Feds seize 150 websites in counterfeit crackdown

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Federal authorities have shut down 150 websites accused of selling knock-off or pirated merchandise to unsuspecting online bargain hunters.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director John Morton and Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer announced the results of the ICE and FBI three-month investigation on "Cyber Monday," the day that for many shoppers kicks off the online holiday shopping season.

The government seized the domain names for the sites that sold everything from fake replica NBA jerseys to replica Louis Vuitton handbags and imitation Ugg boots.

"This is straight crime," Morton said. "This is people being duped into buying a counterfeit."

The federal government has seized the domain names of 350 websites since first targeting online counterfeiters in June 2010. Each investigation, Morton said, has grown.

Visitors to the seized domains are now greeted with a message from federal authorities explaining that the site has been seized by the government and a warning that "willful copyright infringement is a federal crime."

Morton and Breuer said while the domain names were registered in the United States most of the websites were run from abroad, primarily in China. No one has been charged with a crime in connection with the most recently seized domains.

But Breuer said the investigations are ongoing.

Earlier this year five people were indicted in Virginia on conspiracy and copyright infringement charges for their roles in operating a website that the Justice Department said allowed people to illegally download high-quality movies and television shows.

Four people accused of running NinjaVideo.net have pleaded guilty. A fifth person is being sought.

It's unclear how much money the seized sites have made, or potentially cost legitimate companies. Breuer said since the crackdown on counterfeit sellers started last year, Internet users have gone to the seized domains more than 77 million times.

"Typically we don't track the volumes of sales of these particular sites," Morton said, adding that criminal organizations often hide ill-gotten profits. "It is very large figures. Well, well above millions."

Morton said it may seem like a trivial thing to buy a knock-off football jersey or look-alike sunglasses, but the profits seized by counterfeiters can help fund far more nefarious activities.

"This is increasingly not simply a matter of mom and pop violations at the corner of Fourth and Main," Morton said. "We are worried about organized crime and (that profits) are going to fuel other criminal activity."

Morton would not say if organized criminal groups are suspected of running any of the seized sites to help fund other criminal acts.
 

MyScores.ca
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I know a guy who sells this sort of merchandise - knock off sports jerseys, designer clothes and basketball shoes. It all comes from China, of course. And in some cases, the fake merchandise is made in the same factories as the "real" stuff. Hence, the fakes are essentially no different from the real stuff, except they are a fraction of the cost and the players, teams and big corporations are not getting their cut. I bought a couple of NBA jerseys for my son. They look exactly like the "real" jerseys, but cost me about $20 each. At the NBA store, the authentic jerseys sell for $300 each. It's going to be hard for the Feds to stop the flow of this merchandise into North America when there is such a huge price difference for essentially the same product.
 

cunning linguist, master debator
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know of any good websites that are still up selling the knock offs? My 9 yr old wants a nba and nfl jersey....thanks

Ed
 

EV Whore
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I know a guy who sells this sort of merchandise - knock off sports jerseys, designer clothes and basketball shoes. It all comes from China, of course. And in some cases, the fake merchandise is made in the same factories as the "real" stuff. Hence, the fakes are essentially no different from the real stuff, except they are a fraction of the cost and the players, teams and big corporations are not getting their cut. I bought a couple of NBA jerseys for my son. They look exactly like the "real" jerseys, but cost me about $20 each. At the NBA store, the authentic jerseys sell for $300 each. It's going to be hard for the Feds to stop the flow of this merchandise into North America when there is such a huge price difference for essentially the same product.

This. I have a closet full of jerseys that I got at 1/10th the price and you can NOT tell the difference. Got a few blackhawks throwback jerseys for like $20 each, those sell for 15-20x that.
 

SHANKAPOTOMUS !!!!
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I hate to even spur this conversation but, you guys know by buying that shit, you kill our economy.........
 

SHANKAPOTOMUS !!!!
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Well by buying the knock off stuff from china, the one our people made from the USA is still sitting on the shelf.......
 

EV Whore
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(a) The real jerseys are made in the US? Serious question here, I don't know
(b) I think it's a little overdramatic to suggest that buying knock-off pro sports jerseys is "killi[ing] the economy"
(c) Free market economy - I buy what I perceive to be of best value (quality relative to price); this is the philosophy that fuels the US economy

I'm no economist or expert, that's just my off-the-cuff opinion on the matter.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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I hate to even spur this conversation but, you guys know by buying that shit, you kill our economy.........

It's the year 2012

The "economy" is now Global
 

SHANKAPOTOMUS !!!!
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Yes I understand but in its very tiny way it does Harry...Bar when we ship jobs "globally" it hurts our economy, you know that.....
 

SHANKAPOTOMUS !!!!
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I want to clarify myself..... I have a closet full of the shit lol. Just stating a point though...
 

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know of any good websites that are still up selling the knock offs? My 9 yr old wants a nba and nfl jersey....thanks

Ed

Bormtradejersey.com

Hands down the best. Purchased many jerseys from there.

The hockey jerseys are almost impossible to tell the difference
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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Yes I understand but in its very tiny way it does Harry...Bar when we ship jobs "globally" it hurts our economy, you know that.....

It only hurts "our" economy if "we" insist on not doing business internationally.

I myself do not place such silly restrictions on either my business or my personal consumer spending
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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Bormtradejersey.com

Hands down the best. Purchased many jerseys from there.

The hockey jerseys are almost impossible to tell the difference

did you misspell that website url? It doesn't return a live page
 

THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX.
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The big banks run above the law while the feds focus their attention on people selling clothes! Unbelievable.


Mike Rivero said it best yesterday..........

"If the gov. would go after the fed and the big banks that caused this financial crisis, maybe people would have more money to buy authentic jerseys"

LOL. Priceless.
 

MyScores.ca
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I hate to even spur this conversation but, you guys know by buying that shit, you kill our economy.........

The "authentic" merchandise is often made in the same Chinese factories that the "fakes" are made in. As my friend tells me, the jerseys he sells are "factory seconds". They may have minor flaws that are hard for most people to detect. Better still, the "fakes" may be exactly the same as the "authentic" jerseys. Here's how it works. The factories get orders for "authentic" jerseys. When they finish filling those orders, they still have material left. So what do they do with it? They make more (i.e. "fakes") and sell them on the black market.
 

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