established and well under-
    stood that, in exchange for the benefits afforded to users of
    FTZs, those who store merchandise in FTZs must keep Cus-
    toms apprised of their activities and afford Customs officials
    the right to inspect their operations. Intrigue was well aware
    of this trade-off when it decided to run its operations out of
    an FTZ.
    6036 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    [8] We therefore hold that the Customs Service searches
    authorized by the FTZ regulations are “directly connected
    with the environment the Legislature seeks to regulate,” Rush,
    
    756 F.2d at 721
    , and the FTZ regulatory scheme provides a
    constitutionally adequate substitute for a warrant. The war-
    rantless search of Intrigue’s storage area and the initial sam-
    pling constituted a valid and reasonable administrative search.
    B.     Probable Cause for Seizure of all 4,432 Mastercases
    [9] We next conclude that, under the “totality of the cir-
    cumstances” confronting the Customs Service, probable cause
    supported the government’s seizure of all 4,432 mastercases
    of cigarettes on April 6, 2001. As we held in United States v.
    One 1978 Piper Cherokee Aircraft:
    The standard for probable cause in forfeiture pro-
    ceedings resembles that required to support a search
    warrant. The determination of probable cause is
    based upon a “totality of the circumstances” test, and
    the government’s evidence must be more than that
    which gives rise to a mere suspicion, although it
    need not rise to the level of prima facie proof.
    
    91 F.3d 1204
    , 1208 (9th Cir. 1996) (citations omitted).6 Thus,
    probable cause to seize property does not require absolute cer-
    tainty, but only a “fair probability” that the property is contra-
    band. See United States v. Sokolow, 
    490 U.S. 1
    , 7 (1989);
    United States v. Alaimalo, 
    313 F.3d 1188
    , 1193 (9th Cir.
    2002). Because judicial constructs like “probable cause” and
    “reasonable suspicion” are “fluid concepts that take their sub-
    stantive content from the particular contexts in which the
    standards are being assessed,” Ornelas v. United States, 517
    6
    Although the United States points to regulatory provisions indicating
    that the appropriate standard might be the lesser “reasonable cause”
    instead of “probable cause,” because we find that probable cause existed,
    we do not reach this issue.
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 
    6037 U.S. 690
    , 696 (1996), we give reasonable deference to the
    inferences and judgments of experienced agents in the field,
    see 
    id. at 700
    ; United States v. $129,727.00 U.S. Currency,
    
    129 F.3d 486
    , 489 (9th Cir. 1997).
    The Customs Service agents encountered the following
    combination of circumstances when they inspected the Carson
    FTZ. The FTZ operator initially indicated that there were no
    cigarettes on-site, but an FTZ employee queried the next day
    led Customs officers to Intrigue’s cigarette storage space. The
    FTZ operator could not immediately produce records for
    Intrigue’s cigarettes, records the zone operator generally
    maintains and must have “readily available for Customs
    review.” 
    19 C.F.R. § 146.4
    (d). The FTZ employees did not
    have a key to the storage area, and an Intrigue employee
    showed up with a key only when Customs was preparing to
    break the lock. Intrigue’s storage cage was covered with a
    black tarp and the pallets inside were wrapped in opaque
    black plastic, both elements that Senior Customs Inspector
    Rudolfo Villacana testified he had not encountered before.
    When an Intrigue employee showed up, he was not initially
    able to produce any documentation that duties had been paid
    on the cigarettes. The next day, Customs inspectors (accom-
    panied by a government chemist) performed field tests on
    sample packs of Intrigue’s cigarettes, which indicated that the
    cigarettes were “likely counterfeit,” “possibly counterfeit,” or
    at least “appeared to be counterfeit.” Inspector Villacana
    declared that this combination of factors caused him to be
    “very suspicious that the mastercases were entered illegally.”
    Although Intrigue now offers explanations for each of these
    circumstances, at the time, an objectively reasonable Customs
    officer could properly conclude that probable cause existed
    for seizure. See Ornelas, 517 U.S. at 696.
    [10] Intrigue’s contention that the field test results were not
    sufficiently certain to support a finding of probable cause
    lacks merit. The Supreme Court has upheld probable cause
    determinations that are based on ambiguous or inconclusive
    6038 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    field tests, even in the absence of other evidence supporting
    a finding of probable cause. For example, in Illinois v. Cabal-
    les, the Supreme Court upheld the search of a car based on a
    dog-sniff detection of narcotics, 
    543 U.S. 405
    , 410 (2005),
    even though evidence in the record indicated that Illinois drug
    dogs return false positives anywhere from 12.5% to 60% of
    the time, 
    id. at 412
     (Souter, J., dissenting). Here, moreover,
    the “likely counterfeit”/“possibly counterfeit” field test results
    did not stand alone. They were one of a combination of cir-
    cumstances giving rise to probable cause for the seizure.
    [11] Once Customs officers had probable cause to believe
    the merchandise was counterfeit, it was within their discretion
    to seize all of the cigarettes. “Property may be seized, if avail-
    able, by any Customs officer who has reasonable cause to
    believe that any law or regulation enforced by the Customs
    Service has been violated, by reason of which the property
    has become subject to seizure or forfeiture.” 
    19 C.F.R. § 162.21
    (a). Similarly, 
    19 C.F.R. § 162.11
     allows Customs
    officers “lawfully on any premises and [ ] able to identify
    merchandise which has been imported contrary to law [to]
    seize such merchandise without a warrant.” We therefore hold
    that the seizure was based on probable cause and statutorily
    authorized.7
    C.   Retention of the Mastercases
    Intrigue contends that even if probable cause existed for the
    seizure of the 4,432 mastercases, the Customs Service lacked
    probable cause to retain them once the Rudalevige test
    returned inconclusive results on April 9, 2001. Intrigue is cor-
    rect as a matter of law that when there ceases to be probable
    cause for continuing a search or seizure, it must end immedi-
    ately. See Jacobs v. City of Chicago, 
    215 F.3d 758
    , 772 (7th
    7
    We do not reach the United States’ alternative argument that it was jus-
    tified in seizing all the mastercases without a warrant because of exigent
    circumstances.
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6039
    Cir. 2000). However, because Intrigue mischaracterizes the
    import of the Rudalevige test, we cannot agree that probable
    cause evaporated with its failure to reach conclusive results.
