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Specialty Jewelers Block · OFAC / Kimberley Process · FinCEN AML

Diamond Dealer Insurance

A diamond dealer doesn't fit inside a packaged commercial policy. The inventory moves in tens-of-thousands-of-dollars-per-stone increments, the goods routinely sit outside any insured premises, the regulatory stack runs through OFAC and FinCEN and the FTC simultaneously, and the loss-frequency math is dominated by a small number of high-severity events — mysterious disappearance, in-transit robbery, the bad memorandum that goes out and never comes back, the cyber-enabled wire fraud against a buyer's email.

The brokerage places Jewelers Block coverage and the surrounding specialty forms — armored transit, vault, traveling salesperson, mysterious disappearance, sendings-out, JM Sip-up, in-the-mail, and named-perils-only fallback positions for the hardest accounts. We work the full spectrum: loose-goods dealers on 47th Street, brokerage firms operating between cutters and retailers, Antwerp / Mumbai / Tel Aviv connected importers, GIA-graded estate dealers, and online dealers operating under a hybrid B2B / B2C model.

Primary Form Jewelers Block (JBP)
Underwriter Roster JM · Lloyd's · USLI · Berkley
Min. Stock Limit Account-Dependent
Hard-To-Place Primary Specialty

Risk Anatomy · The 4 C's Of Coverage

C
Custody & Bailment
Stones held on memo, consignment, sendings-out
JBP §1
C
Carriage
Armored car · postal · courier · personal-carry
Transit Clause
C
Counterparties
OFAC screening · KYC · AML risk-based program
31 CFR 1027
C
Crime & Cyber
Wire fraud · BEC · social engineering · employee dishonesty
Crime + Cyber
C
Compliance
KPCS · CDTA · FTC Jewelry Guides
19 USC 3901
AML Program Trigger
$50,000
Annual threshold of purchases and proceeds in covered goods that defines a "dealer" subject to FinCEN's written AML program requirement
31 CFR § 1027.100(b)(1)
Cash Reporting
$10,000
Trade-or-business currency receipts above this amount trigger an IRS / FinCEN Form 8300 filing within 15 days of receipt
31 CFR § 1010.330
KPCS Effective Date
Jul 2003
Clean Diamond Trade Act signed July 29, 2003; rough-diamond imports require a Kimberley Process Certificate from July 30 onward
Pub. L. 108-19 · 19 USC 3901
Rough Diamond HTS Codes
7102
HTSUS subheadings 7102.10, 7102.21 and 7102.31 — every CBP entry under these codes is subject to KPCS certificate verification
19 CFR § 12.152
Section 01 · Why Diamonds Are A Class Of Their Own

What Makes A Diamond Dealer Account Different

A diamond moves through the trade as a portable bearer asset — small, dense in value, transferable without registration, and trackable only as far as a paper trail and a grading report allow. That single fact reshapes every coverage form attached to a diamond dealer. Conventional commercial property and crime forms were written for businesses where inventory stays put, sits visible on shelves, and loses value when it leaves the building. Diamonds are the opposite: they spend a meaningful portion of their lifecycle off the dealer's premises, in someone else's pocket or vault, and they retain full value the whole time.

This is why the jewelry trade has its own coverage form. The Jewelers Block Policy (commonly written through Jewelers Mutual on the JM Sip-up form, through Lloyd's syndicates on a manuscript JBP wording, or through Berkley Asset Protection, USLI, and a small number of specialty carriers) is a multi-section all-risks form built around the actual ways a stone goes missing: theft from premises, mysterious disappearance, robbery in transit, loss while held by a bailee, loss in registered mail, loss while shown to a customer, loss during a trade-show appointment, employee infidelity, and the long tail of memorandum-out transactions where a stone went somewhere and never came back.

Coverage in the diamond trade is rated on the form, the location schedule, the carriage limits, and — most of all — on the dealer's documented controls.

What follows is the operator's view of how this works: the dealer types we place, the JBP coverage facets and what each one does, the lifecycle of a stone from rough import to final delivery, the regulatory perimeter (Kimberley, OFAC, FinCEN, FTC), the realistic loss patterns, and the specific submission documentation underwriters require for a defensible account.

