Saturday, May 8, 2010

Traffickers in Counterfeit Cisco Networking Hardware Taken Down by Feds

Via eWeek.com -

A 49-year-old man has become the latest person brought down by a federal investigation targeting people trafficking in counterfeit Cisco network hardware.

"Ehab Ashoor, 49 ... [of] Sugarland, Texas, was sentenced in the Southern District of Texas to 51 months in prison and ordered to pay $119,400 in restitution to Cisco Systems, the Department of Justice said in a May 6 news release. Ashoor was found guilty Jan. 22 of purchasing counterfeit Cisco GBICs (Gigabit Interface Converters) "from an online vendor in China with the intention of selling them to the U.S. Department of Defense for use by U.S. Marine Corps personnel operating in Iraq. The computer network for which the GBICs were intended is used by the U.S. Marine Corps to transmit troop movements, relay intelligence and maintain security for a military base west of Fallujah, Iraq," the DOJ said.

[...]

Dubbed Operation Network Raider, the investigation resulted in "more than 700 seizures of counterfeit Cisco network hardware and labels with an estimated retail value of more than $143 million. ... Nine individuals are facing trial and another eight defendants are awaiting sentencing."

Ashoor is not the first person to be sentenced because of the investigation. In January, "Yongcai Li, 33, a resident of China, was sentenced to 30 months in prison and ordered to pay $790,683 in restitution to Cisco Systems as a result of his conviction for trafficking in counterfeit Cisco products ... while doing business as Gaoyi Tech, a company located in Shenzhen, China. Li procured counterfeit Cisco products in China in response to orders and then shipped the products to the United States. Li was arrested by FBI agents in January 2009 while visiting Las Vegas," the DOJ said.

"During the last four years as part of Operation Network Raider and [a separate investigation called Operation] Cisco Raider, the FBI has executed 36 search warrants seizing counterfeit network components with an estimated retail value of more than $7 million," the DOJ continued.

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