    Probable cause existed at each step in the Customs Service’s
    investigation of the cigarettes.
    By April 19, 2001, when Phillip Morris definitively estab-
    lished that the cigarettes were not counterfeit, the Customs
    Service had developed new bases for probable cause, as its
    inventory of the cigarettes had turned up country-of-origin
    and re-importation violations. Intrigue does not dispute this
    fact but instead contends that there was a one-day break in
    probable cause, between the completion of the inconclusive
    Rudalevige test on April 9 and the discovery of previously-
    denied cigarettes on April 10. It contends that once the
    Rudalevige test failed to establish with certainty that the ciga-
    rettes were counterfeit, the inventory should have stopped and
    the cigarettes should have been returned to Intrigue.
    We disagree. Intrigue asserts that the Rudalevige test
    “proved wrong” the initial field tests indicating that the ciga-
    rettes might be counterfeit. That is not correct. The
    Rudalevige test report identifies a number of characteristics of
    the tested cigarettes that were similar to genuine gray market
    cigarettes, including “the filter holes, the glue, the printing,
    the cigarette packing, the control number, the folding pattern
    of the foil, the lack of fluorescence, the placement of the
    material codes, and the statement ‘Blend of USA.’ ” How-
    ever, the report also notes that the lack of codes on the filter
    paper, the misspelling of Switzerland on two of the sample
    packs, and a number of “signs of poor quality control,” such
    as uneven folds, poorly aligned bands on the filters, and loose
    tobacco in the packages, raised red flags about their genuine-
    ness. Due to these potentially troubling factors, the
    Rudalevige test report stated, “We cannot draw any conclu-
    sion based on these observations.” The report recommended
    sending the cigarettes to Phillip Morris for further testing. The
    Rudalevige test results did not dispute, or even address, the
    6040 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    findings of the initial field tests. They merely indicated that
    additional testing would be required to determine with any
    certainty whether the cigarettes were counterfeit or not.
    [12] The inconclusive Rudalevige test did not extinguish
    probable cause. Indeed, the test report noted several additional
    factors that would have supported a probable cause determi-
    nation. Rudalevige found these elements troubling enough
    that he sought further testing from the supposed manufacturer.
    Furthermore, virtually all of the factors that had generated
    support for the initial seizure, including the suspicious cir-
    cumstances of Intrigue’s storage and the field tests indicating
    that the cigarettes were “possibly” or “likely” counterfeit,
    remained in play and supported probable cause.
    Intrigue points to one out-of-circuit district court case to
    support its argument that an inconclusive test result nullifies
    probable cause to continue seizure. See United States v. One
    DLO Model A/C, 30.06 Mach. Gun, 
    904 F. Supp. 622
     (N.D.
    Ohio 1995). One DLO Model dealt with the arcane issue of
    whether a 
    28 U.S.C. § 2465
     “certificate of reasonable cause,”
    which exempts federal officials from liability after a judicial
    determination that the government wrongly seized property
    for forfeiture, should be predicated on the appropriateness of
    the initial evidentiary seizure or alternatively on the appropri-
    ateness of the “warrant for the arrest of property” that enables
    forfeiture. 
    Id. at 636, 638
    . The claimant had been charged
    with federal weapons violations and the case turned only on
    whether or not he had forged documents transferring owner-
    ship of the weapons to himself. 
    Id. at 641-42
    . However, dur-
    ing the investigation that followed the initial seizure, neither
    the government’s nor the claimant’s forensic experts found
    anything that would indicate that the claimant had forged the
    documents. 
    Id. at 642
     (noting that “[t]here was no longer any
    evidence linking [claimant] to the forgery . . . rising above
    mere suspicion”). Therefore, the court held, while the govern-
    ment might have had probable cause to seize the weapons
    pursuant to the search warrant, that probable cause had evapo-
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6041
    rated by the time the government filed the complaint to forfeit
    them. 
    Id.
    [13] Even if One DLO Model were controlling authority, it
    would not compel the result Intrigue seeks. In One DLO
    Model, the forensic tests exonerated the claimant. The
    Rudalevige test, on the other hand, produced findings both
    inculpatory and exculpatory. In addition, the Customs Service
    still possessed evidence from the initial field test that the ciga-
    rettes might indeed be counterfeit. Intrigue was not exoner-
    ated on the counterfeiting charge until April 19, days after the
    new violations were discovered. Cf. One DLO Model, 
    904 F. Supp. at 642
     (noting that the exonerating evidence was pos-
    sessed by government officials “well before the filing of the
    complaint and the subsequent seizure”). The probable cause
    that existed on April 6 did not lapse before the additional
    bases for probable cause (for violating other importation laws)
    arose on April 10.
    III.   CONTRABAND CIGARETTES TRAFFICKING ACT
    Next we consider the United States’ cross-appeal, challeng-
    ing the district court’s decision that the Contraband Cigarettes
    Trafficking Act (“CCTA”) was inapplicable to Intrigue’s cig-
    arettes because the California cigarette tax is an ad valorem
    tax, expressly precluded by the FTZ Act from application to
    goods stored in FTZs. We agree with the United States that
    the district court misapprehended the nature of the California
    cigarette tax.
    This dispute arises at the intersection of two federal laws:
    the CCTA, which authorizes the federal forfeiture of ciga-
    rettes found in a state without the appropriate state tax stamps,
    and the FTZ Act, which specifically limits the application of
    state and local taxes. The CCTA makes it unlawful “for any
    person knowingly to ship, transport, receive, possess, sell, dis-
    tribute, or purchase contraband cigarettes,” 
    18 U.S.C. § 2342
    (a), and allows the federal government to seize and for-
    6042 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    feit such cigarettes, 
    id.
     § 2344(c). The CCTA, at the time of
    the seizure, defined “contraband cigarettes” as
    a quantity in excess of 60,000 cigarettes, which bear
    no evidence of the payment of applicable State ciga-
    rette taxes in the State where such cigarettes are
    found, . . . in the possession of any person other than
    [a permitted manufacturer, common carrier, entity
    licensed to pay cigarette taxes by other means, or
    federal or state agency or employee].