Section 02 · Dealer Classifications We Place

Six Operating Models, Six Different Rating Profiles

A "diamond dealer" is shorthand for at least six distinct operating models, each of which an underwriter treats differently. The list below is not exhaustive — call the desk if a model isn't named. Coverage tags on each card flag the form sections that typically dominate the rating.

Loose Goods Dealer / Wholesaler

// CLASS 01

The 47th Street operator. Purchases parcels, breaks them down, grades, sorts, sells to retail jewelers, manufacturers, and other dealers. Inventory is overwhelmingly loose stones, frequently held on memo, often moved by personal carry or registered mail. Mysterious-disappearance frequency is the central rating concern.

Jewelers Block Mysterious Disappearance Sendings Out Personal Carry

Diamond Broker

// CLASS 02

Intermediary between supply and demand — never takes title for long, frequently zero inventory at rest. Almost the entire exposure is goods-in-transit and goods-on-memo. Crime, BEC fraud, and wire-transfer impersonation are the load-bearing risks.

Bailee Crime Cyber (BEC) Transit Floater

Diamond Importer (Polished & Rough)

// CLASS 03

CBP entries of polished goods on HTSUS 7102.39 and rough on 7102.10 / 7102.21 / 7102.31. Rough imports must be controlled through KPCS with an original Kimberley Process Certificate, entered formally regardless of value. OFAC sanctions screening on every counterparty.

Ocean / Air Cargo KPCS Compliance OFAC Defense Customs Bond

Estate & Auction-Trade Dealer

// CLASS 04

Purchases from estates, auctions, private clients; often handles unique pieces with provenance documentation. Authentication, mis-grading, and warranty-of-authenticity claims drive the professional liability exposure alongside conventional stock risks.

Jewelers Block E&O / Professional Property In Vault Customer's Goods

Online Diamond Dealer / B2B Platform

// CLASS 05

Digital-first operations — virtual inventory, drop-shipped stones, GIA-report-driven listings, frequently never physically holds the stone the customer buys. Cyber, fraud, FTC advertising injury, and chargeback exposure dominate over physical theft risk.

Cyber E&O Bailee (Drop-Ship) Crime

Trade Show / Bourse-Active Dealer

// CLASS 06

Regular attendee at JCK Las Vegas, AGTA Tucson, JA New York, Hong Kong Jewellery & Gem Fair, or DDC and DTC bourse trading sessions. Inventory routinely in personal-carry transit and on display at temporary booth locations.

Off-Premises Personal Carry Booth Display Show Cancellation
Section 03 · Inside The Jewelers Block Policy

The Eight Facets Of Diamond Dealer Coverage

A Jewelers Block Policy is structured in coverage sections (or "facets") that each respond to a different category of loss. The map below describes the eight facets that most commonly appear in a diamond dealer placement. Coverage wording varies by carrier; the facet itself is industry-standard.

// FACET 01

Stock On Premises

Loose stones, mounted goods, and consigned property while inside the dealer's named premises. Limits sub-divided between safe / vault, display case, and out-of-safe working hours.

ISO PD-style location schedule
// FACET 02

Stock Off Premises

Stones at trade shows, in salesperson hands, at GIA for grading, at a setter, at a contracted polisher, in a safe-deposit box, or otherwise away from the dealer's location.

Off-premises schedule
// FACET 03

Property In Transit

Loss while moving — armored car, USPS Registered Mail (the only US Postal Service product that offers full declared-value coverage), FedEx / UPS, courier, and personal carry. Each carriage method usually carries its own limit.

Transit clause + carrier endorsements
// FACET 04

Mysterious Disappearance

The defining peril of the diamond trade. Coverage for stones that vanish without identifiable theft event — usually requires immediate reporting, inventory reconciliation, and a written explanation acceptable to the carrier.

