Full opinion text
KING, Circuit Judge: This appeal is pursued by the Ancient Coin Collectors Guild (the "Guild") from the judgment in the District of Maryland ordering forfeiture to the United States of seven ancient Cypriot coins and eight ancient Chinese coins, which were imported into this country by the Guild. Incorporated within its challenge to the propriety of the district court's summary judgment decision, the Guild contests the court's treatment of the Guild's expert evidence, the striking of one of its pleadings, and the denial of its requests for additional discovery. As explained below, we reject each of the contentions of error, including several that are foreclosed by our previous decision in Ancient Coin Collectors Guild v. U.S. Customs and Border Protection, 698 F.3d 171 (4th Cir. 2012) (" Ancient Coin I "). Accordingly, we affirm the judgment. I. A. 1. On November 14, 1970, the United States became a signatory, i.e., a State Party, to an international treaty developed primarily by the United Nations-the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership and Cultural Property (the "Treaty"). See 823 U.N.T.S. 231. The Treaty was designed to eradicate the clandestine excavation and illicit trade of "cultural property," that is, property "specifically designated by each State [Party] as being of importance for archaeology, prehistory, history, literature, art or science." Id. art. 1(e). Cultural property includes "antiquities more than one hundred years old, such as ... coins." Id. Article 9 of the Treaty provides that when a State Party determines that its "cultural patrimony is in jeopardy," it may call upon other State Parties to take action, including through the imposition of import restrictions. Id. art. 9. In 1983, Congress enacted a public law entitled the Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act (the "CPIA"), which formally implemented the Treaty. See Pub. L. No. 97-446, 96 Stat. 2350 (1983) (codified at 19 U.S.C. §§ 2601 - 2613 ). Pursuant thereto, if another State Party wants the United States to impose import restrictions on its cultural property, that State Party first must make a formal written request. See 19 U.S.C. § 2602(a)(3). By that request, the State Party must claim, inter alia, that its cultural patrimony is in jeopardy, that the imposition of import restrictions would deter "a serious situation of pillage," and that "less dramatic" alternatives are unavailable. Id. § 2602(a)(1)(A)-(C). After publishing notice of the request but prior to any further action, the CPIA requires the President to forward the State Party's request to a statutory committee-the Cultural Property Advisory Committee ("CPAC" or the "Committee")-for review and recommendations. Id. § 2602(f)(1)-(2). CPAC is an eleven-member Committee appointed by the President and comprised of experts and stakeholders in "the international exchange of archaeological and ethnological materials." See 19 U.S.C. § 2605(b)(2)(A). Upon receiving notice of a State Party's request to impose import restrictions, the Committee is required to conduct an investigation and prepare a report detailing whether import restrictions are warranted. Id. § 2605(f)(1). The report must be detailed, specifying by type or classification the materials that should be subjected to import restrictions. Id. § 2605(f)(4)(B). The President is required to consider the CPAC report before taking any action on a State Party's request. See 19 U.S.C. § 2602(f)(3). If the President is then convinced that import restrictions are warranted, he can enter into an agreement-called a Memorandum of Understanding (an "MOU")-restricting the importation of "archaeological or ethnological materials of the State Party." Id. § 2602(a) - (b). As relevant here, the CPIA defines the term "archaeological or ethnological material of the State Party" as an object of archaeological or ethnological interest, or any fragment or part thereof, "which was first discovered within, and is subject to export control by, the State Party." Id. § 2601(2). After entering into an MOU, the CPIA requires the President to report to Congress, notifying it of the President's action. See 19 U.S.C. § 2602(g)(1)-(2). The President's report to Congress should explain "the differences (if any) between such action and the views and recommendations contained in any [CPAC] report," and provide "the reasons for any such difference." Id. § 2602(g)(2). 2. Upon the President's agreement to an MOU, the Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation with the Secretary of State, is obliged to promulgate a regulation-or "designated list"-identifying the archaeological or ethnological materials covered by the MOU. See 19 U.S.C. § 2604. Restricted materials may be listed therein "by type or other appropriate classification." Id. Each designated list, however, must be "sufficiently specific and precise" to ensure that (1) "the import restrictions ... are applied only to the archaeological and ethnological material covered by the [MOU]" and (2) "fair notice is given to importers ... as to what material is subject to such restrictions." Id. Section 2606 of Title 19 governs the enforcement of the import restrictions contained in the designated lists that have been promulgated. Pursuant thereto, it is unlawful to import "designated archaeological or ethnological material that is exported (whether or not such exportation is to the United States) from the State Party after the designation of such material under section 2604." See 19 U.S.C. § 2606(a). "Designated archaeological or ethnological material" is a term of art in the CPIA, and is not to be confused with the term "archaeological or ethnological material of the State Party." Compare 19 U.S.C. § 2601(2) (defining "archaeological or ethnological material"), with 19 U.S.C. § 2601(7) (defining "designated archaeological or ethnological material"). As relevant here, designated archaeological or ethnological material includes "any archaeological ... material of the State Party" which is "covered by an [MOU]" and "listed by regulation under section 2604." Id. § 2601(7). The CPIA authorizes the importation of designated archaeological or ethnological material into the United States, but only when the importer can satisfy-at the time of entry-at least one of three evidentiary requirements. See 19 U.S.C. § 2606(b). First, under § 2606(b)(1), the importer can present to Customs and Border Protection ("Customs") a "certificate or other documentation" from the State Party that requested the restrictions, certifying that the designated material was exported in compliance with that State Party's laws. Second, pursuant to § 2606(b)(2)(A), the importer can present Customs with "satisfactory evidence" demonstrating that the designated material was exported from the State Party at least ten years before it arrived in the United States. Third, under § 2606(b)(2)(B), the importer can present "satisfactory evidence" to Customs proving that the designated material was exported from the State Party "on or before the date" the material became subject to import restrictions. Under the second and third requirements, that is, pursuant to § 2606(b)(2)(A) and § 2606(b)(2)(B), the term "satisfactory evidence" means a declaration from the importer, plus a statement from the seller, attesting that the designated material was imported in compliance with one of those two provisions. Id. § 2606(c)(1)-(2). If