    Id. § 2341(2) (2005).8 Federal liability under the CCTA is
    thus predicated on the non-payment of state taxes or any other
    violation of an applicable state cigarette tax law. See United
    States v. Gord, 
    77 F.3d 1192
    , 1193 (9th Cir. 1996). The FTZ
    Act, however, prohibits state and local governments from
    imposing ad valorem taxes on tangible personal property held
    in FTZs. 19 U.S.C. § 81o(e). Therefore, whether Intrigue’s
    cigarettes were contraband and seizable for failure to pay the
    California tax turns on whether California’s cigarette tax is
    properly characterized as an ad valorem tax or an excise tax.
    A.    Nature of Cigarette Tax
    [14] We hold, contrary to the district court, that the Califor-
    nia cigarette tax is an excise tax, not expressly precluded by
    the FTZ Act. 19 U.S.C. § 81o(e). An ad valorem tax is
    defined by its method for calculating the size of the tax. Ad
    valorem is the Latin phrase for “according to value,” and it
    describes a tax the size of which directly correlates to the
    value of the item taxed. See Quinault Indian Nation v. Grays
    8
    A 2006 amendment to the CCTA lowered the threshold for contraband
    cigarettes from 60,000 to 10,000 cigarettes. See USA Patriot Improvement
    & Reauthorization Act of 2005, Pub. L. 109-177, § 121(a)(1), 
    120 Stat. 192
    , 221 (2006). Congress also amended the CCTA to include non-
    payment of local taxes as a source of liability. 
    Id.
     § 121(b)(6), 120 Stat.
    at 222. Neither of these changes affects our analysis.
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6043
    Harbor County, 
    310 F.3d 645
    , 647 n.1 (9th Cir. 2002). The
    most common example of an ad valorem tax is the local prop-
    erty tax. An excise tax, by contrast, is one “imposed on the
    performance of an act . . . or the enjoyment of a privilege.”
    
    Id.
     at 651 (citing Black’s Law Dictionary 563 (6th ed. 1990))
    (alteration in original). The quintessential excise tax in our
    country is the sales tax. An excise tax, because it is based on
    a particular transaction or activity, can be imposed only once
    per act, whereas an ad valorem property tax can be imposed
    annually, as is typical of property taxes.
    [15] The California cigarette tax makes no reference to
    value, instead calculating the tax solely according to the num-
    ber of cigarettes distributed within the state. The statute pro-
    vides: “Every distributor shall pay a tax upon his or her
    distributions of cigarettes at the rate of . . . [$0.006 per ciga-
    rette distributed] on and after 12:01 a.m. on January 1, 1994.”
    
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 30101
    . The statute also imposes sep-
    arate taxes of $0.0125 per cigarette to fund community health
    education and disease research, 
    id.
     §§ 30121-30129, and
    $0.025 per cigarette to fund early child development pro-
    grams, id. § 30131. Distributors, therefore, owe the state 4.35
    cents per cigarette, whether the cigarettes are very expensive
    Dunhills, mid-priced Salems, or lower-priced Dorals.
    [16] On its face, the California tax is not imposed ad
    valorem, but rather is an excise tax. See Cal. State Bd. of
    Equalization v. Chemehuevi Indian Tribe, 
    474 U.S. 9
    , 10-11
    (1986) (repeatedly describing California’s cigarette distribu-
    tion tax as an excise tax). The tax does not in any way corre-
    late to value, and it is imposed only once, when the cigarettes
    are “distributed.” See 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 30008
     (defin-
    ing “distribution”). Intrigue argues, however, that imposing
    the per-cigarette tax on the act of storing the cigarettes in Cal-
    ifornia for future sale “transform[s]” the tax into an ad
    valorem tax. We reject the notion that a tax calculated in a
    manner other than ad valorem can be an ad valorem tax.
    6044 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    That conclusion is consistent with our case law and the lan-
    guage of the California statute. We have previously deter-
    mined that a tax on the storage of goods for out-of-state sale
    may nonetheless be an excise tax. Mount Tivy Winery v.
    Lewis, 
    134 F.2d 120
     (9th Cir. 1943). In Mount Tivy, a
    California-based winery challenged a federal tax on wine
    stored for future sale as an unconstitutional direct tax. 
    Id. at 122
    . The outcome of the case similarly turned on whether the
    tax at issue was an excise tax or an ad valorem property tax.
    After reviewing the Supreme Court’s definition of an excise
    tax, “a tax imposed upon a particular use of property or the
    exercise of a single power over property incidental to owner-
    ship,” we held that the liquor tax was indeed an excise tax. 
    Id. at 124-25
     (quoting Bromley v. McCaughn, 
    280 U.S. 124
    , 136
    (1929)).
    [17] The language of California’s cigarette tax, which is
    imposed on “the exercise of any right or power” over ciga-
    rettes, 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 30009
    , parrots the terminol-
    ogy of Mount Tivy and of the “use taxes” common throughout
    the United States. See, e.g., 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 6201
    ;
    
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 144.610
    ; 
    Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 151.011
    ; 
    Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 32, § 9701
    (15). As B.E. Witkin explains in his
    foundational treatise on California law, the use tax is an “ex-
    cise tax imposed . . . on the storage, use or other consumption
    in [a] state of tangible personal property.” Witkin, Summary
    of California Law, Vol. 9, § 305 (9th ed. 1989). We therefore
    conclude that a tax on cigarettes placed in storage does not
    transform an excise tax into an ad valorem tax.
    B.   CCTA Application to Cigarettes Stored for
    Out-of-State Sale
    Intrigue also argues that even if the California cigarette tax
    is an excise tax, by its terms, it does not reach the storage of
    cigarettes to be sold in another state. Because the district court
    found that the California tax was an ad valorem tax, it did not
    reach this question. We reject Intrigue’s argument and hold
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6045
    that California law requires unlicensed distributors like
    Intrigue to pay cigarette taxes on cigarettes stored in Califor-
    nia for out-of-state sale.
    The plain language of the statute compels this reasoning.
    See United States v. Daas, 
    198 F.3d 1167
    , 1174 (9th Cir.
    1999) (“The first step in ascertaining congressional intent is
    to look to the plain language of the statute.”). We follow the
    plain meaning of a statute unless it is ambiguous or its appli-
    cation would lead to unreasonable results. 
    Id.
    [18] California taxes “distributions” of cigarettes, requiring
    “distributors” to either affix a pre-paid stamp on the pack of
    cigarettes or make direct payment to the state. 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code §§ 30101
    , 30161. “Distribution” is defined as
    either the “sale of [previously] untaxed cigarettes or tobacco
    products in this state,” or “[t]he use or consumption of
    untaxed cigarettes or tobacco products in this state.” 
