Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Fewer People Canal Streetin My Style

I love Mayor Bloomberg, but sometimes he gets it wrong, your bootlegs just got harder to get got:

It is a vibrant fixture of Lower Manhattan commerce. Tourists jostle for space at Canal Street’s stores and sidewalk kiosks, bargaining with vendors over sparkly watches, handbags and perfumes with fake designer labels that are sold at a fraction of the cost of the genuine item.

But over the past five weeks, like the goods that are not what they appear to be, undercover police officers and city agents fanned out and pretended to be real shoppers in an area the mayor called the “Counterfeit Triangle” — which roughly includes Canal, Walker, Baxter and Centre Streets. They picked up items that included a Prada handbag for $40; a Patek Philippe watch and a Rolex for $80, and two pairs of Dolce & Gabbana sunglasses for $18.

On Tuesday, 32 shops were closed down, a civil lawsuit was filed against the property owner — the estate of Vincent Terranova — and more than $1 million worth of counterfeit goods were confiscated as a result of the more than 40 undercover shopping sprees.

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg called the operation one of his administration’s “biggest takedowns ever” against the “easy and sleazy” money derived from counterfeit merchandise.

“Whoever you are, wherever you are, we are going to shut you down,” Mr. Bloomberg said at a news conference in the lobby of a Canal Street mall that housed some of the shops. Behind him were dozens of clear plastic bags stuffed with hundreds of seized counterfeit products.

Mr. Bloomberg said that the sales of counterfeit goods cheated the city of $1 billion in sales tax a year and led to money laundering and bloody turf wars. “It is organized crime,” he said.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

i want to get a hIphone on canal. i heard they got em.