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Operation In Our Sites
- Federal Courts Order Seizure of 150 Website Domains Involved in
Selling Counterfeit Goods as Part of Cyber Monday Crackdown
November 28, 2012
Seizure
orders have been executed against 150 domain names of commercial
websites engaged in the illegal sale and distribution of counterfeit
goods and copyrighted works as part of Operation In Our Sites.
“Through this operation we are aggressively targeting those who are
selling counterfeit goods for their own personal gain while costing our
economy much-needed revenue and jobs,” said Attorney General Eric
Holder. “Intellectual property crimes harm businesses and consumers,
alike, threatening economic opportunity and financial stability, and
today we have sent a clear message that the Department will remain ever
vigilant in protecting the public’s economic welfare and public safety
through robust intellectual property enforcement.”
“For most, the holidays represent a season of good will and giving, but
for these criminals, it’s the season to lure in unsuspecting holiday
shoppers,” said ICE Director John Morton. “More and more Americans are
doing their holiday shopping online, and they may not realize that
purchasing counterfeit goods results in American jobs lost, American
business profits stolen and American consumers receiving substandard
products. And the ramifications can be even greater because the illicit
profits made from these types of illegal ventures often fuel other kinds
of organized crime.”
“The sale of counterfeit goods cheats consumers and robs legitimate
businesses – both large and small – of the fruits of their hard-earned
work,” said Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division. “We will not tolerate those who seek to
profit by abusing the Internet and stealing intellectual property at the
expense of authors, artists and inventors. The Department of Justice
will continue to work aggressively to combat intellectual property
crime.”
“The theft of intellectual property, to include the trafficking of
counterfeit goods, creates significant financial losses,” said FBI
Section Chief Zack Miller of the Cyber Division. “The FBI aggressively
pursues intellectual property enforcement through traditional
investigative methods, intelligence initiatives and coordinated efforts
with private industry and domestic and foreign law enforcement
partners.”
The 150 seized domains are in the custody of the federal government.
Visitors to the sites will now find a seizure banner that notifies them
that the domain name has been seized by federal authorities and educates
them that willful copyright infringement is a federal crime.
During this operation, federal law enforcement agents made undercover
purchases of a host of products, including professional sports jerseys,
golf equipment, DVD sets, footwear, handbags and sunglasses,
representing a variety of trademarks from online retailers who were
suspected of selling counterfeit products. In most cases, the goods were
shipped directly into the United States from suppliers in other
countries. If the trademark holders confirmed that the purchased
products were counterfeit or otherwise illegal, seizure orders for the
domain names of the websites that sold the goods and associated websites
were obtained from federal magistrate judges.
This operation is the eighth phase of Operation In Our Sites, a
sustained law enforcement initiative to protect consumers by targeting
counterfeit and piracy on the Internet. This is the second year that a
phase of Operation In Our Sites has coincided with Cyber Monday. In
November 2010, 82 websites were seized during the Cyber Monday-related
operation.
Since the operation’s June 2010 launch, the IPR Center has seized a
total of 350 domain names, and the seizure banner has received more than
77 million individual views.
Of the 350 domain names seized, 116 have now been forfeited to the U.S.
government. The federal forfeiture process affords individuals who have
an interest in the seized domain names a period of time after the
“Notice of Seizure” to file a petition with a federal court and
additional time after the “Notice of Forfeiture” to contest the
forfeiture. If no petitions or claims are filed, the domain names become
property of the U.S. government.
Additionally, a public service announcement (PSA), launched in April
2011, appears on each of the 116 forfeited domain names. This video
educates the public about the economic impact of trademark
counterfeiting and copyright infringement.
The
operation was spearheaded by the IPR Center in coordination with the
FBI’s Washington Field Office, the Computer Crime and Intellectual
Property Section of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and eight
U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, including the District of Maryland, Southern
District of Texas, Western District of Texas, District of Minnesota,
Eastern District of Michigan, Eastern District of Louisiana and District
of Colorado.
The IPR Center is one of the U.S. government’s key weapons in the fight
against criminal counterfeiting and piracy. The IPR Center uses the
expertise of its 19 member agencies to share information, develop
initiatives, coordinate enforcement actions and conduct investigations
related to IP theft. Through this strategic interagency partnership, the
IPR Center protects the public’s health and safety, the U.S. economy and
the war fighters. |