By Caroline Petrow-Cohen, Los Angeles Times
Every year, Ventura County, California, resident Carlos Soto buys a Liverpool Football Club jersey for his son to celebrate the start of the soccer season. This year it was delivered with an additional bill of $107.
“The UPS guy said he couldn’t release it unless I paid more,” said Soto, who owns the Historia Bakery Cafe in Thousand Oaks. “Until this tariff thing started, I’ve never, ever had a bill on top of my purchase.”
Soto declined the payment and requested a refund for the jersey, which he bought from the team’s official website for around $150.
Since President Trump reversed a decades-old tariff policy in August known as de minimis , online shoppers like Soto are sometimes getting hit with high, unexpected extra charges.
De minimis