Gibson Guitars CEO Henry Juszkiewicz unveils the “Gibson Firebird X” during a press conference at the Hard Rock Cafe in New York in this October 28, 2010, file photo. Gibson unveiled its new guitar with buit-in effects, controls, tuner and bluetooth that the legendary guitar maker said amount to a revolution in the music industry. - AFP Photo

WASHINGTON: Gibson Guitar Corp. renewed its plea of innocence on Friday after US agents raided its Tennessee plants and seized rare ebony wood from India used to make some of the world's most coveted guitars.

“We were not engaged in smuggling,” chief executive Henry Juszkiewicz told CNN television. “We have been importing fingerboard stock on a regular basis from India for 17 years.”

It was the second raid in as many years targeting the makers of Les Paul, Epiphone and other guitars favored by such artists as B.B. King, Paul McCartney, Eric Clapton, U2's The Edge, and the late Bob Marley and John Lennon.

“It was a nightmare. We had people sitting there making guitars. We had no weapons,” said Juszkiewicz, who reckoned the raids in Memphis and Nashville cost Gibson about $1 million in seized wood and documents.

Imported woods are important in guitar-making, with different species lending different tones and texture to an instrument's sound.

While Gibson has not been criminally charged, wildlife agents reportedly suspect it might have violated a US law that forbids the import of wood exported in violation of another country's laws.

“We're still in the investigating stage at this point so there's not a lot that we can say,” a spokesman for the US Fish and Wildlife Service told AFP in Washington.

The raids on August 24 has left globe-travelling guitarists worried that their instruments could be seized by customs if they cannot prove the origin of the wood used to make them.

“The law says that if a guitar or instrument of any kind crosses a border, you have to know the species of wood that every component is made of and where it came from,” Juszkiewicz said.

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