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Tens of thousands of fake football shirts worth £5m seized ahead of new season
Tens of thousands of fake football shirts worth £5m seized ahead of new season

Yahoo

time06-08-2025

  • Yahoo

Tens of thousands of fake football shirts worth £5m seized ahead of new season

Police have seized more than 67,000 fake football kits ahead of the new season. As part of an operation involving the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU), the Intellectual Property Office (IPO), Border Force and Trading Standards, a number of raids have taken place across the country since January 2025. The raids resulted in seven people being arrested - including one person from Greater Manchester. READ MORE: UK households urged to sprinkle chilli powder across gardens in August READ MORE: 'It was just banter... I have a husband': Care worker tells court she 'didn't want love bite' off boy If genuine, the seized merchandise would have been worth a massive £5.1 million, the City of London Police said. Officers from PIPCU arrested five people for the sale of counterfeit goods in Bolton, Nottingham, Shrewsbury, Burton-on-Trent and Leek in June and July 2025. All those arrested have since received conditional cautions, which order them to stop selling counterfeit goods and take down their online sales platforms, police said. Det Chf Insp Emma Warbey, from the PIPCU, said: "Criminals are continuing to bring counterfeit products to the market as the new football season approaches. "Some consumers believe they're buying genuine merchandise; some end up with a poor-quality product, and counterfeiting is thought to be the second largest source of criminal income worldwide, second only to illegal drugs. "An issue of this scale demands a coordinated response, and we'll continue to work with our law enforcement, government and industry partners to crack down on this illegal trade and those who drive it." On 26 June, West Yorkshire Trading Standards and the IPO seized around 2,300 fake football shirts during two search warrants in Leeds and Bradford. Two men, aged 37 and 44, were arrested on suspicion of selling counterfeit goods and money laundering offences. They have since been released under investigation. A further 2,793 items were seized by Border Force agents at East Midlands Airport during the UEFA Women's Euros. The IPO's Deputy Director of Intelligence and Law Enforcement, Kate Caffery said: "As fans rally behind their teams for the new Premier League season, criminal organisations are exploiting their passion by flooding the market with fake merchandise. "The manufacturing and distribution of counterfeit football kits is anything but a victimless crime – it channels money away from the game and directly into the pockets of serious crime. "Counterfeit trading destroys tens of thousands of jobs annually and has a strong link to other serious criminal activities – from drug trafficking to human trafficking and modern slavery. "By raising public awareness and helping supporters make informed choices, we can ensure that fans' loyalty truly benefits the sport they cherish and help combat this threat to our communities." Adam Chatfield, Assistant Border Force Director for Birmingham and East Midlands Airports added: "Border Force officers play a crucial role in protecting UK consumers and legitimate businesses by intercepting counterfeit goods before they reach the market. "Counterfeit goods are worse than just poor-quality products - they often fund serious organised crime and are manufactured without regard for safety standards or workers' rights. "By stopping these items at the border, we're not only protecting consumers from potentially dangerous products but also disrupting the criminal networks that profit from this illegal trade."

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