    Id.
    § 30008. In turn, “use or consumption” is defined as
    the exercise of any right or power over cigarettes or
    tobacco products incident to the ownership thereof,
    other than the sale of the cigarettes or tobacco prod-
    ucts or the keeping or retention thereof by a licensed
    distributor for the purpose of sale.
    Id. § 30009.
    We agree with the United States that California’s use of the
    term “the exercise of any right or power over cigarettes . . .
    incident to [ ] ownership” is intended to include the act of
    storage. A number of courts and statutes have recognized or
    approved this interpretation. For example, in D.H. Holmes
    Co. v. McNamara, the United States Supreme Court upheld
    against a Commerce Clause challenge a Louisiana use tax that
    defined “use” as “the exercise of any right or power over tan-
    gible personal property incident to ownership, and includes
    consumption, distribution, and storage.” 
    486 U.S. 24
    , 27
    6046 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    (1988). Similarly, in Mount Tivy Winery, we held that the “ac-
    tivity of holding wine intended for sale” could be taxed under
    a statute that imposed taxes on the “exercise of a single power
    over property incidental to ownership.” 134 F.2d at 124
    (internal quotation marks omitted). See also Dept. of Revenue
    of State of N.M. v. United States, 
    408 F.2d 574
    , 576-77 (10th
    Cir. 1969) (describing New Mexico excise tax which defined
    “use” as “exercise of any right or power over tangible per-
    sonal property incident to . . . ownership” and laid the tax on
    “personal property stored, used or consumed in state”); Texas
    Co. v. Siefried, 
    147 P.2d 837
    , 844 (Wyo. 1944) (holding that
    a tax on “use” reached the storage and withdrawal from stor-
    age of gasoline).
    [19] Given the definition of “distribution” in § 30008, we
    cannot accept Intrigue’s argument that the California statute
    is intended to tax only sales of cigarettes. Because California
    explicitly defined the term in the statute, we need not resort
    to dictionary definitions of “distribution.” See Konop v.
    Hawaiian Airlines, Inc., 
    302 F.3d 868
    , 880 (9th Cir. 2002).
    California’s definition of “distribution” includes not only the
    “sale of untaxed cigarettes in this state” but also the use and
    consumption of cigarettes. All other exercises of right or
    power over cigarettes, including storage, fall within this sec-
    ond definition of “distribution.” 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 30009
    . Intrigue’s proposed interpretation would write out of
    the statute the second basis for § 30008 tax liability, some-
    thing we must seek to avoid. See Miller v. United States, 
    363 F.3d 999
    , 1008 (9th Cir. 2004) (“Courts must aspire to give
    meaning to every word of a legislative enactment.”).
    Our interpretation of the California statute is reinforced by
    the exception built into § 30009. California explicitly exempts
    from its definition of “use or consumption” the “keeping or
    retention [of cigarettes] by a licensed distributor for the pur-
    pose of sale.” 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 30009
     (emphasis
    added). Thus, “use or consumption” would have to include
    the keeping or retention for sale of cigarettes by an unlicensed
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6047
    distributor. Intrigue concedes it was not a licensed distributor
    within the state of California at the time of seizure; therefore,
    it would not qualify for the exception.
    The legislative history of the “use or consumption” defini-
    tion in § 30009 further confirms our conclusion that the Cali-
    fornia cigarette tax reaches Intrigue’s cigarettes. The
    California legislature, in 1998, amended the exception to
    § 30009 for “the keeping or retention thereof for the purpose
    of sale” to add the words “by a licensed distributor.” Act of
    Aug. 28, 1998, ch. 420, § 4, 1998 Cal. Legis Serv. 420 (S.B.
    2230) (West). The legislative history of Senate Bill 2230,
    which enacted this amendment, indicates that California
    intended to make unlicensed distributors liable for taxes on
    any unstamped cigarettes found in their possession. It reads:
    “This bill . . . revises the definition of ‘use and consumption’
    to allow for the imposition of the tax on inventory seized
    while in the possession of an unlicensed distributor . . . .” Cal-
    ifornia Bill Analysis, Assembly Committee, 1997-1998 Regu-
    lar Session, Senate Bill 2230 (Aug. 5, 1998). Elsewhere, the
    legislative history offers a more thorough explanation, envi-
    sioning the precise scenario presented in this case:
    Unlicensed distributors have been known to obtain
    cigarettes and sell them directly to consumers with-
    out the cigarette tax having been paid. However,
    under current law, unlicensed distributors cannot be
    held liable for the cigarette tax on unstamped ciga-
    rettes that are seized because they can claim that a
    large portion of their inventory is being held for pur-
    poses of resale, rather than for direct sale to consum-
    ers.
    This bill would draw a distinction between
    licensed and unlicensed distributors. Unlicensed dis-
    tributors would be liable for tax on all unstamped
    cigarette or tobacco products found in their posses-
    sion. The presumption would be that the unlicensed
    6048 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    distributor is really in the business of selling ciga-
    rettes to consumers. Licensed distributors would not
    be liable for unstamped products in their possession.
    California Bill Analysis, Senate Floor, 1997-1998 Regular
    Session, Senate Bill 2230 (May 6, 1998).
    Unlicensed distributors, like Intrigue, were precisely the
    target of the 1998 amendment. Indeed, Intrigue’s owner Andy
    Lee testified that Intrigue kept the cigarettes in an FTZ
    because he believed that, by doing so, Intrigue could avoid
    paying California taxes. The clear implication of the statute,
    as amended in 1998, is that an unlicensed distributor like
    Intrigue owes taxes when it stores cigarettes within the state
    of California.