JBP §M · sub-limited
// FACET 05

Sendings Out / Memorandum

Stones sent to potential buyers on memo or consignment. Coverage extension addresses the gap between when the dealer hands off custody and when title returns or transfers. Memorandum agreement language matters.

Bailee + memorandum agreement
// FACET 06

Customer's Goods

Property of others while at the dealer's premises for grading, valuation, resetting, repair, or appraisal. Critical for dealers operating any service line alongside trading. Customer-goods peak limits are scrutinized.

Bailee · customer's property
// FACET 07

Robbery & Burglary

Forcible-entry theft, armed-robbery loss, vault-attack scenarios. Carrier underwriting drills hard on alarm certifications, UL safe rating, time-lock procedures, and after-hours staffing protocols.

Per UL safe rating · §B
// FACET 08

Employee Infidelity

Theft by an insider with legitimate access to inventory. Distinct from third-party crime and underwritten separately, with employment history, background-check protocols, and dual-control practices all relevant.

Crime coverage Form A · ISO 03 02
📌 Practitioner Note

USPS Registered Mail is the only Postal Service product that provides full declared-value insurance and the unbroken chain-of-custody documentation that JBP carriers will accept for high-value shipments. Insured value via Registered Mail is capped at $50,000 per piece for declared value at standard rates; higher amounts require special arrangement and carrier-side approval. Express Mail, Priority Mail, and Certified Mail are not equivalent.

Section 04 · The Stone's Insurable Lifecycle

From Mine To Memo To Final Customer

A diamond crosses six distinct insurable handoffs between source and consumer. The handoff is where the form changes — and where the gap shows up. Below is the path most stones travel in the dealer trade today.

1

Rough Import

Rough crosses CBP under HTS 7102.10/21/31 with a KPCS certificate. Ocean and air cargo policies, customs bond.

KPCS · 19 CFR 12.152
2

Cutting & Polishing

Rough sent to cutter (often overseas). Bailee form covers goods in the cutter's hands; goods-in-process valuation matters.

Bailee · Foreign Property
3

Grading & Certification

Polished stones sent to GIA, AGS, IGI, or HRD for grading. JBP off-premises facet + bailee at the lab.

Off-Premises · Lab Bailee
4

Dealer Inventory

Graded stones land at the dealer. Stock-on-premises facet active. Safe rating, alarms, and staffing controls all rated.

Stock On Premises
5

Memo / Sendings Out

Stone sent on memo to retailer, manufacturer, or buyer for review. Memorandum agreement governs title; sendings-out coverage responds.

Sendings Out · Memo
6

Sale & Delivery

Stone sold; final delivery via Registered Mail, armored car, or in-person handoff. Transit clause; payment via wire (BEC risk).

Transit · Cyber (BEC)
Section 05 · The Regulatory Perimeter

What FinCEN Expects From Every Diamond Dealer Above Threshold

Secure diamond dealer trading room with loose gemstones under 10X magnification, digital scales, grading instruments, and parcel paper
Trading floor inspection with 10x loupe, digital scale, and grading tools — the physical environment that the JBP rates by safe type, alarm grade, and after-hours controls

Insurance is downstream of compliance. A diamond dealer's defensibility on a loss claim — and the carrier's willingness to renew at competitive terms — both depend on documented compliance with the federal regimes the trade operates inside. FinCEN's AML rule for dealers in precious metals, precious stones, or jewels at 31 CFR Part 1027 is the central one, but it does not stand alone.

A defensible compliance file gives the underwriter what they need to see to keep the account in the market: documented written AML program, evidence of staff training, OFAC screening logs, Form 8300 filing history for cash receipts above threshold, and an active Kimberley Process compliance record for any rough imports.

