Yesterday morning police seized $1.25 million worth of clothing from the Polvos Azules shopping mall in downtown Lima.
Over 800 police officers and 15 prosecutors raided the shopping center in the La Victoria district just blocks from the historic city center. Mall security guards dumped acid on police in an attempt to prevent the raid.
Ultimately the police entered by force and filled 431 sacks with counterfeit clothing from 87 independent vendor stands. The most common brands imitated included Reebok, Nike, Tommy Hilfiger, Levi’s, Caterpillar and Dolce & Gabbana.
“They are clothes with luxury brands that are clearly being pirated,” said Arturo Prado, the investigating prosecutor who led the raid. “They’re going against the intellectual property rights of companies that pay taxes to the state.”
Prado added that the sellers of falsified clothing will be charged with violating intellectual property, a crime punishable by two to five years in jail.
In the first six months of this year, the SUNAT tax authority has seized $48 million worth of counterfeit clothing in Lima and Callao. On a national level, over 6,000 operations have yielded $89 worth of counterfeit merchandise.
In 1993, the Polvos Azules shopping center was built to house over 2,000 informal vendors who had occupied the original Polvos Azules market in what is now the Alameda Chabuca Granda behind the Government Palace.
Today 4,000 to 5,000 shoppers visit the 172,000 square-foot shopping center every day. The Polvos Azules association director Maribel Gutierrez says that over 90% of vendors are formal businesses which pay taxes to SUNAT.
Sources
Decomisan ropa adulterada valorizada en varios millones de soles en Polvos Azules (Andina)
Polvos Azules: quisieron impedir decomiso usando agua con ácido (El Comercio)
Polvos Azules: el centro comercial que nació en la calle (El Comercio)
Policía Nacional incauta ropas de marcas falsificadas en Polvos Azules (Correo)
Polvos azules el pueblo tiene su mall (La Republica)
View Comments (1)
I do not purchase these items as I am aware they are counterfeit and the business usually do not issue a boleta - thus do not pay taxes. I am concerned that security guards poured ACID on the police - this can not be tolerated! I hope they are duly punished and fined. What upsets me even more is all the stores that sell pirated DVDs. Keep up the good work - POLICE IN PERU!