Mexican
Raids Net
15,000
Counterfeit
Nintendo
Products
Aug. 17,
2007
Mexican
authorities
conducted
raids today
against 12
alleged
distributors
of
counterfeit
Nintendo®
products in
a major "fayuca"
(contraband)
market in
Guadalajara.
Authorities
seized
15,000
counterfeit
Nintendo
products,
including
4,500
counterfeit
Wii™ game
discs.
The
Guadalajara
raids follow
other
Nintendo
actions in
Mexico
during the
past few
months. Last
month,
Nintendo
worked with
customs
agents to
stop a
shipment of
more than
5,500
counterfeit
Nintendo
products
entering
Manzanillo,
exported
from China.
Prior to
that,
Nintendo
assisted
local
authorities
in a raid of
the San Juan
de Dios
market in
Guadalajara,
where 23
stores were
shut down
and more
than 56,000
counterfeit
Nintendo
products
were
confiscated,
including
11,000
counterfeit
Wii discs.
"Mexico is
Nintendo's
largest
market in
Latin
America,
where the
problem of
video game
piracy is
widespread,"
said Jodi
Daugherty,
Nintendo of
America's
senior
director of
anti-piracy.
"Since
January,
Nintendo has
worked with
law
enforcement
agencies
worldwide to
seize
100,000
counterfeit
Wii games."
Earlier this
month, U.S.
Immigrations
and Customs
Enforcement
agents
executed 32
federal
search
warrants in
16 states as
part of an
investigation
into the
alleged sale
and
distribution
of illegal
Wii
modification
chips
designed to
circumvent
the security
embedded in
the hardware
and allow
users to
play
counterfeit
Wii
software.
Nintendo and
its
developers
and
publishers
lost an
estimated
$762 million
in sales in
2006 due to
piracy of
its
products.