FinCEN AML Program Requirements

31 CFR § 1027.210
  • Written Program RequiredEach dealer must develop and implement a written AML program reasonably designed to prevent the dealer from being used to facilitate money laundering or terrorist financing through covered goods.
  • Senior Management ApprovalThe written program must be approved by senior management of the dealer entity. Documentation of that approval must be available to FinCEN on request.
  • Risk-Based Internal ControlsPolicies, procedures, and internal controls must be based on the dealer's specific assessment of money laundering and terrorist financing risks in their lines of business.
  • Designated Compliance OfficerA specific officer or employee must be designated as responsible for assuring day-to-day compliance with the AML program and BSA recordkeeping requirements.
  • Ongoing TrainingOngoing training for appropriate employees on the AML program, including how to identify and report suspicious activity.
  • Independent TestingIndependent testing of the program for compliance, conducted at a reasonable interval. The testing function must be performed by personnel not directly involved in compliance day-to-day.
  • $50,000 ThresholdThe rule applies to dealers who purchased more than $50,000 in covered goods and received more than $50,000 in gross proceeds during the prior calendar or tax year (§ 1027.100(b)(1)).
Section 06 · Three Compliance Lanes Running In Parallel

OFAC · FinCEN · FTC — The Triangle Every Dealer Sits Inside

The diamond trade runs underneath three federal compliance regimes simultaneously. Each one has its own enforcement agency, its own penalty structure, and its own underwriting implications. None of them substitute for the other.

Lane 01 · OFAC + CBP

Sanctions & Kimberley Process

Enforced by the Office of Foreign Assets Control and Customs and Border Protection. Rough diamonds must be controlled through KPCS; sanctioned-jurisdiction counterparties are prohibited regardless of stone source.

  • Clean Diamond Trade Act, 19 USC §§ 3901–3913
  • Executive Order 13312 (July 29, 2003)
  • Rough Diamonds Control Regulations, 31 CFR Part 592
  • CBP implementation, 19 CFR § 12.152
  • HTSUS 7102.10, 7102.21, 7102.31 — every entry verified against KPCS certificate
  • OFAC SDN List screening on every counterparty
Lane 02 · FinCEN AML

Bank Secrecy Act Obligations

Enforced by FinCEN under the Bank Secrecy Act. Dealers above the $50,000 threshold are subject to a written AML program, currency-receipt reporting on Form 8300, and recordkeeping requirements.

  • Rules for Dealers in Precious Metals, Stones, or Jewels — 31 CFR Part 1027
  • AML program requirement — 31 CFR § 1027.210
  • Definition of dealer / covered goods — 31 CFR § 1027.100
  • Form 8300 cash receipts over $10,000 — 31 CFR § 1010.330
  • Recordkeeping requirements — 31 CFR Part 1010, Subpart D
  • Senior management approval and independent testing required
Lane 03 · FTC

Jewelry Guides & Disclosure

Enforced by the Federal Trade Commission. The Jewelry Guides set the disclosure framework for diamonds, including treatments, lab-grown origin, and the prohibited use of unqualified terms.

  • Jewelry, Precious Metals, & Pewter Industries Guides — 16 CFR Part 23
  • Definition and misuse of "diamond" — § 23.12
  • Misuse of "flawless" / "perfect" — § 23.13
  • Disclosure of treatments to diamonds — § 23.14
  • Disclosure for laboratory-grown diamonds — § 23.25 (2018 revision)
  • Misrepresentation of weight and "total weight" — § 23.18
⚠ Underwriting Note

Compliance documentation is not optional in a Jewelers Block submission. Most JBP carriers will request, at minimum: the dealer's written AML program, evidence of OFAC screening procedures, documentation of any rough-diamond import history and Kimberley Process compliance, prior Form 8300 filing history, and recent FTC Jewelry Guide compliance review (especially for any dealer offering lab-grown stones alongside mined).

Section 07 · Realistic Loss Patterns

How Claims Actually Show Up On A Diamond Dealer File

The loss patterns below are composite, generalized examples of the claim types the JBP market sees on diamond dealer accounts. They are illustrative — they do not describe specific clients or claim files. They demonstrate the coverage logic that has to be in place before the loss event.

Pattern · Robbery In Transit

Armed Robbery Of A Sales Representative

A traveling salesperson is followed from a buyer meeting and robbed of a parcel of stones at gunpoint in a parking garage. The transit clause responds, but only if the carriage method was within the JBP's permitted carriage list and the salesperson was named on the policy. Many carriers exclude losses where the carrier deviated from the agreed route.

