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vendredi 7 mars 2014

Phony Olympics Merchandise Floods UK Market

By Cornelius Nunev


There is nothing brand new about counterfeit sporting merchandise. It is a criminal market that takes billions a year away from legitimate, authorized vendors. With the world's eyes on London this summer, United Kingdom regulators are urging vacationers to beware of supporting criminal behavior by purchasing knock-off items. Already, hundreds have been arrested for pushing bogus products.

Reason to avoid counterfeiting

The sale of counterfeit merchandise is just as bad as bootlegging movies and music. It is still considered theft because it is taking advantage of somebody to take their cash.

In Kansas, City, Gilbert Trill is in charge of Homeland Security Investigations as a special agent. He just stopped an enormous merchandise ring in KS City for Major League Baseball. Trill said:

"Selling counterfeit goods is stealing. Counterfeit goods steal U.S. jobs, create inferior and sometimes dangerous products, and support criminal organizations."

Just the start

There are a ton of scams around with the Olympics too. On Jun 8, authorities seized 500 cigarette lighters, 400 vests and 7,000 fake Olympic tote bags at the Port of London where thousands of pounds of phony merchandise were found.

ABC News spoke with bill Bilan, the Trading Standards Institute's Olympic strategy group chairman, who said:

"We're really busy and getting busier."

Child labor involved

The quality of bogus merchandise is not as good generally, and the items do not always cost less too. Interpol explained that the funds usually go to terrorist or criminal activities. Also, kid labor is typically used to be able to produce the items. It is almost never worth it to purchase the counterfeit stuff.

Noticing the knockoffs

There is only one place to buy legitimate Olympic mementos outside of Olympic Park. It is on Rotten Row in London's Hyde Park as a temporary structure. All legitimate mementos will even have a holographic tag that rotates on it. Even though it is hard to tell the fake stuff from the real now with all the technology out there, these are some guidelines to follow.

You may end up having things seized by customs on your way home if it is bogus too, according to Daily Finance. You should never purchase stuff sold except at legitimate venues, and also you should always try to find bad stitching, mismatched colors, misspelled names or other things, according to the finance site.

Also, if the cost seems too low to be real... you know the rest of the sentence.



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