    The distinction between licensed and unlicensed cigarette
    distributors also has practical merit. As the United States, and
    amicus California Board of Equalization (“BOE”), contend,
    the statutory scheme intentionally creates an “either/or” sys-
    tem that balances fairness to distributors with the government
    interest in combating cigarette smuggling. A distributor may
    choose to obtain a license, in which case it must report the
    cigarettes it brings into or ships out of state; or it may remain
    unlicensed but face liability for taxes on any cigarettes found
    in its possession, even if it intends to ship the cigarettes else-
    where. Contrary to Intrigue’s representations at oral argu-
    ment, licensed distributors are required to file regular reports
    with the California BOE detailing their inventories (both tax-
    stamped and unstamped), any distributions or sales, and the
    tax they believe is due. See 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code §§ 30182
    (a), 30183(a); 
    Cal. Code Regs. tit. 18, §§ 4022
    ,
    4031. Licensed distributors must also keep a record of all cig-
    arettes stored on a particular site, a record which must be
    made available to the BOE upon request. See 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code § 30454
    ; 
    Cal. Code Regs. tit. 18, § 4026
    . Taxing
    the cigarettes of unlicensed distributors is a precautionary
    measure to limit the state’s financial risk that a distributor will
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6049
    claim cigarettes are destined for export, only to sell them at
    the lower, pre-tax price within California.
    Intrigue argues that our reading of the statute would enable
    a system of double taxation, because it would be taxed for
    storing cigarettes in California and then taxed again when it
    sells the cigarettes in another state. We find this argument
    unavailing. First, any risk of double taxation would apply
    only to the small number of distributors who neglect to obtain
    a California license. Second, section 30008 makes clear that
    the “use or consumption” tax is due not for the sale, but rather
    for the privilege of storing the cigarettes within the state, a
    right that imposes on the state the reciprocal burdens of pro-
    tecting and monitoring the cigarettes stored there. Third, Cali-
    fornia provides a legal procedure for companies like Intrigue,
    when they actually sell the cigarettes in another state, to peti-
    tion the California BOE for a credit or refund of taxes on
    those cigarettes sold out of state. See 
    Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code §§ 30176.1
    , 30178.1-2. In that way, the specter of double tax-
    ation can be avoided altogether.
    Intrigue also asserts that, because the legislative history of
    the CCTA indicates that its purpose was to combat organized
    crime and bootlegging, Intrigue, as a legitimate business,
    should not be subject to the law. Even assuming, as we do,
    that Intrigue is a legitimate business, this argument lacks
    merit. The explicit language of the statute does not limit the
    CCTA to organized crime or bootlegging operations; any
    knowing possession, sale, or receipt of contraband cigarettes
    exposes one to liability under the statute. See 
    18 U.S.C. § 2342
    (a). Furthermore, it defies logic that, under a penal stat-
    ute, a defendant who violated clear statutory provisions could
    escape punishment merely because his particular class of
    criminal offenders was unmentioned in the authorizing stat-
    ute’s legislative history.
    For similar reasons, we reject Intrigue’s argument that the
    CCTA is inapplicable to Intrigue because its operations were
    6050 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    closely monitored by state and federal officials and because
    the United States offered no proof that it “evaded” tax laws.
    The CCTA does not require an intentional evasion of the law
    to prompt forfeiture of cigarettes. Compare 
    18 U.S.C. § 2344
    (a), (b) (requiring “knowing” violations to trigger crim-
    inal punishments), with 
    id.
     § 2344(c) (“Any contraband ciga-
    rettes involved in any violation of the provisions of this
    chapter shall be subject to seizure and forfeiture.”). We have
    previously held that the federal government may seize and
    forfeit cigarettes whenever they are found in a state in viola-
    tion of that state’s tax laws, regardless of the possessor’s
    intent to evade state tax laws or its intent to distribute the cig-
    arettes in another state. Grey Poplars, Inc. v. 1,371,100
    Assorted Brands of Cigarettes, 
    282 F.3d 1175
    , 1178 (9th Cir.
    2002). This case is no exception.
    Finally, we reject as factually unfounded Intrigue’s argu-
    ment that it owed no taxes because the cigarettes were in
    “joint possession” with NTI, Intrigue’s sister corporation that
    was licensed to distribute cigarettes in California. Even
    Intrigue’s CEO Andy Lee conceded during his deposition
    that, “Well, legally . . . Intrigue Trading, Inc. owned the prod-
    uct,” agreeing that Intrigue “always had possession” of the
    cigarettes once they entered the FTZ. Intrigue offered no evi-
    dence indicating that it conveyed joint ownership rights over
    the cigarettes to NTI in a written document, as California law
    requires to establish joint ownership. See Donovan v. Dono-
    van, 
    223 Cal. App. 2d 691
    , 697 (1964) (citing California
    Trust Co. v. Bennett, 
    33 Cal. 2d 694
    , 697 (1949)). Nor did
    NTI demonstrate “possession” by exerting any control over or
    taking any action with regard to the 4,432 mastercases, other
    than paying the rent on the storage space where they were
    located. See Black’s Law Dictionary 1201 (8th ed. 2004)
    (defining possession as “the exercise of dominion over prop-
    erty” or “[t]he right under which one may exercise control
    over something to the exclusion of all others”). Furthermore,
    there is no indication in the record that NTI reported the
    acquisition of the cigarettes to the California BOE, as it would
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6051
    have been required to do as a licensed distributor that believed
    itself to be a rightful owner. See 
    Cal. Code Regs. tit. 18, §§ 4022
    , 4031. NTI does not cite to, and we cannot find, any
    authority suggesting that shared storage space creates this
    form of joint ownership or allows a company like Intrigue to
    piggyback on the license of a separate and independent corpo-
    ration. Because there was no “joint possession” of the ciga-
    rettes, we need not decide whether “joint possession” by a
    licensed distributor could exempt a co-possessing unlicensed
    distributor from the California tax.
    C.   Preemption
    Having concluded that California’s cigarette tax applies to
    the storage of cigarettes in California destined for future out-
    of-state sale, we must reach the broader question whether the
    FTZ Act preempts all state and local efforts to impose taxes
    on merchandise stored within FTZs. We hold that it does not.
    [20] Federal law may preempt state law under the Suprem-
    acy Clause of the Constitution. U.S. Const., art. VI, cl. 2.
    “Preemption can occur in one of three ways: express pre-
    emption by statute, occupation of the field, or conflict
    between state and federal regulation.” Air Conditioning &
    Refrigeration Inst. v. Energy Res. Conservation & Dev.
    Comm’n, 
    410 F.3d 492
    , 495 (9th Cir.), petition for cert. filed,
    74 U.S.L.W. (Sept. 12, 2005) (No. 05-331). In any consider-
    ation of preemption, we view the purpose and intent of Con-
    gress as the “ultimate touchstone,” Cipollone v. Liggett
    Group, Inc., 
    505 U.S. 504
    , 516 (1992), and presume that Con-
    gress did not intend to supplant state law, Air Conditioning &
    Refrigeration Inst., 
    410 F.3d at
    496 (citing Medtronic, Inc. v.