Triggers: Transit · Personal Carry · Robbery
Pattern · Mysterious Disappearance

Inventory Reconciliation Shortfall

A monthly stock take produces a shortage with no identifiable theft event, no break-in evidence, and no failed staff procedure that explains it. Mysterious disappearance responds under sub-limit, with the carrier typically requiring an inventory reconciliation, a written explanation, and a forensic accountant's verification before paying.

Triggers: Mysterious Disappearance · Sub-Limited
Pattern · Memo Loss

Stone Sent Out On Memo Never Returns

A high-value stone is sent on memo to a retailer for client viewing. The retailer files bankruptcy two weeks later; the stone is co-mingled with other inventory in receivership. The sendings-out facet of the JBP responds to the bailee loss; the underlying memorandum agreement language determines title at the moment of the bankruptcy filing.

Triggers: Sendings Out · Memo · Bailee
Pattern · BEC / Wire Fraud

Spoofed Email Diverting Wire Payment

A buyer receives a spoofed email purporting to come from the dealer, with new wire instructions diverting payment to a fraudster's account. The dealer ships the stones against an apparent payment that never reaches them. Coverage runs through the cyber form's social engineering and funds-transfer fraud extensions, not the JBP.

Triggers: Cyber · Funds-Transfer Fraud · Social Engineering
Pattern · Employee Infidelity

Long-Tenure Employee Diverts Inventory

A long-tenured back-office employee is found to have been routing high-value stones to an outside account over an extended period. Discovery typically comes through audit or after the employee leaves. Crime / employee dishonesty responds, but the carrier scrutinizes whether dual-control procedures were in place, and whether the loss was discovered within the discovery window.

Triggers: Crime · Employee Dishonesty · Discovery Window
Pattern · Mis-Grading / Authenticity

Stone Sold As Natural Returned As Laboratory-Grown

A stone sold to a customer with a grading report described as natural is later resubmitted to a laboratory and identified as laboratory-grown. The customer claims breach of warranty of authenticity. Defense costs and any refund run through the professional liability / E&O form, not the JBP property facets.

Triggers: E&O / Professional Liability · 16 CFR Part 23
⚠ Reading Note

The scenarios above are illustrative composites drawn from publicly documented claim types in the diamond dealer class. Actual coverage outcomes are determined by the specific policy forms, endorsements, sub-limits, deductibles, and exclusions in force at the time of loss. Nothing on this page constitutes a coverage opinion or a guarantee of payment under any specific policy.

Section 08 · Underwriter's View · Where Each Loss Lands

Choose A Scenario, See The Coverage Response

High-security diamond vault interior with reinforced safes and organized stone storage compartments inside an UL-rated jeweler vault
UL-rated jeweler vault interior — the physical baseline most JBP carriers expect for above-threshold stock-on-premises limits

The tool to the right walks through six common loss scenarios and identifies which coverage facets typically respond. It is educational, not advisory. Coverage in a real loss is governed by the specific policy wording in force.

Scenario Mapper

// 6 SCENARIOS · LIVE

Armed Robbery Of A Salesperson

A salesperson is robbed at gunpoint while carrying a parcel between buyer meetings. The robbery occurs on a route consistent with the named-insured travel pattern.

Coverage Response
JBP Transit ClausePersonal CarryRobbery SectionSchedule Verification
Section 09 · Building A Clean Submission

What A Diamond Dealer Submission Has To Contain

A diamond dealer submission is rated as much on the controls narrative as on the inventory numbers. The list below describes the minimum documentation set a JBP underwriter expects to see before quoting.

