mandag den 4. august 2014

Billige Nike free factories



Two former Nike employees and a Florida shoe collector have been indicted on federal charges after authorities say they worked together for several years to steal and sell hundreds of limited-edition company sneakers.

A federal grand jury indicted Jason M. Keating, Kyle K. Yamaguchi and Tung W. Ho Wednesday on charges of conspiracy to transport, receive and sell stolen goods, court records show. Ho also faces counts of wire fraud, Yamaguchi is also accused of interstate transportation of stolen goods and Keating faces an additional receipt of stolen goods charge.

The federal charges come after Billige Nike free sued Ho, Yamaguchi, Keating, Yamaguchi's wife and another ex-employee in April to recover losses from the unsanctioned sneaker sales. Keating was arrested earlier that month on a charge of receipt of stolen property in connection with this case.
Keating, 35, of Fort Myers, Fla., is scheduled for a July 16 appearance in U.S. District Court in Portland, court records show. He is the only person who has been arrested in this case.

Nike alleges in its lawsuit that the three men were involved in a scheme that stretched from 2006 to 2014 in which Yamaguchi and Ho ordered promotional and sample shoes from Billige Nike free factories for themselves, then later sold shoes to Keating, who then resold the footwear.

Keating is accused of selling the sneakers to small businesses in Oregon, California, Florida, New York and New Jersey.

Yamaguchi and Ho agreed to work together to sell the rare Billige Nike free sneakers in 2012, according to a federal indictment filed Wednesday. Between September 2012 and March 2014, Keating paid Yamaguchi nearly $680,000 for more than 630 pairs of allegedly stolen Nike shoes, the indictment said.

Promotional and sample products consist of items usually made for an athlete, team, celebrity or other influential people and in some cases never become retail products. Federal investigators say individual pairs of the rare Nike sneakers could be sold for prices ranging from $1,000 to more than $20,000 among shoe collectors.

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