

Secretary
Chertoff and ICE assistant Julie
Myers
at opening of the International
Intellectual Property Rights
Coordination Center on July 10
(DHS Photo/Lutz)
New
National Intellectual Property
Rights Coordination Center Opens
in Virginia
Departments of Homeland Security,
Justice and Commerce and Postal
Inspection Service open command
post to take joint action against
counterfeiters
July 13, 2008
WASHINGTON, DC -- The
U.S. Department of Homeland
Security announced today the
opening of a new high-tech
National Intellectual Property
Rights Coordination Center (IPR
Center) in Northern Virginia that
will help maximize member
agencies' authorities and
resources to counter the global
threat of intellectual property
rights violations.
"Intellectual property
rights crimes are increasing in
volume and complexity, costing
legitimate companies and their
hard-working employees billions
in irreplaceable revenue,"
said Homeland Security Secretary
Michael Chertoff. "These
crimes threaten the health and
safety of American consumers, and
put illicit funds in the hands of
criminals here as well as unknown
recipients overseas. This center
will fuse federal resources and
promote partnerships with
industry in new and powerful ways
to protect American business and
consumers from falling victim to
dangerous and illicit
goods."
The center will host the
restructured partnership of its
components, U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) and
U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, with the Department
of Commerce, Health and Human
Services' Food and Drug
Administration, the Department of
Justice's Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the U.S. Postal
Inspection Service to combat
counterfeiting and trademark
piracy.
"Intellectual property is
one of America's most precious
assets," said U.S. Secretary
of Commerce Carlos M. Gutierrez.
"The Bush Administration has
recognized the critical task of
protecting intellectual property
both domestically and
internationally. This new IPR
Center is just another example of
this Administration stepping-up
the fight against counterfeiting
and piracy."
DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff
and Commerce Secretary Carlos M.
Gutierrez joined business
leaders, members of Congress and
law enforcement officials to
dedicate the new facility in
Crystal City, Va., and to explain
how this state-of-the-art center
will function. The ICE-led IPR
Center co-locates, for the first
time, the regulators and law
enforcement agencies that work to
protect public safety and
national security by stopping the
importation of counterfeit,
substandard and tainted products
and the theft of intellectual
property.
"Private sector rights
holders - across industries,
across regions, and even among
competitors - will unanimously
agree that the fight against IP
crime cannot be won in
isolation," said Keith
Williams, president and CEO for
Underwriters Laboratories, one of
the world's leading product
safety testing and certification
organizations, who took part in
the ceremony. "The Center is
perfectly positioned to build
global partnerships capable of
achieving exponential success in
our collective battle against
counterfeiting while fostering
innovation, encouraging
investment in research and
development, and ultimately
protecting the health and safety
of consumers."
Since 2000, the IPR Center has
been the federal government's
central point of contact in the
fight against IPR violators.
Under the new structure, and in
the state-of-the-art facility,
partners will employ a task force
model to more effectively use
authorities and resources to
attack this international
problem.
The agencies will jointly manage
investigative leads,
investigations and operations and
head off conflicts in enforcement
activity. In addition, they will
strategically reach out
nationally and internationally to
train other law enforcement at
every level about investigative
best practices, to broaden
intellectual property protection
and to expand transnational
enforcement capabilities. For
international law enforcement
agencies, the IPR Center will
serve as a one-stop shop for
partnering with the U.S.
government to dismantle the
criminal enterprises behind the
flow of counterfeit items.
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