    Lohr, 
    518 U.S. 470
    , 485 (1996)).
    [21] The FTZ Act does not expressly preempt all state reg-
    ulation and taxation. “Express preemption occurs when Con-
    gress enacts a statute that expressly commands that state law
    on the particular subject is displaced.” Gadda v. Ashcroft, 377
    6052 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    F.3d 934, 944 (9th Cir. 2004). The only express preemption
    in the FTZ Act is the prohibition on state and local ad valorem
    taxes. 19 U.S.C. § 81o(e). We view this limited statement of
    preemption through the canon of statutory construction inclu-
    sio unius est exclusio alterius, indicating Congress’s lack of
    interest in more broadly limiting state power. See Metro-
    phones Telecomm., Inc. v. Global Crossing Telecomm., Inc.,
    
    423 F.3d 1056
    , 1072 (9th Cir. 2005); United States v. Ter-
    rence, 
    132 F.3d 1291
    , 1294 (9th Cir. 1997); see also 3M
    Health Care Ltd. v. Grant, 
    908 F.2d 918
    , 920-21 (11th Cir.
    1990) (concluding that the FTZ Act does not expressly pre-
    empt all state power over FTZs).
    [22] Nor do we find that Congress has expressed an intent
    to occupy the entire field of activity around FTZs, such that
    state law should be preempted, or that state regulation creates
    an irreconcilable conflict with the FTZ Act and federal regu-
    lation. As the Supreme Court has explained:
    [Field preemption] may be inferred from a scheme of
    federal regulation . . . so pervasive as to make rea-
    sonable the inference that Congress left no room for
    the States to supplement it, or where an Act of Con-
    gress touch[es] a field in which the federal interest
    is so dominant that the federal system will be
    assumed to preclude enforcement of state laws on
    the same subject.
    English v. Gen. Elec. Co., 
    496 U.S. 72
    , 79 (1990) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). State law may also be preempted
    where it would be impossible for a party to comply with both
    state and federal requirements or where the state law would
    “stand[ ] as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution
    of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.” 
    Id.
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    As discussed above, supra at pp. 6029-30, there is signifi-
    cant federal control over the “field” of FTZs. However, sev-
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6053
    eral factors militate against applying field preemption in this
    arena. First, the federal regulations implementing the CCTA,
    which Congress enacted forty-five years after the passage of
    the FTZ Act, envision that certain activities within an FTZ
    would remain subject to state cigarette taxes. Those regula-
    tions exempt from the CCTA both cigarettes in the stream of
    international commerce and domestic cigarettes destined for
    export, but not those like Intrigue’s that have been entered
    into the United States for domestic consumption. In defining
    parties exempted from the CCTA, 
    27 C.F.R. § 646.143
    includes “[a]ny person who is . . . (g) Operating within a
    foreign-trade zone established under 19 U.S.C., section 81b,
    when the cigarettes involved have been entered into the zone
    [pending foreign export] or, in respect to foreign cigarettes,
    have been admitted into the zone but have not been entered
    in the United States.” The 4,432 mastercases at issue here do
    not fall within either of these exceptions. They had already
    passed through Customs in Miami, so they were no longer
    “foreign cigarettes,” nor were they destined for foreign
    export. By implication then, the federal government has
    acknowledged that states retain taxing authority over some
    products within FTZs. Otherwise, the regulation would have
    exempted every person operating within an FTZ.
    Second, the Supreme Court itself has indicated that the fed-
    eral interest in domestic-bound goods stored in FTZs is not so
    dominant as to completely preclude state activity in this field.
    In a pair of cases from the 1980s, Xerox Corp. v. Harris
    County, Texas, 
    459 U.S. 145
     (1982) and R.J. Reynolds
    Tobacco Co. v. Durham County, North Carolina, 
    479 U.S. 130
     (1986), the Supreme Court addressed this same preemp-
    tion question in the context of customs-bonded warehouses.
    Customs-bonded warehouses (“CBWs”) and FTZs are func-
    tionally quite similar and often treated as one and the same.
    An importer may store goods in a CBW, just as he would in
    an FTZ, without paying duties until the products leave the
    CBW for domestic consumption. Also like in an FTZ, goods
    in the stream of foreign commerce may be temporarily stored
    6054 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    in a CBW, and may be manipulated, combined, or re-
    packaged before being sent abroad again, all without paying
    American duties. CBWs, however, need not be located adja-
    cent to ports; the importer must pay a bond for the right to
    store merchandise in a CBW, which he gets back when the
    products are re-exported or domestic duties are paid; and the
    duties owed on goods that have been manipulated are set at
    the time of withdrawal from the warehouse (whereas an
    importer using an FTZ can choose whether to pay duties on
    the imported raw goods or the manipulated final product).9
    From a customs perspective though, FTZs and CBWs are far
    more alike than they are different.
    In Xerox, the Supreme Court struck down an ad valorem
    property tax the Texas county sought to impose on copiers
    that had been built in Mexico and were being stored in a
    CBW until they could be sent to distributors in Latin Amer-
    ica. The Court’s reasoning combined elements of field pre-
    emption and conflict preemption. The Court first pointed to
    “the continuous control and supervision” of Customs officials
    over CBWs and the “[d]etailed regulations control[ling] every
    aspect of the manner in which the warehouses are to be oper-
    ated,” 
    459 U.S. at 150
    , which demonstrated a “pervasive” sys-
    tem of regulation, 
    id. at 153
    . Then, after reviewing the
    legislative history of the Warehousing Act of 1846 and Con-
    gress’s purpose in establishing CBWs, the Court also held that
    the state tax would “offset substantially the very benefits Con-
    gress intended to confer” in creating CBWs. 
    Id.
    [23] Four years later, in R.J. Reynolds, the Supreme Court
    clarified its preemption reasoning. The R.J. Reynolds Court
    held that a county was not preempted from imposing an ad
    valorem tax on foreign tobacco that R.J. Reynolds was storing
    and aging in CBWs, because Reynolds ultimately intended to
    9
    United States Customs & Border Protection, U.S. Customs Bonded
    Warehouse (2001), www.cbp.gov/linkhandler/cgov/toolbox/publications/
    trade/bon ded_ 20wh2.ctt/bonded_20wh2.doc.