an importer fails to submit any of the documentation specified in § 2606 when designated material enters the United States, Customs officials are directed to "refuse to release the material from customs custody." See 19 U.S.C. § 2606(b). The importer then has ninety days to file with Customs either the required certificate or satisfactory evidence demonstrating that the designated material was lawfully exported from the State Party. Id. If the importer fails to do so, the designated material is subject to seizure and forfeiture to the United States. Id. § 2609(b). B. 1. The Guild is a non-profit organization dedicated to protecting the interests of numismatists, particularly those individuals who specialize in the collection of ancient coins. The Guild's director, Wayne Sayles, founded the organization in 2004 in an effort to preempt the imposition of CPIA restrictions on ancient coins. Sayles and the Guild opposed such restrictions for two primary reasons. First, they rejected the notion that coins should be considered part of a country's cultural patrimony. More specifically, they read the CPIA to limit the concept of cultural patrimony to those items "first discovered within" a particular State Party's borders. See 19 U.S.C. § 2601(2). Because most ancient coins have no known locus of discovery-also called a "find spot"-and many coins have been subject to decades, if not centuries, of international circulation, Sayles and the Guild believed that it would be specious to assert that broad categories of coins belonged to a particular country. Second, Sayles and the Guild feared that coin collectors would be unable to comply with the CPIA's evidentiary requirements for importation. For example, they asserted that it would be difficult for an importer to obtain a certificate from a foreign country-that is, the certificate required by 19 U.S.C. § 2606(b)(1) -demonstrating that a particular coin had been lawfully exported. In a similar vein, they believed that importers would be unable to satisfy the "provenance" requirements of § 2606(b)(2). According to Sayles, a "huge majority" of collectible ancient coins have no provenance-or record of ownership-because "there's never been any desire really among collectors of ancient coins to maintain provenance of a coin that they bought for 10 or 15 or $20." See J.A. 664. Sayles and the Guild ultimately believed that if coins became legitimate targets of CPIA restrictions, it would "destroy ancient coin collecting." Id. at 665. Beginning in 2004, the Guild engaged in a lobbying campaign to thwart efforts by governments to impose import restrictions on ancient coins. The Guild, however, was unsuccessful in that endeavor. In 2007, the U.S. Department of State (the "State Department") agreed to a request by the Cypriot government to impose import restrictions on ancient Cypriot coins, including those minted during Cyprus's Hellenistic and Roman eras. Pursuant to the resulting Cypriot MOU, Customs promulgated a regulation-that is, the "Cypriot Designated List"-identifying the ancient Cypriot coins that are subject to import restrictions. Two years later, in January 2009, the State Department entered into a separate MOU with China. Pursuant thereto, the United States agreed to impose import restrictions on Chinese coins minted during the Zhou through the Tang Dynasties, a period of approximately 2,000 years. Consistent with the Chinese MOU, Customs promulgated a "Chinese Designated List," specifying the restricted materials. The Guild opposed the Cypriot and Chinese MOUs, believing that State Department officials had acted in bad faith in adopting the import restrictions. That belief was bolstered by what the Guild perceived as failures of government officials to comply with the CPIA. To remedy those perceived failures, the Guild sought to have its grievances heard and resolved in the courts. The Guild therefore decided to manufacture litigation by deliberately importing restricted ancient Cypriot and Chinese coins into the United States. Once the coins were detained, the Guild planned to sue the federal agencies and officials responsible for imposing and enforcing the import restrictions. The Guild, however, was initially unsuccessful in its efforts to induce Customs to detain various imported coins. The Guild therefore enlisted the help of a British coin dealer, Spink & Son. Using the Cypriot and Chinese Designated Lists for guidance, Spink and the Guild located twenty-three Cypriot and Chinese coins that they considered likely to be detained by Customs. On April 15, 2009, Spink shipped the Cypriot and Chinese coins from London to Baltimore on a commercial airline flight. To support the Guild's scheme, Spink attached an invoice to the coin shipment that was designed to alert the Customs officers and result in detention of the coins. The Spink invoice specified that the shipment contained twenty-three coins, including seven coins derived from Cyprus's Hellenistic and Roman eras (the "ancient Cypriot coins"); nine coins-two of which were knife-shaped-derived from China's Zhou, Han, and Western Han dynasties (the "ancient Chinese coins"); and seven other Chinese coins that were unattributed to a particular era or dynasty (the "unattributed Chinese coins"). The invoice also reflected that each coin had "[n]o recorded provenance" and that each coin's "find spot" was "unknown." See J.A. 1164. 2. On April 24, 2009, Customs officers in Baltimore detained Spink's shipment of coins. The Spink invoice identified the Guild as the recipient of the coin shipment. Customs therefore issued the Guild a Notice of Detention, which specified its reason for detaining the coins as "Cultural Property Import Restrictions per [ 19 U.S.C. § 2606 ]." See J.A. 1172. The Notice of Detention requested that the Guild supply Customs with a "Certificate or evidence" demonstrating that the coins were being imported into the United States in compliance with the CPIA. Id. In May 2009, the Guild's lawyer filed a response to the Notice of Detention with Customs, objecting to the seizure and detention of the coin shipment. By that response, the Guild contended that the "State Department promulgated the underlying regulations in an arbitrary and capricious manner and/or contrary to law." See J.A. 186. The Guild further asserted that-based on its reading of the CPIA-Customs officers were required to "trace the coins in question back to either China or Cyprus before they [could] be properly detained." Id. Finally, the Guild maintained that it was impossible to provide Customs with the requested certification or satisfactory evidence, and that the Guild wished to have its "views [tested] in [c]ourt." Id. at 187. Nearly a year later, on February 11, 2010, the Guild filed a civil action in the District of Maryland, naming as defendants the State Department, Customs, and two government officials. The Guild's complaint challenged the detention of the Spink coin shipment and alleged that the government had violated the Administrative Procedures Act (the "APA"), as well as the Guild's First and Fifth Amendment rights. The Guild also contended that the defendants had exceeded their authority-that is, acted ultra vires -by imposing import restrictions on Cypriot and Chinese coins. By Memorandum Opinion of August 8, 2011, the district court dismissed the Guild's claims. See Ancient Coin Collectors Guild v. U.S. Customs & Border Prot. , 801 F.Supp.2d 383 (D. Md. 2011). As relevant here, the court ruled that the State Department's actions were not reviewable in federal court under the APA. The court further determined that the State Department had not exceeded its authority under the CPIA by effectively "barring the importation of coins with unknown find spots." Id. at 409. The court also ruled that Customs had neither violated the APA nor acted ultra vires by carrying out its duty to promulgate and enforce the Cypriot and Chinese Designated Lists. Finally, the court concluded that the Guild's constitutional claims were meritless. 