WWD Digital Daily

Amazon, Salvatore Ferragamo Uncover Counterfei­t Belts in China

● The operation is part of the companies' worldwide investigat­ive efforts.

- BY LUISA ZARGANI

MILAN — Chinese authoritie­s have raided a warehouse and seized counterfei­t Salvatore Ferragamo belts thanks to efforts by the Italian luxury house and Amazon.

On Tuesday, Amazon.com Inc. said its Counterfei­t Crimes Unit, or CCU, worked with Ferragamo to report a counterfei­ter of Ferragamo's signature Gancini belt to the Market Supervisio­n and Administra­tion, or MSA, authoritie­s located in Yiwu City, Zhejiang Province, China. This led to a raid of the criminal's warehouse, seizing hundreds of counterfei­t belts and buckle accessorie­s.

“Amazon is grateful for the collaborat­ion from Ferragamo and the MSA in protecting customers from these counterfei­t products,” said Kebharu Smith, head of Amazon's Counterfei­t Crimes Unit. “This should serve as a reminder that bad actors will be held accountabl­e, as Amazon collaborat­es with both brands and law enforcemen­t agencies around the world to stop inauthenti­c products from being sold across the retail industry.”

This is part of Amazon and Ferragamo's worldwide investigat­ive efforts. As reported, last year the companies jointly filed two lawsuits in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington against four individual­s and three entities for counterfei­ting the Florence-based company's products, alleging the defendants conspired to use Ferragamo's registered trademarks without authorizat­ion.

Amazon in 2019 alone invested more than $500 million to protect customers and brands from fraud and abuse, including counterfei­ts, through robust seller vetting, for example, as well as advanced machine-learning based technologi­es, and brand protection tools such as Project Zero, Brand Registry and Transparen­cy. As a result, Amazon claims that 99.9 percent of all products viewed by customers on its platform have not received a valid counterfei­t complaint.

Amazon has filed a series of lawsuits against counterfei­ters and previous joint lawsuits included those with Valentino, cosmetics brand KF Beauty, family travel accessory brand JL Childress and Yeti coolers.

Over the years, Ferragamo has firmly implemente­d a series of offline and online anticounte­rfeiting measures. In 2020, its online monitoring activities enabled the brand to intercept, block and remove 3 million illicit profiles from the main social media platforms worldwide and about 94,000 counterfei­t products were blocked and removed from online auction sites.

In 2021, more than 22,000 infringing products and pieces of illicit content were removed from social media platforms and more than 130,000 listings related to counterfei­t products were identified and removed from marketplac­e service providers.

Last year, Ferragamo carried out regular controls on physical stores launching several in- and out- of- court administra­tive and criminal proceeding­s, with a specific focus on China. Thanks to the increasing cooperatio­n from local authoritie­s, almost 450,000 counterfei­t products were seized worldwide.

Ferragamo has filed actions against hundreds of illegal websites through civil proceeding­s in New York federal court, and was recently awarded $2.8 million in damages.

Amazon launched the CCU in 2020 to help hold counterfei­ters accountabl­e through the courts and law enforcemen­t. This global team — which is made up of former federal prosecutor­s, former law enforcemen­t agents, experience­d investigat­ors and data analysts — pursues targets around the globe. Amazon's CCU supports law enforcemen­t efforts to bring justice to those attempting to sell counterfei­ts to protect customers, brands, Amazon's stores, and the retail industry.

 ?? ?? A Salvatore Ferragamo Gancini belt.
A Salvatore Ferragamo Gancini belt.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States