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Louis Vuitton wins lawsuit against Britney

Britney Spears French luxury goods company Louis Vuitton has won a lawsuit against Britney Spears. The company filed suit against the pop star for showing a pink Vuitton-upholstered dashboard in her music video for Do Something. The video shows Spears driving in a pink Hummer and tapping her fingers on a dashboard that resembles Vuitton’s ‘Cherry Blossoms’ design. A Paris civil court ordered Sony BMG and MTV Online to stop broadcasting or marketing the video and fined them 80,000 euros apiece, reports the Associated Press. They were also found guilty of violating counterfeiting laws. Spears herself was not fined or found guilty.

Check out the video here.

2 Responses

11.23.07

Only Britney did such stupid thing. Most of celebrities and rich people prefer shopping online to save time and for security reasons. I learned this from wealthy people I met through http://www.Millionairematch.com/photo/bloger All of them buy more online than on land.

11.23.07

LOS ANGELES, CA, Aug 14, 2008 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX) — A malicious prosecution lawsuit against Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior was filed today by downtown Los Angeles shop owners George and Marijeanne Antounian, charging the companies and their attorneys with bringing an unlawful lawsuit against them for selling knock-off products (Antounians v. Louis Vuitton et al, Los Angeles County Superior Court, Case No. BC396340). The malicious prosecution suit alleges that Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior, and their respective lawyers knew the allegations of copyright and trademark infringement were not true but continued with the litigation, ultimately forcing the shop to close and the owners to liquidate their inventory.
Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior hired a private investigation company, Investigative Consultants, in 2005 to determine whether stores on Santee Alley in downtown Los Angeles were selling counterfeit Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior wallets, purses and other goods. After nearly two years of investigations, the suit alleges Investigative Consultants wrongfully concluded that the Antounians, owners of the Bijou Palace at 1116 Santee Alley, sold fake Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior products. An investigation video showed the counterfeit transactions occurring at adjacent stores and in the alley itself but not at Bijou Palace.
“The Antounians’ store, Bijou Palace, sold only costume jewelry and was not in the business of selling purses and wallets,” says Sean Macias, managing partner of Macias Counsel, Inc. in Glendale and lead attorney representing the Antounians.
William Salle, co-counsel for the Antounians, says a member of the investigation team, Arianna Ortiz, admitted she provided false testimony in identifying Bijou Palace as one of the stores selling knockoff products. “Ortiz alerted Kris Buckner, president of Investigative Consultants, and lead counsel Janine Garguilo for Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior, of the errors in the investigation reports months before trial, but legal action still proceeded against the Antounians,” says William Salle. During trial in July 2007, Investigator Buckner testified that he never saw handbags, wallets or sunglasses or any Louis Vuitton or Dior items for sale at Bijou Palace. “These were the same items that the Antounians and Bijou Palace were to have allegedly sold,” says Salle.
“We understand the plight of companies as they try to protect their brand from counterfeiters,” says Macias, “but doing as they did in this case is unjustifiable. Maybe they wanted to send a message to would-be counterfeiters that they mean business. Instead, Louis Vuitton and Christian Dior succeeded only in destroying a small business.”
Co-counsel representing George and Marijeanne Antounian is also Armen Shaghzo of the law firm Shaghzo and Shaghzo.
Contacts:
Sean Macias, Esq.
Macias Counsel, Inc.
425 East Colorado Blvd. Suite 710
Glendale, California 91205
Tel: (818) 265-0025
Fax: (818) 265-0035
Email Contact

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