3. By our Ancient Coin I decision of October 22, 2012, we affirmed the district court's dismissal of the Guild's complaint. See 698 F.3d 171 (4th Cir. 2012). Our colleague Judge Wilkinson, writing for a unanimous panel, ruled that the State Department had not exceeded its authority when it agreed to impose import restrictions on Cypriot and Chinese coins. Id. at 179-81. More specifically, the Ancient Coin I decision carefully examined the State Department's activities leading to the promulgation of the Chinese Designated List and concluded that "there is no question that the State Department complied with CPIA procedures when it placed import restrictions on Chinese coins." Id. at 179. The decision deemed it unnecessary to conduct a similar analysis of the Cypriot Designated List, explaining that the "district court similarly found that the State Department complied with the statutory requirements in placing import restrictions on Cypriot coins." Id. at 180. Our Ancient Coin I decision also rejected the Guild's contention that the defendants had acted ultra vires by imposing import restrictions on, and later detaining, the collection of coins that were not necessarily "first discovered within" Cyprus and China. See 698 F.3d at 181-82 (quoting 19 U.S.C. § 2601(2) ). In so ruling, we recognized that it was the duty of the State Department and CPAC to determine where certain materials were first discovered before placing them on a designated list. Id. After ruling that the State Department and Customs had properly interpreted and applied the CPIA, the Ancient Coin I decision explained that the Guild would be entitled in a forfeiture proceeding to "press a particularized challenge to the government's assertion that the twenty-three coins are covered by import restrictions." See 698 F.3d at 185. The decision also explained the burden-shifting framework applicable in a forfeiture proceeding conducted pursuant to the CPIA. In such a proceeding, the government would bear the burden of establishing that the ancient coins had been "listed in accordance with [ 19 U.S.C. § 2604 ]." Id. (quoting 19 U.S.C. § 2610 ). In other words, the coins must have been "listed 'by type or other appropriate classification' in a manner that gives 'fair notice ... to importers.' " Id. (quoting 19 U.S.C. § 2604 ). If the government satisfied its evidentiary burden in the forfeiture proceeding, "the Guild must then demonstrate that its coins are not subject to forfeiture in order to prevail." Id. (citing 19 U.S.C. § 1615 ). C. 1. On April 22, 2013, the government filed in the District of Maryland the complaint that underlies this appeal, seeking forfeiture to the United States of the ancient Cypriot and Chinese coins. See United States v. 3 Knife-Shaped Coins , No. 1:13-cv-01183 (D. Md. Apr. 22, 2013), ECF No. 1 (the "Complaint"). The Complaint alleges that the defendant coins "compris[e] archaeological material of China and Cyprus that is listed ... as property subject to such import restrictions." Id. at 4. The Complaint makes clear that the importer failed to supply the Customs officers with CPIA-compliant evidence. For example, the Complaint alleges that neither Cyprus nor China issued certificates or documentation confirming that the coins' exportation was not in violation of their laws. The district court thus issued a warrant for arrest in rem for the seized coins. The Guild promptly filed a Claim of Interest in the defendant coins, pursuant to Supplemental Admiralty and Maritime Claims Rule G(5)(A) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. In June 2013, the Guild answered the Complaint, interposing twelve affirmative defenses and demanding a jury trial. In the process, the government moved to strike portions of the Guild's answer, contending that several of the Guild's responses-including affirmative defenses-sought to relitigate issues that were resolved by the Ancient Coin I decision. While the government's motion to strike was pending, the Guild amended its answer, identifying additional affirmative defenses and seeking to counter the motion to strike. See United States v. 3 Knife-Shaped Coins , No. 1:13-cv-01183 (D. Md. Sept. 27, 2013), ECF No. 13 (the "Amended Answer"). By Opinion and Order of June 3, 2014, the district court granted the government's motion to strike, applying it to the Amended Answer. See United States v. 3 Knife-Shaped Coins , No. 1:13-cv-01183 (D. Md. June 3, 2014), ECF Nos. 22 & 23 (the "Strike Opinion" and "Strike Order," respectively). In so ruling, the court observed that "much of the [Amended Answer] and most if not all of the affirmative defenses seek to relitigate issues concerning the validity of the regulations and the government's decision to impose import restrictions on certain Cypriot and Chinese coins. " See Strike Opinion 2. The court stressed that the Ancient Coin I decision "forecloses any further challenge to the validity of the regulations." Id. at 1. Eight months after the district court struck the Amended Answer, the Guild filed a newly amended answer. See United States v. 3 Knife-Shaped Coins , No. 1:13-cv-01183 (D. Md. Feb. 25, 2015), ECF No. 36 (the "Second Amended Answer"). In its Second Amended Answer, the Guild removed portions of its previous answer that had sought to relitigate Ancient Coin I . Despite those changes, the government moved to strike the Second Amended Answer. Although it noted that there "appear[ed] to be valid challenges to portions of the [Second Amended Answer]," the court denied the government's motion. See United States v. 3 Knife-Shaped Coins , No. 1:13-cv-01183, at 2 (D. Md. Feb. 11, 2016), ECF No. 63. Thus, the Second Amended Answer became the Guild's operative responsive pleading for the remainder of the forfeiture action. 