South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Williams-Sonoma accuses Amazon over knockoff items

- By Taylor Telford

For Christmas, WilliamsSo­noma got Amazon the gift that truly keeps on giving: A federal lawsuit.

In a complaint filed Dec. 14, the home goods company accused Amazon.com of selling unauthoriz­ed Williams-Sonoma merchandis­e on its website. It also claimed the retail giant “unfairly and deceptivel­y engaged in a widespread campaign of copying” designs of its West Elm furniture for its own furniture line, Rivet. (Amazon founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.) Sometimes the items are sold at a significan­t markup, the complaint states; other times, they’re sold at lower prices.

It’s widely known that third-party vendors sell counterfei­t products on Amazon, but the company has sidesteppe­d blame in the past by claiming it merely provides the platform and can’t control those vendors. This complaint is different. The knockoff Williams-Sonoma products are being sold and marketed by Amazon itself, putting Amazon in direct competitio­n with Williams-Sonoma, according to the company’s lawyers at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe.

Although Williams-Sonoma doesn’t license its branded products to other online retailers, Amazon markets some merchandis­e on its website as WilliamsSo­noma products “in a confusing manner that is likely to lead, and has led, customers to believe” that they are buying licensed WilliamsSo­noma goods, the complaint says. Products listed under labels like “by Williams-Sonoma” or “Bestsellin­g products from Williams-Sonoma” are actually knockoffs, the complaint states. Williams-Sonoma said it has been inundated

with complaints from customers who bought the knockoff items from Amazon, believing them to be genuine Williams-Sonoma products. Still more customers have complained on the Amazon website about the products, according to the complaint.

“Many of these products have been the subject of customer complaints on the Amazon website, are not subject to WSI’s quality control measures, and/or have been damaged or altered such that the Williams-Sonoma mark no longer properly applies,” the complaint states.

Amazon also markets the knockoff Williams-Sonoma products through targeted emails — and one such email was sent to the president of Williams-Sonoma, Janet Hayes. Court documents show an email Hayes received with the subject line “Janet: Williams-Sonoma Peppermint Bark 1 Pound Tin and more items for you,” which linked to a holiday candy priced at almost double what Williams-Sonoma sells it for.

The complaint also alleges that Amazon’s privatelab­el home goods brand, Rivet, which launched in November 2017, sells products that are “strikingly similar” to West Elm’s, using

Rivet products to compete directly with West Elm. Not only are the designs nearly identical to many West Elm products, but so are the names and marketing terms. In 2016, West Elm began selling a chair called the “Orb” that was designed in-house for $299. In March of this year, Amazon began selling a nearly identical product, called the “Amazon Orb Chair.” The same thing occurred with an office chair, the “Slope,” which Amazon sells as the “Amazon Slope Chair.”

“Amazon has engaged in a systematic campaign of copying Williams-Sonoma’s West Elm products,” the complaint states. “Amazon deliberate­ly chose to adopt West Elm’s brand identity and create a Rivet brand that gives consumers the same overall visual impression as West Elm.”

Williams-Sonoma is demanding damages of up to $2,000,000 per counterfei­t item being sold by Amazon, as well as legal costs. Williams-Sonoma’s legal counsel did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment from The Washington Post. Amazon declined to comment on the lawsuit. Williams-Sonoma is a major home furnishing­s retailer headquarte­red in San Francisco.

 ?? VICTOR J. BLUE/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Williams-Sonoma’s lawsuit accuses Amazon of copying items from its West Elm line, along with other products.
VICTOR J. BLUE/BLOOMBERG NEWS Williams-Sonoma’s lawsuit accuses Amazon of copying items from its West Elm line, along with other products.

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