The New York Post e-Edition

‘KILLER’S SAVIOR COMPLEX

By DEAN BALSAMINI and HELAYNE SEIDMAN dbalsamini@nypost.com

Canal Street residents are tired of fake news.

Three months after a massive NYPD sting netted as much as $2 million in knockoff designer goods, peddlers of faux Fendi and pirated Prada are out in full force again, locals griped.

“They just have no shame. They just take over the public sidewalk,” said one visitor to a three-block stretch of Broadway, off Canal, which is again blanketed with bogus Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior, Hermes, Chanel and Gucci handbags, along with belts, hats, jewelry and socks.

Recently, two dozen brazen merchandise hawkers were enjoying a brisk business while two uniformed police officers did nothing. And it was only noon.

“There are A, B and C grades of this stuff,” one seller told The Post about the quality of the fakes.

Of course, he deemed his wares “Grade A.”

At one seller, there seems to be an unspoken understanding with a buyer that the Chanels are a sham. They haggle about price.

A fugazi Dior tote bag was selling for $45. The real McCoy goes for $3,500.

Nearly 600 people have signed a petition supporting efforts to add more cops along Canal Street and the surrounding blocks of Church, Mercer Street, Lispenard Street and Broadway. “All passersby deserve to walk, live, and do business without harassment or aggressive solicitation, especially by those vending illegal counterfeit goods and unlicensed/controlled drugs etc.,” wrote the petition organizer, Raphael A.

‘A slap in the face’

“It’s a slap in the face to other businesswomen and men who go by the rules and it’s become very dangerous for pedestrians,” posted Patrick Valentino to the online petition. “I don’t begrudge someone making a living. I do when they do it at the expense of others.”

Echoed Richard Kurtz: “The crowds of people selling bogus stuff is totally off-putting and illegal and creates human pollution and makes walking on Canal Street intimidating and uncomfortable. The police have been useless in dealing with this problem which has been a factor in our neighborhood for years.”

This nothing-to-see here attitude by the cops on Canal is a far cry from just three months ago, when the NYPD trumpeted the qualityof-life takedown they called “Operation Bag Guys.”

“The money that is raised by the sale of these counterfeit goods are used to further other crimes throughout the city,” said NYPD

Deputy Chief Benjamin Gurley at the Aug. 12 press conference. “We will go wherever, and whenever, we need to go to stop these kind of crimes and furthering crime throughout our city.”

Wellington Chen, executive director of the Chinatown Partnership Local Development Corp., called the counterfeit comeback on Canal a “cat-and-mouse game,” adding, “It is déjà vu all over.”

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2022-11-27T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-11-27T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://nypost.pressreader.com/article/281642489184886

New York Post