2. The parties began conducting discovery in March 2015, and several discovery issues were thereafter contested. In August 2015, the Guild sought to test the sufficiency of the government's objections to certain requests for admissions. The Guild had requested, for example, that the government admit that, under the CPIA, it is only authorized to impose restrictions on objects of archaeological interest of a specific State Party "first discovered within" and "subject to the export control" of that State Party. See J.A. 172. The government objected, arguing that the Guild was seeking to expand the scope of the forfeiture action beyond the limitations imposed by the Ancient Coin I decision. The Guild sought the depositions of two State Department officials, Andrew Cohen and Maria Kouroupas, along with the deposition of a Department-designated witness under Rule 30(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Rule 30(b)(6) deposition sought information concerning eleven subjects, including the circulation patterns of Cypriot and Chinese coins; European Union and Chinese export control laws for cultural goods, including coins; and the drafting and meaning of the Cypriot and Chinese Designated Lists. In September 2015, the government requested a protective order barring the depositions of the State Department officials and substantially narrowing the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition. Thereafter, in October 2015, the Guild sought to compel responses to thirteen of its document requests and two sets of interrogatories, which related to the circulation of Cypriot and Chinese coins, foreign export control laws, and the drafting of the Cypriot and Chinese Designated Lists. By Order of February 11, 2016, after considering the arguments of counsel, the district court ruled on the discovery motions. See United States v. 3 Knife-Shaped Coins , No. 1:13-cv-01183 (D. Md. Feb. 11, 2016), ECF No. 63 (the "Discovery Order"). In its Discovery Order, the court denied most of the Guild's discovery requests and granted the government's request for a protective order. The court primarily concluded that the Guild was seeking discovery on issues that were irrelevant to the forfeiture proceedings. Id. at 1-2 (emphasizing that it was "unlikely that the export control status of the coins under foreign law will be a proper defense in this forfeiture action"). The court also deemed most of the discovery sought from the State Department officials to be improper, explaining that it was "not so much factual as legal." Id. at 1. The Discovery Order also addressed the Guild's repeated endeavors to pursue its contention that the government was obliged to prove "first discovery" as part of its prima facie forfeiture case. The district court concluded that the Guild's position in that regard was foreclosed by Ancient Coin I , but suggested that the Guild might be able to rebut a prima facie forfeiture case by demonstrating that "these specific coins were exported from their respective States before CPIA restrictions went into effect." See Discovery Order 1. The court also suggested that it might consider some expert testimony in that respect as pertinent. In response to the Discovery Order, the Guild secured two experts. It retained an expert in numismatics, Douglas Mudd, and an expert in the international exchange of cultural artifacts, Michael McCullough. In his expert report, Mudd opined that based upon the mass circulation of Cypriot and Chinese coins outside modern borders, "it is impossible to assert that all such coins without provenance should be regarded as illegally exported cultural property." See J.A. 1040. McCullough opined in his expert report that, after assessing the applicable laws and regulations, "the export of [the] Cypriot coins at issue from the United Kingdom was a legal export under European Union and hence Cypriot law" that should satisfy the CPIA's evidentiary requirements. Id. at 1052. McCullough also opined that "the Chinese coins at issue could have been exported from China's Free Port of Hong Kong legally without an export certificate." Id. Notably, the Guild made several significant admissions during the course of the discovery proceedings. For example, it acknowledged that the seven ancient Cypriot coins identified in the Complaint appeared on the Cypriot Designated List. The Guild also admitted that the eight ancient Chinese coins identified in the forfeiture complaint appeared on the Chinese Designated List. Finally, the Guild admitted that it had "knowingly" and "purposefully" sought to import those fifteen coins into the United States, with full awareness that the ancient Cypriot coins and the ancient Chinese coins identified on the Spink invoice were subject to import restrictions imposed by the United States. See J.A. 1280. The Guild denied, however, knowing that the seven unattributed Chinese coins named as defendants in the Complaint were subject to import restrictions. 3. After the close of discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. On March 31, 2017, the district court issued its decision resolving the parties' motions. See United States v. 3 Knife-Shaped Coins , No. 1:13-cv-01183 (D. Md. Mar. 31, 2017), ECF No. 83 (the "Forfeiture Opinion"). In conducting its forfeiture analysis, the court adhered to the burden-shifting framework identified in the Ancient Coin I decision. Pursuant thereto, the government was obliged to carry the initial burden of showing that the coins were "listed in accordance with section 2604." See Forfeiture Opinion 15 (quoting Ancient Coin I , 698 F.3d at 185 ). However, the court concluded that the Ancient Coin I decision had already determined that the government had properly promulgated the Cypriot and Chinese Designated Lists, in accordance with § 2604 of Title 19. Thus, the government's remaining burden in the forfeiture proceedings was to prove that "each of the 22 coins falls into the 'type or other classification' of material included in the designated lists." Id. at 15. In the Forfeiture Opinion, the district court ruled that the government had satisfied its burden with respect to the seven ancient Cypriot coins and the eight ancient Chinese coins. As the court explained, the Spink invoice and the Guild's own admissions established that the fifteen coins were of "restricted types." See Forfeiture Opinion 16. By contrast, neither the government nor the Guild introduced any evidence establishing that the seven unattributed Chinese coins matched the materials on the Chinese Designated List. The court therefore awarded summary judgment to the Guild as to the seven unattributed Chinese coins. With regard to the fifteen contested Cypriot and Chinese coins, the Forfeiture Opinion explained that the burden shifted to the Guild to rebut the government's initial showing. The Guild thus had "to [either] establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the property is not subject to forfeiture, or ... establish an applicable affirmative defense." See Forfeiture Opinion 18 (quoting United States v. Eighteenth Century Peruvian Oil , 597 F.Supp.2d 618, 623 (E.D. Va. 2009) ). In order to satisfy that burden, the Guild sought to utilize its expert evidence. The government objected, however, arguing that the Guild was confined by statute to the three forms of documentation specified in § 2606(b)(1)-(2) -which the Guild conceded it could not produce. The district court then declined to rule on the propriety of the Guild's use of its expert evidence, explaining that the government was entitled to judgment as a matter of law regardless of whether Mudd's and McCullough's opinions were proper CPIA evidence. As the court explained, Mudd's expert testimony-which the Guild relied on to prove that it was "more probable than not that the Spink coins left Cyprus and China hundreds or thousands of years ago as currency, or decades ago as collectables"-was insufficiently particularized to the defendant coins to rebut the government's prima facie case. See Forfeiture Opinion 22. In so ruling, the court emphasized that the Guild had identified "no authority for the position that a CPIA forfeiture claimant may rebut the government's prima facie case with general evidence regarding a type of restricted material." Id. The court emphasized that Mudd's expert evidence was essentially an effort to second-guess the State Department's and CPAC's decision to impose import restrictions on certain ancient coins. As such, the court determined that the expert opinions of Mudd failed