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Beijing police seize 41,000 fake iPhones in raid on huge counterfeiting operation

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Beijing police seize 41,000 fake iPhones worth US$19m in raid on huge counterfeiting operation


PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 28 July, 2015, 9:37am
UPDATED : Tuesday, 28 July, 2015, 9:58am

Reuters in Beijing

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Fake iPhones worth an estimated US$19 million were seized by police in Beijing. Photo: Sam Tsang

Police in Beijing have busted a factory that produced more than 41,000 fake iPhones worth as much as 120 million yuan (HK$152 million), including some that reached the United States, and have arrested nine suspects in the counterfeiting operation.

Apple is one of the most popular brands in China, where authorities have stepped up efforts in recent years to dispel the country's reputation for turning out counterfeit goods.

Officials have taken stiffer action to enforce intellectual property rights, pushed firms to apply for trademarks and patents and cracked down on fakes.

Police arrested nine people, including a married couple who led the operation, after a raid in May on the factory, run under the guise of a gadget maintenance shop on the northern outskirts of the Chinese capital.

The details were revealed in a social media posting on Sunday by the public security bureau in Beijing.

The group, headed by a 43-year old man, surnamed Yu, and his 40-year old wife, surnamed Xie, both from the southern hardware manufacturing city of Shenzhen, allegedly set up the Beijing factory with six assembly lines in January, the bureau said.

They hired "hundreds" of workers to repackage second-hand smartphone components as iPhones for export, it added.

Police seized 1,400 handsets and large quantities of accessories during the May 14 raid. In the United States, the newest Apple Inc handsets can fetch US$649, or more, depending on the model.

Beijing police said their investigation followed a tip-off from US authorities who seized some of the fake devices.

The destination of the counterfeit phones, and how many made it there, remains unknown.

Public security representatives declined to comment on Monday.

Apple also declined to comment, saying the investigation was ongoing.

It is not the first time China has uncovered plots to exploit the popularity of Apple products.

Bloggers in the southwestern city of Kunming discovered more than a dozen unauthorised brick-and-mortar outlets in 2011 that carefully replicated the interior decor, and even employee uniforms, used in genuine Apple stores.

The viral pictures embarrassed officials, who vowed to do more to protect trademarks.




 
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