Delta Electronics (Americas) Ltd. and seven affiliated entities filed a complaint at the U.S. Court of International Trade against CBP Commissioner Rodney Scott, challenging a customs or tariff-related determination. The case, filed June 15, 2026 by Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP, covers a broad range of Delta Group subsidiaries including logistics, building technologies, and electronics units.
The filing coincides with a period of heightened CIT docket activity on Taiwan-origin electronics entries as both AD/CVD scope determinations and Section 301 List 3 and 4 duties have generated a backlog of disputed liquidations. The multi-entity structure of the complaint, spanning logistics, building technologies, and electronics units, suggests Delta received a consolidated adverse CBP determination that cut across its U.S. operating structure rather than a single product-line entry dispute.
Delta Electronics is a major Taiwanese power supply and electronics manufacturer with deep U.S. customer relationships in data center and industrial markets; its litigation posture reflects an importer coalition increasingly willing to litigate rather than absorb escalating duty stacks. CBP enforcement of AD/CVD and Section 301 against Taiwanese electronics suppliers has intensified as transshipment and scope concerns have grown, giving domestic producers an incentive to support the government's position.
Taiwan is a central node in global power electronics and data center supply chains, and adverse CIT rulings against Taiwanese suppliers can accelerate supply-chain restructuring toward Southeast Asian or Mexican assembly. The concurrent CIT activity in the Xiamen Dalle EV case (visible in graph neighbors) suggests the court is handling multiple remand-level disputes over Commerce and CBP determinations simultaneously, which increases the institutional pressure on both agencies to tighten their administrative records.