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6055
    enter the tobacco into the United States for domestic manu-
    facturing and consumption. At the beginning of its analysis,
    the Court explicitly pulled back from any “field preemptive”
    language in Xerox. R.J. Reynolds, 
    479 U.S. at 142
     (“[The
    Xerox Court] limited its pre-emption analysis to whether taxa-
    tion would impede the congressional objectives.”); see also
    
    id. at 149
     (“[T]he [customs] regulations, while detailed,
    appear to contemplate some concurrent state regulation and,
    arguably, even state taxation.”). Then, after reviewing the
    same legislative history of the Warehousing Act of 1846 that
    it had examined in Xerox, the Court found that local taxes on
    imports destined for domestic consumption would not
    obstruct congressional objectives. 
    Id.
     at 142-43 & n.10, 148.
    Seven years later, the Court reiterated that Congress had not
    occupied the entire field of taxation with regard to CBWs:
    [W]e have not held that state taxation of goods in
    bonded warehouses is pre-empted by Congress’
    intent to occupy the field of bonded warehouse regu-
    lation. In fact, in R.J. Reynolds we specifically held
    that the bonded warehouse statutes and regulations
    did not evidence such a purpose.
    Itel Containers Int’l Corp. v. Huddleston, 
    507 U.S. 60
    , 71
    (1993). For the same reasons, we hold that state regulation
    and taxation of goods in FTZs are not prohibited under the
    doctrine of “field preemption.”
    [24] With respect to conflict preemption, we read Xerox
    and R.J. Reynolds as drawing a clear distinction between
    goods within the stream of international commerce and goods
    destined for domestic consumption. In the former case, where
    federal duties are not even due, local taxation would inhibit
    the use of American ports; in the latter, federal duties will
    already be required and an exemption from local taxation
    would provide a windfall for foreign manufacturers that
    domestic manufacturers do not receive, hardly the aim of the
    statute. R.J. Reynolds, 
    479 U.S. at 144-46
    . As the Court
    6056 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    explained: “There is no indication in the legislative history of
    the Warehousing Act that one of the goals of the [CBW] sys-
    tem was to benefit imported goods in their competition with
    domestic goods.” 
    Id.
     at 145 n.14. Therefore, “[p]ermitting
    imposition of a tax . . . leads to equal treatment for imported
    and domestic tobacco.” 
    Id. at 147
    . This bifurcated approach
    to CBWs, treating goods differently depending on whether
    they are in foreign transshipment or destined for domestic
    consumption, is also consistent with the approach taken by
    California’s courts. See Am. Smelting & Refining Co. v.
    County of Contra Costa, 
    271 Cal. App. 2d 437
    , 474 (1969)
    (concluding that “the laws and regulations relating specifi-
    cally to [CBWs] do not . . . confer an immunity from a non-
    discriminatory tax on property of foreign origin being
    processed for domestic consumption”).
    The reasoning of the R.J. Reynolds opinion applies with
    equal force to FTZs. Intrigue cites dicta in a footnote to the
    R.J. Reynolds opinion to argue that the holding of that case
    should not extend from CBWs to FTZs. In its opinion at foot-
    note 22, the R.J. Reynolds Court sought to explain why the
    then-recently passed 19 U.S.C. § 81o(e), which explicitly pro-
    hibited ad valorem taxes in FTZs, did not preclude it from
    approving an ad valorem tax in a CBW. After noting the lim-
    ited scope of the 1984 amendment that inserted § 81o(e), the
    Court explained:
    Foreign trade zones are valued because they actually
    promote domestic industry and create jobs [citing
    129 Cong. Rec. 14501 (1983) (remarks of Sen. Bent-
    sen)]. Given that the taxation of goods in foreign
    trade zones could arguably harm domestic industry,
    while exemption from taxation of the imported
    goods in the present case would serve to discriminate
    against domestic producers, there appears to be a
    sufficient justification for the difference in state tax-
    ation with respect to these customs entities.
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6057
    R.J. Reynolds, 
    479 U.S. at
    151 n.22. We are unpersuaded
    that the dicta in footnote 22 compels the result Intrigue seeks.
    We conclude that, outside the context of ad valorem taxes
    (which Congress expressly prohibited for property in FTZs),
    there is no reason to treat the two facilities differently. FTZs
    and CBWs serve almost identical roles in our system of inter-
    state commerce. The legislative history of the Warehousing
    Act of 1846, which enabled the creation of customs-bonded
    warehouses, indicates that the aim of CBWs was twofold:
    granting flexibility to importers as to when they pay their
    duties (duties need only be paid when the goods are removed
    from the CBW and entered into the United States); and
    encouraging shippers to utilize American ports as a way sta-
    tion in international commerce (because duties are never
    required if the goods are re-exported directly from the CBW).
    See R.J. Reynolds, 
    479 U.S. at
    145-47 & nn.14-16 (providing
    detailed analysis of legislative history of Warehousing Act).
    Foreign trade zones were created by Congress for the same
    basic purposes. Although there is no formal legislative history
    for the 1934 FTZ Act, its stated purpose was “to expedite and
    encourage foreign commerce, and for other purposes.” Act of
    June 18, 1934, 
    48 Stat. 998
    , 998. Congress’s twin aims in
    passing the FTZ Act, further encouraging use of United States
    ports in the flow of interstate commerce and enabling manipu-
    lation of foreign goods before they are imported, are apparent
    from the face of the statute. See 19 U.S.C. § 81c(a); see also
    3M Health Care, 
    908 F.2d at 921
     (“[T]he goal of the [FTZ
    Act] is straightforward—to facilitate the use of U.S. ports for
    the transshipment of goods in foreign commerce.”); Fountain
    v. New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc., 
    387 F.2d 343
    , 344 (5th Cir.
    1967) (“The purpose of [FTZs] is to expedite and encourage
    foreign commerce . . . without subjecting same to the customs
    laws of the United States.”); A.T. Cross, 
    467 F. Supp. at 50
    (suggesting that the purpose of the FTZ Act is to allow Amer-
    ican workers and companies to “profit from the breaking
    6058 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    down, repacking and relabeling of the goods” temporarily
    stored there).