Inventory & Operations

  • Peak inventory value at retail and at cost, by location
  • Average single-stone value (largest single piece on hand)
  • Loose-goods vs. mounted vs. consigned percentage split
  • Memo / sendings-out turnover and largest outstanding memo
  • Annual purchase volume and proceeds (FinCEN threshold determination)
  • Geographic sourcing mix (Antwerp / Mumbai / Tel Aviv / NYC / online platforms)

Physical Security

  • UL safe rating (TL-15, TL-30, TL-30x6, TRTL-30x6, etc.)
  • Alarm system: UL grade, response service, central-station certificate
  • CCTV coverage map and retention period
  • Access control procedures (key control, dual control, time locks)
  • After-hours and weekend staffing protocols

Compliance Documentation

  • Written AML program approved by senior management
  • Designated AML compliance officer (name and role)
  • Most recent independent AML testing report
  • OFAC screening procedures and tool used
  • KPCS compliance file (if importing rough)
  • Form 8300 filing history (cash receipts above $10,000)

Underwriting Submission

  • 5 years of currently valued loss runs across all lines
  • Memorandum / consignment template used with counterparties
  • Carriage procedures (armored, USPS Registered, personal carry, courier)
  • Employee count, screening procedures, dual-control practices
  • Trade-show calendar and inventory carried per show
Section 10 · Related Pages In The KIG Library

Connected Coverage Across The Fashion & Jewelry Cluster

Diamond dealing is one node in a much larger jewelry and fashion coverage cluster. The pages below describe the adjacent and supporting placements that frequently sit alongside a diamond dealer program.

Jewelry, Watches & Hard Goods
Broader Fashion Industry Cluster
Supporting Coverage From The Broader KIG Library
Section 11 · FAQ

