| Counterfeit
Goods Linked to Al Qaeda
From the Associated Press
WASHINGTON – From knockoffs of designer
Kate Spade handbags to pirated DVDs, Al Qaeda and other terrorist
groups increasingly are turning to counterfeit goods to fund their
operations, lawmakers were told Wednesday.
The global trade in counterfeit goods is estimated
at $400 billion to $450 billion a year, said Ronald K. Noble, Secretary
general of Interpol, the organization that coordinates information
among law enforcement agencies in 181 countries.
Noble did not have any figures on what percentage
of funds may be going directly into the hands of terrorists, but
he told the House Committee on International Relations that police
agencies are “seeing the connection between terrorist financing
and intellectual property crime.”
He pointed to counterfeit cigarette trafficking
by paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland and profits from counterfeit
CDs and other goods being funneled to Hezbollah in the Mideast.
Noble said some supporters of Al Qaeda have been
found with huge amounts of counterfeit items.
“If you find one Al Qaeda operative with it, it’s like
finding one roach in your house or one rat in your house,” he
said. “It should be enough to draw your attention to it.”
Larry Johnson, a consultant on counterfeiting
and money laundering, testified that sources of state-sponsored
terrorism are disappearing, leading terrorist groups to pursue
other avenues.
Committee Chairman Henry J. Hyde (R-Ill.) said that “should
make you think twice before buying that knockoff purse or a fake
CD.”
When asked how Americans might tell the difference
between counterfeits and the real thing, Asa Hutchinson—Homeland
Security undersecretary for border and transportation security—said
price is a good indication.
“If you’ve got a CD on the street
corner selling for a dollar, that ought to raise some suspicions
that maybe this is not on the up and up.” Hutchinson said.
Nearly half of the fake handbags, video games
and other goods seized in 2002 came from China, and more than one-fourth
came from Taiwan, he said.
Some of the fakes were showcased at the hearing,
including Levi’s jeans, batteries, extension cords and Christmas
lights.
Noble testified that, in general, law enforcement
around the world has not made counterfeiting and piracy a high-priority
crime. He said the focus is often on seizing the goods, and not
on investigating who might be receiving the profits.
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