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Counterfeiting is Illegal HERE, I think, but is a little more relaxed around the world. Its a fake, more or less a kit car, which is why i don't know how it could be considered illegal. Especially since it is sold for budget and not in competition of the real thing. If they were selling the car for the same price as a real Ferrari, then you can claim they are sullying their names with a cheap inferior copycat. I see no foul here.
Why did the picture of the interior so remind me of a Pontiac Fiero?? I remember back in the 80's people used to use them for kit car-bases all the time.
Financial police officers posing next to a confiscated fake Ferrari car at an unknown location. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Courtesy of Italian Financial Police
Italian authorities bust car counterfeiting ring turning Pontiacs into Ferraris
Thu Feb 28, 4:03 PM
By Colleen Barry, The Associated Press
MILAN, Italy - Italian financial police have busted a ring of counterfeiters who built fake Ferraris and sold them for as little as $30,000 a car, officials said Thursday.
Authorities have confiscated 14 fake Ferrari Modena 360s - seven sold and seven under construction - in an operation reaching from Palermo to Milan, said Guido Geremia, head of the Palermo unit that led the investigation.
Investigators do not know how many of the cars have been sold in the past, but Geremia said the buyers knew the cars were fakes and were clearly seeking to impress unknowing neighbours with the sleek-bodied speed machines.
"That is the only reason," he said.
Eight people are under investigation, authorities said. The ring used mostly Pontiacs as their base, but also Mercedes and Toyotas, building a copy of a Ferrari body over the original car's engine.
"It was done very well - they were very skilled," Geremia said.
The financial police, who lead Italy's fight against the counterfeiters who cash in on the peninsula's reputation for quality in everything from handbags to prosciutto, launched the Ferrari investigation six months ago. Geremia said they were helped by Internet sites where the cars were offered up for sale.
The 360 Modena went out of production in 2004, and was priced at the time at $215,000, said Ferrari spokeswoman Mariella Mengozzi. The current suggested retail price by Italy's consumer auto magazine for a 2004 model is around $150,000.
Mengozzi said it is not the first time the Ferrari brand has been copied and that the automaker, which is owned by the Fiat Group, monitors websites for evidence of fakes.
"Ferrari is a product that maintains its value over time and of course we try to protect our clients who buy the real thing," Mengozzi said.
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