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Home International Customs New Zealand

New Zealand’s borders customs seize fake goods

byCT Report
23/01/2017
in New Zealand
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WELLINGTON: The number of suspected fake products being stopped at our borders almost doubled last year as Customs deals with a surge in high-end fashion and electronic knock-offs trying to enter the country.

Customs intercepted more than 50,000 suspected fake items in 56 incidents between January and August 2016 well up on the 27,000 found during all of the previous year.

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Details released under the Official Information Act show staff seized an average of about 130 items a day over the past two years. Other goods breaching trademark or copyright laws included sports equipment and children’s toys, as well as high-end fashion items and electronics, he said.

“Recently we’ve seen more fake electronic goods such as wireless headphones, cellphone screens, cases and batteries, and even smart-watches.”

Counterfeit goods are different from those brought into the country through parallel importing, in which genuine goods whose manufacturers have met trademark and copyright laws are imported for sale at prices cheaper than equivalents made in here. The biggest single haul of 19,000 suspected counterfeit clothing items was from a shipping container at Tauranga, but Customs would not reveal details about what was inside it.

In Wellington, at least 168 items of counterfeit art, 488 pieces of furniture, and about 100 watches were seized in the past couple of years. Trade Me head of trust and safety Jon Duffy said it did not matter if sellers listed counterfeit items as copies, replicas, fake or pirated – the listings would be removed.

“You’d be pretty foolish to try to start a business selling counterfeit goods on Trade Me. You leave deep electronic footprints and we’d shut something like this down very quickly,” he said.

“The majority of counterfeit items listed on-site are done out of ignorance. We contact the seller to warn them, and that’s the end of the matter.”

Most common items included GHD hair straighteners, Nike footwear and designer-brand handbags. Intellectual property law specialist and AJ Park senior associate Matthew Hayes said rights holders could seek civil court remedies, including declarations that other goods were fakes, injunctions to stop people making them, and damages.

Maximum penalties were five years in prison or a $150,000 fine.

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