    Moreover, the reasons given in R.J. Reynolds for distin-
    guishing FTZs from CBWs are inapplicable here. When
    goods like cigarettes are bound for domestic use already, as
    Intrigue’s were, exempting them from state cigarette taxes
    because they are stored in an FTZ will not adversely affect
    domestic industry or job creation. Indeed, like the local
    tobacco growers in R.J. Reynolds, domestic cigarette distribu-
    tors would be disadvantaged by allowing Intrigue a tax
    exemption not afforded to unlicensed distributors storing cig-
    arettes elsewhere in California. Allowing California to impose
    its tax on domestic-bound cigarettes would lead to “equal
    treatment for imported and domestic” cigarettes. R.J. Reyn-
    olds, 
    479 U.S. at 147
    .
    The Eleventh Circuit similarly has found the Xerox/R.J.
    Reynolds dichotomy relevant in the context of FTZs. See 3M
    Health Care, 
    908 F.2d 918
    . The court in 3M Health Care
    blocked Florida’s effort to apply its Drug and Cosmetic Act
    to foreign pharmaceuticals being stored in an FTZ for even-
    tual transshipment to Latin American countries. 
    Id. at 919
    .
    Performing a similar preemption analysis, the Eleventh Cir-
    cuit held that allowing Florida to regulate products that would
    never actually enter the domestic market would “encumber
    the ease of transshipment through the zones . . . [and] frus-
    trate[ ] the goal of the Foreign Trade Zones Act.” 
    Id. at 921
    .
    In doing so, the Eleventh Circuit relied on the Supreme
    Court’s Xerox/R.J. Reynolds distinction between goods that
    are in transshipment and those destined for domestic sale. 
    Id.
    at 922 n.6.
    [25] We find distinguishable the state and federal cases
    cited by Intrigue that have limited state taxing authority
    within FTZs. See Hostetter v. Idlewild Bon Voyage Liquor
    Corp., 
    377 U.S. 324
    , 333-34 (1964) (holding that New York
    lacked power to regulate duty-free liquor shops, which are
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6059
    technically FTZs, in airports); McGoldrick v. Gulf Oil Corp.,
    
    309 U.S. 414
    , 428-29 (1940) (holding that New York did not
    have the power to tax oil imported into a customs-bonded
    warehouse that was then reprocessed and sold to vessels in
    foreign commerce); During v. Valente, 
    46 N.Y.S.2d 385
    , 387
    (App. Div. 1944) (holding that sale of alcohol in an FTZ “was
    not subject to local regulation or tax”). All of these cases
    addressed state regulation or taxation of goods that were in
    the stream of foreign commerce, as opposed to goods like
    Intrigue’s cigarettes that were destined for domestic consump-
    tion. Moreover, all of these cases pre-date the Supreme
    Court’s opinion in R.J. Reynolds. We believe that, post-R.J.
    Reynolds, the operative framework is the transshipment/
    domestic consumption dichotomy, and we will straightfor-
    wardly follow it. Because Intrigue’s cigarettes were bound for
    domestic consumption and there is not “any suggestion that
    taxation here would conflict with the central purpose” of our
    country’s system of foreign trade zones, R.J. Reynolds, 
    479 U.S. at 148
    , we fail to see any conflict between imposition of
    the California cigarette tax and the goals of the FTZ Act. That
    the CCTA regulations exempt from forfeiture all cigarettes in
    an FTZ except for those in the situation presented here
    (“domestic status” cigarettes) only confirms the correctness of
    this result. 
    27 C.F.R. § 646.143
    (g).
    [26] We therefore hold that state excise taxes on merchan-
    dise stored in FTZs for eventual domestic consumption are
    not expressly preempted by federal law. Nor has the federal
    scheme for FTZs so occupied the field as to prohibit state tax-
    ation. Finally, imposition of California’s cigarette tax does not
    create an irreconcilable conflict with the FTZ laws, at least
    when the goods taxed are already duty-paid and bound for
    domestic consumption.10
    10
    We do not reach the question of whether a state or local tax imposed
    on domestic-bound goods that have not yet been “entered into” the United
    States would conflict with the purpose of the FTZ Act.
    6060 UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES
    IV.      ATTORNEYS’ FEES
    [27] The district court awarded attorneys’ fees based on its
    grant of summary judgment to Intrigue. Because we reverse
    that judgment, we vacate the fee award. Baffert v. Cal. Horse
    Racing Bd., 
    332 F.3d 613
    , 617 (9th Cir. 2003); Lovell v.
    Poway Unified Sch. Dist., 
    90 F.3d 367
    , 373-74 (9th Cir.
    1996).
    V.    CONCLUSION
    California has made the decision to impose its cigarette tax
    on unlicensed distributors who store cigarettes within the state
    for future sale in another state, including those cigarettes
    stored in FTZs. That decision is not preempted by the express
    language of the Foreign Trade Zones Act, nor does it conflict
    with the general purpose or intent of Congress in establishing
    foreign trade zones. Though Intrigue’s motives may have
    been pure, and it may simply be the victim of bad legal advice
    or a poor gamble on the outcome of unsettled law, Intrigue’s
    cigarettes were ultimately found in California without Califor-
    nia tax stamps. That was sufficient, under the CCTA, to allow
    the federal government to seize and forfeit them.
    The storage of goods in foreign trade zones is “closely reg-
    ulated,” and Customs officials are empowered by statute to
    search and inspect merchandise in foreign trade zones without
    a warrant. Customs officials had probable cause to believe
    that Intrigue’s cigarettes were counterfeit, and it lawfully
    seized them. Probable cause for the seizure never dissipated,
    because the Rudalevige test was not conclusive and because,
    by the time the cigarettes were demonstrated to be genuine,
    the Customs Service had developed probable cause to believe
    that the cigarettes otherwise violated importation laws. The
    search and seizure both comported with the Fourth Amend-
    ment.
    We therefore AFFIRM the denial of the motion to sup-
    press, REVERSE the grant of summary judgment, VACATE
    UNITED STATES v. 4,432 MASTERCASES OF CIGARETTES 6061
    the award of attorneys’ fees, and REMAND with instructions
    that summary judgment be granted to the United States.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-55354, 04-55356, 04-56350

Citation Numbers: 448 F.3d 1168

Judges: Hug, Wardlaw, Singleton

Filed Date: 6/1/2006

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

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