to create an issue of material fact, and the court refused to sanction the Guild's effort to "undermine the function of the designated lists." Id. The district court also concluded that McCullough's expert testimony was deficient for a number of reasons. First, the court explained that McCullough's expert evidence-which was offered to show that the defendant coins had been lawfully exported from their respective State Parties-was not in the form contemplated by the CPIA. To demonstrate compliance with a State Party's laws, the CPIA requires a certificate or other documentation "from the State Party" that had requested the import restrictions. See Forfeiture Opinion 23-24 (citing § 2601(a), (b)(1) ). However, the Guild offered neither a certificate nor other documentation from Cyprus or China. Second, the Forfeiture Opinion observed that McCullough's testimony suggested that the Cypriot coins were lawfully exported from the United Kingdom, rather than from Cyprus. But the CPIA directs that evidence of a lawful export must come from the country that requested the import restriction, in this case Cyprus. Third, the court emphasized that McCullough's opinions suggested only that the Chinese coins "could have been lawfully exported" from China-not that they actually had been lawfully exported from China. Id. at 26-27 (emphasis original). That evidence thus suffered from a lack of particularity and was incongruous with the CPIA requirements. Based upon those shortcomings, the district court ruled that the Guild was unable to rebut the government's prima facie case for forfeiture. Finally, the Forfeiture Opinion rejected the Guild's due process claims, as well as the Guild's request that the district court reconsider several earlier rulings. The district court characterized the Guild's two due process claims as impermissible efforts to relitigate issues that we resolved five years earlier in the Ancient Coin I decision. Regardless of the previous litigation, the court explained that the Guild's constitutional claims lacked merit. The court thus awarded summary judgment to the government as to the fifteen ancient coins, that is, the seven Cypriot and eight Chinese coins. The Guild has timely appealed the judgment of forfeiture of the fifteen coins to the United States. We possess jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. II. The Guild challenges the district court's judgment on multiple grounds. First, the Guild contends that the court erred in the Forfeiture Opinion by failing to require the government to prove all the elements of its forfeiture case. Second, the Guild argues that the court abused its discretion in the Forfeiture Opinion when it rejected the Guild's expert evidence. Third, the Guild maintains that the court erred in ruling that the Guild had not been deprived of its right to fair notice of the ancient coins that were subject to import restrictions imposed by the government. Fourth, the Guild maintains that, in the Discovery Order, the court abused its discretion by declining to authorize several discovery requests. Fifth, the Guild argues that the court abused its discretion in the Strike Opinion and Order by striking certain affirmative defenses and other aspects of the Guild's Amended Answer. Notably, the Guild supports its third and fifth contentions with constitutional arguments. We review de novo a district court's award of summary judgment, "viewing the facts and inferences reasonably drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party." See Woollard v. Gallagher , 712 F.3d 865, 873 (4th Cir. 2013). An award of summary judgment is only appropriate if the record demonstrates that "there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The applicable standard of review for an evidentiary ruling is the abuse of discretion standard. See Gen. Elec. Co. v. Joiner , 522 U.S. 136, 141-41, 118 S.Ct. 512, 139 L.Ed.2d 508 (1997). We will also review a decision to strike a party's pleadings-or portions thereof-for an abuse of discretion. See Jennings v. Univ. of N.C. , 482 F.3d 686, 702 (4th Cir. 2007) (en banc); see also Hatchett v. United States , 330 F.3d 875, 887 (6th Cir. 2003). Because a constitutional question is a legal issue, we review the district court's ruling de novo. See United States v. Dinkins , 691 F.3d 358, 382 (4th Cir. 2012). III. Before specifically addressing the Guild's appellate contentions, some background concerning federal forfeiture proceedings is warranted. Most civil forfeiture actions in the federal courts are governed by provisions of the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act (the "CAFRA"). See 18 U.S.C. § 983. Pursuant thereto, the government has the initial burden to establish "by a preponderance of the evidence that the [disputed] property is subject to forfeiture." Id . § 983(i)(2). Section 983(i)(2) of Title 18, however, excludes certain other statutory provisions from CAFRA's application, including all forfeiture proceedings conducted under Title 19, in which the CPIA has been codified. Id. § 983(i)(2)(A). Forfeiture proceedings arising under the CPIA are thus governed by § 1615 of Title 19. Although § 1615 places the initial burden of proof in Title 19 forfeiture proceedings on the claimants of the disputed goods, § 2610 -which governs CPIA forfeiture proceedings-places the initial burden of proof on the government. The parties disagree, however, on what the government must demonstrate to carry its burden. With that legal landscape in mind, we turn to an assessment of the Guild's various contentions of error. A. In its initial appellate contention, the Guild maintains that the district court erred in failing to require the government to prove two essential elements of its prima facie forfeiture case. According to the Guild, the government was obliged to prove that the ancient Cypriot and Chinese coins were (1) first discovered within and hence subject to the export control of the State Party for which restrictions were granted ("first discovery"); and (2) illegally removed from the State Party's control after those restrictions were granted ("illegal removal"). See Br. of Appellant 21. The Guild contends that the government has not and cannot satisfy either of those requirements. The government counters that it had to prove-pursuant to § 2610 -only that a particular seized item was "listed in accordance with section 2604." See Br. of Appellee 46 (quoting 19 U.S.C. § 2610 ). It argues that to be "listed in accordance with section 2604" has only two requirements, namely that the seized material has been (1) listed by type or other appropriate classification, and (2) listed in a manner that gives fair notice to importers. The government asserts that it satisfied each of those requirements, and thus proved that the fifteen coins were "listed in accordance with section 2604." As explained below, we reject the Guild's contentions with respect to the first discovery and illegal removal elements. We agree that the district court properly determined that the government had satisfied its burden with respect to the fifteen ancient Cypriot and Chinese coins at issue in these forfeiture proceedings. 