Trending

Nearly $4.6M in fake jewelry seized in Kentucky

Fake jewelry seized in Louisville U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers seized three shipments in Louisville, Kentucky, containing counterfeit jewelry that would have been worth nearly $4.6 million if genuine. This fake Richard Mille watch, had it been authentic, would have been worth $2.25 million. (U.S. Customs and Border Protection)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers in Kentucky recently seized three packages within a 24-hour period containing a wide array of jewelry with an estimated value of nearly $4.6 million, had the items been genuine.

>> Read more trending news

The trio of interceptions began Tuesday at the Express Consignment Operation hub in Louisville, with a shipment en route from Hong Kong to a residence in Ontario, Canada. In the first shipment, inspectors discovered more than three dozen counterfeit watches – including 29 Rolex watches – that would have been worth a combined $1.11 million, the agency stated in a news release.

The following night, officers seized two packages containing counterfeit merchandise.

The first shipment contained 1,034 fake jewelry items that would have been worth an estimated $1.2 million, including the following:

  • 554 Tommy Hilfiger necklaces
  • 60 Rolex bracelet and ring combinations
  • 60 Bvlgari bracelet and ring combination
  • 60 Louis Vuitton bracelet and ring combinations
  • 60 Cartier bracelet and ring combinations
  • 60 Versace bracelet and ring combinations
  • 60 Hermes bracelet and ring combinations
  • 120 Gucci bracelet and ring combinations

According to the agency, the shipment originated in Hong Kong and was en route to a business in Miami, Florida.

Later that same night, CBP officers found a parcel containing a single Richard Mille watch that, had it been genuine, would have been worth more than $2.25 million, the agency stated.

“CBP is responsible for enforcing nearly 500 U.S. trade laws and regulations on behalf of 49 other federal agencies. CBP officers play a critical role in the nation’s efforts to keep unsafe counterfeit and pirated goods from harming the American public,” LaFonda D. Sutton-Burke, director of field operations for the agency’s Chicago Field Office, said in a prepared statement.

0