counterfeit athletic shoes is said to employ more than a thousand workers.
Counterfeiting often plays a significant role in money laundering, because laundering always works best when there's a product involved. Authorities believe that the reason inexpensive items like correction fluid and trash bags are counterfeited is to wash money from other criminal activities like weapons smuggling and loan-sharking. Police using trained drug dogs have found heroin stuffed inside counterfeit Chanel and Louis Vuitton handbags. Criminals were doubling up, importing counterfeit products and drugs all at once. You have to realize, crime syndicates are business operations, and their executives sit around and make strategic decisions just like executives in Fortune 500 companies. One day, at the weekly marketing meeting, some guy probably spoke up and said, "Look, we're bringing in these counterfeit purses and we're bringing in drugs, why not combine the two? It'll be more cost-effective." The idea probably got him employee of the month.
The money is so good in counterfeit products, that terrorists are believed to often fund their activities by trafficking in fake goods. Terrorists in Northern Ireland are thought to have supported their violence by selling counterfeit veterinary products, perfume, video games, and computer software. The FBI believes the bombing of the World Trade Center was financed by the sale of counterfeit T-shirts and sportswear.
"MADE IN CHINA" MORE THAN YOU KNOW
Counterfeiters live all over, but a great deal of the merchandise originates in places like China, Korea, and Vietnam. China may well be the leading supplier of counterfeit products to the world, and just about anything the Chinese consumer buys is quite likely not real. You go to the store in China and there's fake Skippy peanut butter, fake Gillette razor blades, fake Knorr chicken soup, fake Hellmann's mayonnaise, fake Kellogg's Corn Flakes, fake Lux soap, fake Rejoice shampoo, fake Huggies diapers, fake fertilizer, fake liquor, fake motor oil, fake chewing gum, fake cell phone batteries, even fake toilet paper. The goods are probably rung up on a counterfeit cash register and packed in counterfeit grocery bags.
Procter & Gamble began selling its products in China in 1991, and that same year counterfeits were already on shelves. The soap company says counterfeiters make fraudulent copies of their shampoo bottles and fill them up with the cheapest blend of raw ingredients. Then they'll top off the product with a touch of the real shampoo to make it look and smell authentic. Each year, the problem worsens.
Royal Philips Electronics has said 40 percent of counterfeit Philips light bulbs in the Philippines come from China. Volkswagen said two-thirds of the car parts sold in China under its brand name are fakes. Hitachi has the same problem with counterfeit electronic products. The Chinese press wrote up some thieves who put together an entire car from used and counterfeit parts that they tried to sell as a new Audi.
China has begun cracking down on the problem, under pressure from foreign companies. But some pretty major cultural shifts have to take place. Local governments have been famous for protecting factories churning out counterfeit goods. Philips said that the prime counterfeiter in Zhangzhou in the Fujian province was even given an "outstanding youth" award by the local government.
All these cheap Asian fakes serve as fodder for all types of little scams. You know when you take transatlantic flights and the airline crews come around with little trolleys of duty-free items you can buy? Some dishonest crew members on British Airways figured out a way to augment their income. They bought counterfeit products like Raymond Weil watches, Chanel perfume, and Gucci sunglasses while on layovers in Hong Kong and Singapore. Then they substituted the fakes for the genuine products on the trolleys they wheeled around, and passengers unwittingly bought them. The crew members then sold the legitimate goods back in England to stores or on the black market. They would take watches to jewelers and tell them they had gotten them as unwanted gifts, and the jewelers would gladly buy them.
A big part of the problem is that most consumers don't care if something is fake, as long as it looks like the real thing and it costs less. And it's not just penny-pinchers who buy phony Gucci and Fendi bags. One counterfeiter said he had a steady client who was a neurosurgeon's wife. Some rich people, he said, buy fake handbags and luggage from him for trips, so they don't have to worry if they get stolen in hotels. Then they had the real thing