1. The Guild premises its contention that the government must satisfy the first discovery element upon two assertions about the CPIA-but only one of those assertions is accurate. The Guild correctly stresses that, under the CPIA, the executive branch can only impose restrictions on archaeological or ethnological material that was first discovered within the State Party that requested the restrictions, i.e., the State Party's cultural patrimony. The Guild is incorrect, however, in asserting that the government must prove the first discovery element at every stage of the CPIA process-initially in the promulgation of the designated lists, then in the detention of the restricted items by Customs, and again as part of establishing a prima facie forfeiture case. The Guild wrongly conflates two statutory terms of art used in the CPIA-"archaeological ... material of the State Party," as defined by 19 U.S.C. § 2601(2), and "designated archaeological ... material," as defined by § 2601(7). Contrary to the Guild's erroneous reading of the CPIA, the first discovery requirement only delimits what material the executive branch can place on a restricted list. Once the material is properly included on a list, or, in other words, "designated," the government no longer must establish the first discovery element with regard to particular imported material. The CPIA uses the term "archaeological material of the State Party"-which expressly incorporates the first discovery element emphasized by the Guild-when specifying the duties of officials in creating a designated list of restricted materials. See 19 U.S.C. § 2601(2). For example, when CPAC is presented with a request from a State Party to impose import restrictions, CPAC must prepare a report detailing the "archaeological ... material of the State Party" that should be subject to import restrictions. Id. § 2605(f)(4)(B). The President, in turn, is authorized to enter into an MOU that imposes import restrictions on "archaeological ... material of the State Party" that made such a request. Id. § 2602(a)(2). Finally, after an MOU has been entered into, the CPIA requires the appropriate agency to promulgate a regulation listing the "archaeological ... material of the State Party" that is covered by the MOU. Id. § 2604. In the Ancient Coin I litigation, we examined whether the State Department, CPAC, and Customs had carried out their responsibilities in accordance with the CPIA, and we ruled that those responsibilities were executed properly. See 698 F.3d at 181. Our decision explained that the State Department and CPAC had appropriately taken into account where ancient coins were typically "first discovered" before deciding that Cypriot and Chinese coins comprised part of those State Parties' respective cultural patrimonies. Id. at 182. Judge Wilkinson's opinion specified: CPAC and the Assistant Secretary [of State] did consider where the restricted types may generally be found as part of the review of the Chinese and Cypriot requests. [Customs] listed the articles in question in the Federal Register by "type"-but only after State and CPAC had determined that each type was part of the respective cultural patrimonies of China and Cyprus. ... Plaintiffs have given us no reason to question CPAC's conclusion, as adopted by State, as to where the types of cultural property at issue were discovered. To the contrary, it was hardly illogical for CPAC to conclude that, absent evidence suggesting otherwise, Chinese and Cypriot coins were first discovered in those two countries and form part of each nation's cultural heritage. Id. Thus, in Ancient Coin I , we decided that the government had properly listed the Cypriot and Chinese coins, having satisfied the first discovery element. To the extent the Guild seeks to revisit the Ancient Coin I ruling, we lack any authority to do so. Put succinctly, it is a basic principle of our Court that "one panel cannot overrule a decision issued by another panel." See McMellon v. United States , 387 F.3d 329, 332 (4th Cir. 2004) (en banc). In that regard, it is also notable that the Guild unsuccessfully petitioned for rehearing and then for certiorari, all to no avail. With the propriety of the Cypriot and Chinese listings decided in the previous litigation, all that remains in this matter is whether the coins in question constitute "designated archeological material" subject to forfeiture. As noted, the CPIA uses the defined term "designated archaeological material"-which does not contain the first discovery element-in describing the responsibilities of federal officials after import restrictions have gone into effect, i.e., after ancient coins have been placed on a "designated list." See 19 U.S.C. § 2601(7). Thus, Customs is tasked with preventing the "designated archaeological ... material" from entering the United States without adequate documentation. Id. § 2606(a). Furthermore, when a determination has been made by Customs that "designated archaeological ... material" was sought to be imported in violation of § 2606, the government is obliged to initiate an appropriate forfeiture action. Id. § 2606(b); see also id. § 2609. Finally, during the forfeiture proceedings, the government's initial burden of proof is simply to demonstrate that "material subject to the provisions of section 2606"-that is, designated archaeological material-is listed "in accordance with section 2604." Id. § 2610. The crux of the Guild's incorrect interpretation of the CPIA appears to emanate from the "in accordance with section 2604" language. See 19 U.S.C. § 2610(1). In addition to directing the executive branch to promulgate lists of restricted material, § 2604 also imposes minimum drafting standards for those lists. It provides that each listing "shall be sufficiently specific and precise to ensure [both] that [the restrictions] are applied only to the archeological and ethnological material covered by the agreement" and that importers have fair notice regarding what material is subject to those restrictions. Id. § 2604. However, our Ancient Coin I decision foreclosed a subsequent challenge to whether Cypriot and Chinese coins were "listed in accordance with section 2604." See 698 F.3d at 183 ("Here, CBP has listed the Chinese and Cypriot coins by type, in accordance with 19 U.S.C. § 2604...."). Instead, in the forfeiture proceedings, the government had to demonstrate that the particular coins in question fall under the type described in the listing. Even absent the rulings in Ancient Coin I , however, we do not read § 2610, incorporating § 2604, to require the government to establish first discovery in order to carry its initial burden in a forfeiture action. As explained in Ancient Coin I , Congress drafted the CPIA in an effort to balance procedural efficiency with procedural recourse. See 698 F.3d at 181. Additionally, we explained in Ancient Coin I that second-guessing the executive branch's international negotiations regarding issues of cultural heritage is generally beyond the purview of the federal judiciary. Id. at 179. Given that context, we will not engage in "a searching substantive review of ... diplomatic negotiations or [the] application of [ ] archaeological expertise." Id. Therefore, we must read and apply the CPIA in light of that approach. The second sentence of § 2604 requires the government in a forfeiture action to demonstrate that the listed, restricted material is "covered by" the relevant MOU. The first requirement of that sentence does not oblige the government to establish that the material at issue was "first discovered" within the relevant State Party. To rule otherwise would both necessitate a "searching substantive review" of international negotiations, which is an inappropriate exercise for the courts, and undermine our controlling construction of the CPIA. See Ancient Coin I , 698 F.3d at 179. