Probably wouldn't be a bad idea...or, just travel with a different cue.What month?
I have a cue with pre-ban ivory, I’m pretty sure. It’s dated July 10, 1989. Wondering if I need documentation from the cue maker.

Probably wouldn't be a bad idea...or, just travel with a different cue.What month?
I have a cue with pre-ban ivory, I’m pretty sure. It’s dated July 10, 1989. Wondering if I need documentation from the cue maker.
Yes to that. I recently sold a cue with lots of that product. I chose to drive it 650 miles each way rather than screw around with shipping issues, tax issues and all the other bullshit that is life today.
The buyer agreed it was a cash deal and I had a short vacation too boot!
Screw the cops, screw the shipping thieves, screw the porch pirates and fork the tax man!
Easy peasy!
The Feds will take any cues they find with ivory in them, even if they are small inlays. If your cue has pre-ban ivory in it you will have to prove it to them to get it returned. And it better be iron clad proof!They don't apply to items made before the ban
They apply to items that guys claim were made after the ban, with preban ivory, without very clear documentation
That’s my worry. I can see this as a problem with some synthetic materials let alone natural materials.wonder if the feds can the tell the diff between iv and imitation iv
Yes to that. I have one high end Mike Bender with four shafts a matching jump break in a Justis Case which is not going anywhere.I out of high end cues shortly after 9-11
Felt the market was robust and due for a correction
As a result i havn't shipped a high end cue overnight since then , but will guess that the cost of next day air freight + ins on a $10K piece would be over 2 hun. If time isn't a factor hand delivery would be a great option
See Jay, some of us old foxes find a way around whatever they toss in the road. They might slow us down but we remain one step ahead!The only surefire way to sell/transfer such a cue is in person, hand to hand. I bought a valuable Ginacue (10K) from a seller in Germany. He had it delivered to me in Las Vegas by a friend who flew in for a big tourney there. That cue was ALL Iv! Kept it a few years and needed money so I sold it (15K, online too) and met my buyer back in Vegas. All's well that end's well!
Nowadays you may have to drive somewhere to consumate a deal like this. No more planes, trains, mail or submarines!![]()
Yeah, how would you go about selling a loaded 1999 BB? Where are you going to advertise it? You need a nationwide audience, maybe even worldwide.See Jay, some of us old foxes find a way around whatever they toss in the road. They might slow us down but we remain one step ahead!
Put aluminum foil in all your hats and around windows.There is probably a member of the ivory task force watching your every move and recording your phone calls.
The task force surveillance team is just waiting for you to make a move with that pool cue.
My advice is not to talk pool or pool cues with any,one you don't know
Yeah, how would you go about selling a loaded 1999 BB? Where are you going to advertise it? You need a nationwide audience, maybe even worldwide.
Some fed will meet at the mall parking lot agreed upon meeting spot with cuffs waiting.
I’d bet dollars to donuts Jay wouldn’t touch that “today” with a 10 pole
Guess you’d have to ask Jay. If the price was right you never know.Yeah, how would you go about selling a loaded 1999 BB? Where are you going to advertise it? You need a nationwide audience, maybe even worldwide.
Some fed will meet at the mall parking lot agreed upon meeting spot with cuffs waiting.
I’d bet dollars to donuts Jay wouldn’t touch that “today” with a 10 foot pole?
That is a lot of ivory. Even if ivory were legal, I wouldn't feel comfortable playing with that cue.