Amusing sensationalism, no?

-rick



From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2005 6:57 AM
To: undisclosed-recipients
Subject: *** PIRATED DISCS, DVDS BECOMING "THE NEW DRUG ON THE STREET"
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

November 15, 2005

PIRATED DISCS, DVDS BECOMING

"THE NEW DRUG ON THE STREET"

 
WASHINGTON-A fatal car chase on November 10 between a convicted felon in
Virginia wanted by authorities on several criminal charges including cocaine
possession yielded hundreds of pirated CDs and DVDs in the man's trunk,
giving rise to a new kind of traded drug, according to the Motion Picture
Association of America (MPAA) Inc's Dennis Supik.

 "A lot of people we were arresting had drug conviction backgrounds.
Actually, what they said was, 'This is the new drug on the street,'" said
Supik, an MPAA field investigator who assists local law enforcement in
anti-piracy raids.

MPAA investigations teams routinely uncover evidence demonstrating that many
of the gangs and syndicates involved in hard goods piracy are also heavily
involved in other forms of illegal activity such as drug dealing. In
September, Los Angeles police arrested Jose Maria Trujillo for possession of
six bundles of powder cocaine, an ounce of marijuana, and selling illegal
DVDs after a search of his car uncovered more than 2,000 pirated DVDs.
During the same month, Federal and local authorities in New York arrested
approximately 21 members of the violent Chinatown street gang "Yi Ging" who
were involved in DVD and CD piracy as well as narcotics trafficking, loan
sharking and other crimes.

In a 2003 testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives' Committee on
International Relations, Interpol Secretary General Ron Noble stated that
the global trade in narcotics is estimated at $322 billion, while the global
trade in counterfeit goods is estimated at $512 billion.

"Intellectual Property crime (IPC) is a lucrative criminal activity with the
possibility of high financial returns. It is also relatively low risk as
prison sentences tend to be light when compared to other criminal activity
such as drug trafficking," Secretary General Noble said in his testimony.

"We are aware that serious criminals are profiting from the illegal sales of
DVDs. These types of operations are supporting networks of drugs and other
criminal activity that we do not want on our streets," said MPAA Chairman
and CEO Dan Glickman. "The MPAA is working aggressively to root out piracy
in all corners of the globe so that unfortunate events driven by this
illegal activity are halted and the public is made safer."

Working with law enforcement around the world, the MPAA seized more than 76
million illegal optical discs in 2004. A federal interagency report
published that same year estimates that counterfeit and pirated goods,
including those of copyrighted works, cost the American economy $250 billion
a year. The MPAA estimates its member companies lost $3.5 billion last year
due to piracy of hard goods alone, not including losses from illegal
file-sharing on the Internet.

The MPAA and its member companies are tackling the major problem of piracy
with a multi-pronged approach which includes educating people about the
consequences of piracy, taking action against Internet thieves, working with
law enforcement authorities around the world to root out pirate operations
and working to ensure movies are available legally using advances
technology.

Read Interpol Secretary General Ron Noble's testimony titled The Links
Between Intellectual Property Crime and Terrorist Financing at
http://www.interpol.int/Public/ICPO/speeches/SG20030716.asp#1
<http://www.interpol.int/Public/ICPO/speeches/SG20030716.asp#1>

About the MPAA

The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) serves as the voice and
advocate of the American motion picture, home video and television
industries from its offices in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. Its members
include: Buena Vista Pictures Distribution; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios
Inc.; Paramount Pictures; Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.; Twentieth
Century Fox Film Corporation; Universal City Studios, LLP; and Warner Bros.
Entertainment Inc.

# # #

For more information, contact:

MPAA Los Angeles
Kori Bernards or Michelle Greeno
(818) 995-6600

MPAA Washington, D.C.
John Feehery or Gayle Osterberg
(202) 293-1966




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