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Guild would have us rule that Congress's use of the term "designated archaeological material" with respect to the designated lists-rather than, for example, the term "archaeological material of the State Party"-was the result of poor drafting. The Guild would also have us rule that Congress actually intended for government officials and the federal courts to treat the two terms as identical. We readily reject that request. It is axiomatic that "where Congress includes particular language in one section of a statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion." See Duncan v. Walker , 533 U.S. 167, 173, 121 S.Ct. 2120, 150 L.Ed.2d 251 (2001) (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted). The CPIA prescribes that "archeological material" refers to what may be listed, and that "designated archeological material" describes what has been listed. This temporal distinction supplies the controlling, meaningful difference between the two terms of art contained within the CPIA. Here, Congress's use of the term "designated archaeological material" absolves the government from the need to again prove the first discovery element after properly promulgated import restrictions have gone into effect. If that were not the case, the importers-such as the Guild-could always relitigate the State Department's conclusions that certain materials belong to a particular country's cultural patrimony. And that is precisely what the Guild seeks to do in this forfeiture action. As we recognized in Ancient Coin I , however, the determination of where certain types of archaeological materials are typically discovered is beyond the competence of the federal courts. See 698 F.3d at 179 ("The federal judiciary has not been generally empowered to second-guess the Executive Branch in its negotiations with other nations over matters of great importance to their cultural heritage."). Consistent with the foregoing, the issue pursued by the Guild regarding first discovery is resolved by the designated lists in the regulations-and need not be relitigated in a forfeiture action. We therefore reject the Guild's contention that the district court erroneously excused the government from proving first discovery as an essential element of its prima facie forfeiture case. 2. As a part of its initial contention of error, the Guild also maintains that the government failed to establish that the fifteen ancient coins were illegally removed from Cyprus or China. This argument is predicated on the fact that the CPIA does not bar importation of all "designated archaeological or ethnological material," but rather only designated material that has been "exported ... from the State Party after the designation of such material under section 2604," without "documentation which certifies that such exportation was not in violation of the laws of the State Party." See 19 U.S.C. § 2606(a). As with the first discovery requirement, the Guild contends that the government had to prove the illegal removal element as part of its prima facie forfeiture case. Simply put, we reject the Guild's interpretation of the CPIA on this point. As we explained in Ancient Coin I , Congress anticipated efforts to import archaeological material "without precisely documented provenance and export records." See 698 F.3d at 182. In those circumstances, the CPIA does not require the government to produce evidence establishing the provenance or export status of the archaeological material. Rather, as Ancient Coin I recognized, when Customs has determined that the archaeological material "has been designated by 'type' and included in the list of restricted articles," § 2606"expressly places the burden on importers to prove [the designated material is] importable." Id. at 182. The importer can satisfy that burden by presenting to Customs one of the three types of documentation specified in § 2606(b). Id. Unless the importer does so, however, Customs must "refuse to release the material from customs custody." See 19 U.S.C. § 2606(b). The Guild maintains that Ancient Coin I 's reasoning does not apply because that decision dealt with an importer's burden in the context of a detention of coins, rather than a forfeiture action. There is nothing in the CPIA, however, that supports the notion that the government must establish the provenance of seized material-or more specifically, that the seized material was illegally removed from a specified State Party-in the forfeiture proceedings. The CPIA simply permits the authorities to commence forfeiture proceedings under § 2609 if the importer fails to provide the documentation specified in § 2606(b). See 19 U.S.C. § 2606(b). And § 2609 provides that designated archaeological material imported "in violation of" § 2606 is "subject to seizure and forfeiture." Id. § 2609. Absent a clear directive from Congress that the government must prove the additional element of illegal removal in forfeiture proceedings conducted under § 2609-but not in a § 2606 detention-we must reject the Guild's contention that the government failed to establish a prima facie forfeiture case. 3. Although we reject the Guild's contentions with respect to first discovery and illegal removal, we recognize that 19 U.S.C. § 2610 imposes a substantial burden on the government in a forfeiture action. Indeed, the CPIA requires a multi-part inquiry before seized material is subject to forfeiture. As a preliminary matter, § 2610 requires the government to show that the seized material is "subject to the provisions of section 2606," i.e., that it is "designated archaeological or ethnological material." That showing requires the seized material to be "covered by an [MOU]" in force in the United States and "listed by regulation under section 2604." See 19 U.S.C. § 2601(7)(A)(i), (B). The government must then determine whether the seized material has been "listed in accordance with section 2604." Id. § 2610. To be so listed means that the pertinent designated list is "sufficiently specific and precise" to ensure that "the import restrictions under section 2606... are only applied to the archaeological or ethnological material covered by the [MOU]," and that "fair notice is given to importers and other persons as to what material is subject to such restrictions." Id. § 2604. Distilling the statutory requirements, the government must establish the following in order to meet its initial burden in a forfeiture action for material subject to § 2606 of the CPIA: (1) that the material is covered by an MOU, see 19 U.S.C. § 2601(7)(A)(i) ; (2) that the material is "listed by regulation under section 2604," id. § 2601(7)(B) ; and (3) that the listing is "sufficiently specific and precise" to ensure both that "the import restrictions ... are only applied to the archeological or ethnological material covered by the [MOU]," and that "fair notice is given to importers and other persons as to what material is subject to such restrictions" id. § 2604. The Forfeiture Opinion properly determined that the government had met its initial burden. The district court therein recognized that the first element of the CPIA forfeiture test was uncontested, i.e., that the seized ancient coins were covered by enforceable MOUs with Cyprus and China. See