Diamond Dealer Insurance FAQ

What is a Jewelers Block Policy and why is it different from a BOP?
A Jewelers Block Policy is an inland-marine-style multi-section all-risks form built specifically for businesses that own or hold high-value, portable goods. It addresses the way stones actually move — on memo, in personal carry, in registered mail, at trade shows, at graders, at setters — and the way they actually disappear, including mysterious disappearance, which generic property forms typically exclude or sub-limit aggressively. A Business Owners Policy was written for retail and service businesses where inventory sits visible on premises and loses value when it leaves. The JBP rewrites the property logic around stones.
What is "mysterious disappearance" and why does the JBP carry a sub-limit for it?
Mysterious disappearance describes the loss of a stone with no identifiable theft event, no break-in, no failed staff procedure that explains it. Because the cause cannot be proven, the moral hazard is meaningfully different from a documented theft. Carriers respond by sub-limiting the coverage, requiring inventory reconciliation, requesting forensic accounting verification before payment, and scrutinizing the dealer's stock control and dual-control practices. It remains one of the most-claimed perils in the JBP class.
If we send a stone out on memo and it never comes back, what coverage responds?
The sendings-out (sometimes called "sendings" or "consignment") facet of the JBP responds, subject to its own sub-limit and conditions. Most carriers require: a written memorandum agreement with the bailee specifying that title remains with the dealer, evidence of insurance held by the bailee or coverage extending to the dealer's goods, a documented carriage method for the stone going out and returning, and prompt reporting if the stone is not returned within the memo period. Memorandum agreement language is the single biggest controllable factor on these losses.
Do we need a FinCEN AML program?
If the operation purchased more than $50,000 in covered goods and received more than $50,000 in gross proceeds from the sale of covered goods during the prior calendar or tax year, then yes — the dealer is subject to the AML program requirements at 31 CFR § 1027.210. The program must be written, approved by senior management, designed against a risk assessment of the dealer's specific business, supervised by a designated compliance officer, supported by ongoing training, and subject to periodic independent testing. Covered goods include precious metals, precious stones, jewels, and finished goods deriving 50% or more of their value from those.
Does the Kimberley Process apply to our business if we only deal in polished stones?
The Kimberley Process Certification Scheme, implemented in US law through the Clean Diamond Trade Act (Public Law 108-19, July 29, 2003), applies specifically to rough diamonds classified under HTSUS subheadings 7102.10, 7102.21, and 7102.31. Polished stones are outside the KPCS scope. However, several due-diligence and reporting standards from the broader responsible-sourcing framework (System of Warranties, OECD due-diligence guidance, RJC chain-of-custody) apply at the polished level and are referenced by carriers and downstream retailers.
What's the difference between USPS Registered Mail and Express / Priority Mail for shipping stones?
USPS Registered Mail is the only Postal Service product that provides full chain-of-custody documentation (signed and tracked at every handoff in transit) and that accepts declared values up to $50,000 per article at standard rates, with higher amounts available by special arrangement. Express Mail and Priority Mail carry limited maximum coverage and do not provide the same chain-of-custody documentation. JBP carriers typically require Registered Mail for any high-value postal shipment; carriage by another method without prior approval can void the transit clause for that shipment.
What is BEC fraud and why does it matter for a diamond dealer?
Business Email Compromise (BEC) is a class of cyber fraud in which an attacker spoofs or compromises a legitimate email account and uses it to redirect a payment, frequently by sending fraudulent wire instructions immediately before a high-value transfer. The diamond trade is a documented target because transactions are large, payment is by wire, and the legitimate communication pattern is conducive to impersonation. Coverage for BEC losses runs through the cyber policy's social engineering and funds-transfer fraud extensions, not through the JBP. Many cyber forms sub-limit social engineering coverage tightly and require evidence of verification procedures (callbacks to a known number) before paying.
What FTC disclosures apply when selling laboratory-grown diamonds?
The FTC's revised Jewelry Guides at 16 CFR Part 23, effective from the 2018 revision, permit laboratory-grown diamonds to be described as diamonds provided that the synthetic origin is disclosed clearly and conspicuously. The acceptable qualifiers — laboratory-grown, laboratory-created, [manufacturer name]-created, or other clear language conveying that the stone is not mined — must accompany the term "diamond" in equally conspicuous form. The term "cultured" may be used only when paired with one of those qualifiers in equally conspicuous form. Misrepresentation is enforced under Section 5 of the FTC Act.
What UL safe rating do JBP carriers expect?
The expectation scales with the stock-on-premises limit. Lower limits may be acceptable with a TL-15 or TL-30 safe. Higher limits typically require TL-30x6 or TRTL-30x6 ratings. The TL designation refers to tool-attack resistance, the TRTL designation adds torch resistance, and the x6 designation means the rating applies to all six sides of the safe. UL alarm grade (typically Grade 2 or higher), central-station response, and time-lock features on the safe are commonly required alongside the safe rating itself.
If a stone we sold is later identified as treated or lab-grown after being sold as natural, what coverage responds?
Authenticity and grading disputes run through the professional liability / errors and omissions form, not the property facets of the JBP. The carrier will look at the documentation that accompanied the sale: the grading report, the dealer's representations, the buyer's purchase agreement, and any disclaimer language. Loss settlement in these cases is typically defense costs plus indemnity for any refund or damages. Estate and auction-trade dealers carry the most concentrated exposure here because of the volume of authenticity-sensitive transactions.
How does carriage by personal carry differ from carriage by armored car or registered mail?
JBP transit clauses typically treat each carriage method separately, with named individuals authorized for personal carry, named carriers approved for armored transport, and Registered Mail handled as its own carriage method. Coverage limits vary by method — personal carry usually has lower per-piece limits than armored car. Deviations matter: carrying stones by a method or in an amount not contemplated by the policy can void coverage for that specific shipment. This is one of the areas where misalignment between actual operating practice and the policy as written produces the most denied claims.
What if our account has been declined or non-renewed?
That is the brokerage's primary book. Hard-to-place diamond dealer accounts — prior theft loss, prior mysterious disappearance, complex international supply chain, prior CBP or FinCEN correspondence, large memo book, online or hybrid model with elevated cyber exposure — typically still place through Lloyd's syndicates, specialty US E&S markets, or Jewelers Mutual on manuscript terms, provided the submission narrative is built around the issue rather than concealing it. The intake call is where that narrative gets shaped.

Start The Diamond Dealer Submission

Use the intake portal to begin the submission, or schedule a discovery call to walk through the inventory mix, security posture, and compliance documentation before any paperwork moves. Clean accounts move from intake to first carrier indication within 2 to 5 business days.