The best defense against fraudulent foods
Claims of bogus foods and beverages are rising. How can you best protect your restaurant?
August 22, 2012
Mark Partridge
In March 2012 the New York Times reported that FBI agents arrested a leading wine merchant on charges that he had sold more than $1.3 million in counterfeit wine. He was charged with mail and wire fraud.
As FBI assistant director Janice Fedarcyk explained, “the bad faith sale of any commodity you know to be a counterfeit, fake or forgery is a felony. Whether you are peddling a Picasso or a Petrus, a Botticelli or a Burgundy, unless it is what you say it is, the sale is a fraud.”
Obviously, no reputable restaurant would ever risk its reputation by knowingly serving counterfeit wine or other food products to guests. But the fact remains that food manufacturers and federal agents devote considerable resources to combating counterfeit products in the marketplace. Vanity Fair reported this summer on fraudulent high-end Burgundies sold to wine connoisseurs. Coca-Cola’s battle against restaurants passing off the wrong product is so well known that it spawned a Saturday Night Live skit.
While the willful sale of counterfeit products may lead to criminal charges, a restaurant’s potential liability on this issue is not limited to those charges alone. In fact, restaurateurs are potentially liable for infringement if they “knew or should have known” that they were selling counterfeit and mislabeled products.
Civil liability arises under various laws, including the federal laws protecting intellectual property. Willful violation of intellectual property rights through the sale of counterfeit products carries a hefty civil penalty with statutory fines as high as $2 million.
Yet another consideration is the irreparable damage to the restaurant’s reputation.
Counterfeit food products are turning up in the marketplace more frequently. Consider these recent examples:
• Interpol investigators have uncovered counterfeit candy bars, tomato sauce, fish and cheese bound for the U.S.
• Food and Drug Administration agents are seizing counterfeit olive oil and wine.
• Garden-variety tomatoes are being marketed as expensive heirloom tomatoes.