Forfeiture Opinion 15 ("There is no dispute that China and Cyprus are 'State Parties' under the CPIA ... nor does the Guild deny that the United States has entered into an [MOU] with each under § 2602."). This forfeiture action is also distinguished by the fact that the Ancient Coin I decision already dispensed with the third element of the inquiry. More specifically, Ancient Coin I preempted further litigation of the validity of the Cypriot and Chinese Designated Lists, ruling that the Cypriot and Chinese coins were listed "in accordance with 19 U.S.C. § 2604." See 698 F.3d at 183. The government thus had only to prove the second element-that the Guild's coins were "listed by regulation under section 2604." See 19 U.S.C. § 2601(7)(B). And the government established that element. Indeed, the Guild conceded the issue, admitting that the fifteen ancient Cypriot and Chinese coins matched coins on the Cypriot and Chinese Designated Lists. The Forfeiture Opinion therefore properly concluded that the government had satisfied its initial burden in this case. As a result, the burden shifted to the Guild to prove that the fifteen ancient coins were somehow not subject to being forfeited to the United States. B. In its second contention, the Guild maintains that the Forfeiture Opinion improperly precluded the testimony of its expert witnesses and the circumstantial evidence that could be derived from that testimony. The Guild contends that the district court erroneously required the Guild's expert evidence to be particularized as to the defendant coins. Assuming the particularization requirement, the Guild further argues that the expert opinions of Mudd and McCullough were sufficiently particularized and relevant to the forfeiture proceedings, and rebutted the government's prima facie forfeiture case. The government counters that the court properly addressed and discounted the experts' evidence, relying primarily on the reasoning of the Forfeiture Opinion. As an initial matter, despite the Guild's characterization to the contrary, the district court did not expressly exclude the opinions of Mudd and McCullough. Instead, the court concluded that the evidence "[ran] contrary to the logic of the CPIA," and conflicted with the Guild's statutorily imposed evidentiary burden in the forfeiture proceedings. See Forfeiture Opinion 22. Additionally, the court ruled that the expert evidence was "insufficiently particularized," such that it failed to "rebut the government's initial showing." Id. at 23, 27. We discern no abuse of discretion in the district court's treatment of the expert evidence. Further, we agree with the court that the expert evidence failed to create a disputed issue of material fact that rebutted the government's prima facie case. We review a district court's decision on expert evidence for an abuse of discretion. See United States v. Chikvashvili , 859 F.3d 285, 292 (4th Cir. 2017). In evaluating the permissibility of expert evidence, a court assumes a "gatekeeping role," which guarantees that the expert opinions rest "on a reliable foundation and [are] relevant to the task at hand." See Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. , 509 U.S. 579, 597, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993). The Supreme Court has explained that relevance-or what has been called "fit"-is a precondition for the admissibility of expert testimony, in that the rules of evidence require expert opinions to assist the "the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue." Id. at 591, 113 S.Ct. 2786 (quoting former Fed. R. Evid. 702(a) ). In reviewing a trial court's rulings on experts, we are mindful of the Supreme Court's admonition against "applying an overly stringent review ... [that] fail[s] to give the trial court the deference that is the hallmark of abuse-of-discretion review." See Joiner , 522 U.S. at 143, 118 S.Ct. 512. And where a court relies upon expert evidence to determine whether a dispute of material fact exists, we review that determination de novo. See Dash v. Mayweather , 731 F.3d 303, 310-11, 316 (4th Cir. 2013). With those principles in mind, we turn to the Guild's contentions with respect to its proposed experts. 1. The Guild maintains that the district court erroneously required the Guild's experts to present particularized opinions that would prove the fifteen defendant ancient coins were not subject to forfeiture. As the Guild emphasizes, the word "particularized" is not found in the CPIA. Furthermore, the Guild argues that-unlike the government's initial burden of proof-the CPIA does not specify the Guild's burden on rebuttal. See 19 U.S.C. § 2610. Rather, § 2609 provides that "[a]ll provisions of law relating to ... forfeiture ... for violation of the customs laws shall apply to seizures and forfeitures incurred ... under [the CPIA], insofar as such provisions of law are applicable to, and not inconsistent with, the provisions of [the CPIA]." Id. § 2609(a). In the Guild's view, its burden was thus governed by § 1615, which "contemplates that a claimant in a court case will be able to use any admissible evidence or testimony to rebut any presumption that an article is subject to forfeiture." See Br. of Appellant 36. Although the Guild's recitation of legal principles may be accurate, we discern no error in the district court's application of a particularization requirement to the Guild's expert evidence. As our Ancient Coin I decision explained, the CPIA requires an importer to establish the importability of designated archaeological material by reference to the "article in question." See 698 F.3d at 182 (citing 19 U.S.C. § 2606 ). More specifically, the importer must satisfy one of three statutory requirements-i.e., that the material was either "(1) lawfully exported from its respective state while CPIA restrictions were in effect; (2) exported from its respective state more than ten years before it arrived in the United States; or (3) exported from its respective state before CPIA restrictions went into effect." Id. at 183. Consistent with the foregoing, the district court required the Guild to tailor its expert evidence to the articles in question, i.e., the specific Cypriot and Chinese coins that the Guild sought to import. As explained in the Forfeiture Opinion, permitting the Guild to rebut the government's prima facie forfeiture case with generalized evidence about ancient coins would "run[ ] contrary to the logic of the CPIA." See Forfeiture Opinion 22. More specifically, such expert evidence would not assist the trier of fact in determining when the specific articles in question were exported from the particular State Party. Nor would it tend to prove that the articles were lawfully exported. Rather, generalized evidence could only serve to attack the legitimacy and logic of the pertinent designated lists in the regulations. And in these forfeiture proceedings, the legitimacy of those lists was no longer subject to challenge. The district court's application of the particularization requirement thus ensured that the Guild's rebuttal expert evidence "fit" the questions presented in the forfeiture proceedings. See Daubert , 509 U.S. at 591, 113 S.Ct. 2786. And that requirement barred the Guild from using expert evidence to undermine the legitimacy of the designated lists, and relying on evidence that is "inconsistent" with the CPIA. See 19 U.S.C. § 2609. The court therefore did not abuse its discretion by