U.S. Customs Seizes 1,578 Counterfeit FIFA World Cup 2026 Items in
Indianapolis Operation
Key Points Summary
·
U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers in Indianapolis conducted Operation Winner’s Circle
from June 1–5, targeting counterfeit FIFA World Cup 2026 merchandise.
·
CBP
seized 18 shipments
containing 1,578
counterfeit items linked to the FIFA World Cup 2026™.
·
If
genuine, the seized goods would have had a retail value of approximately $134,594.
·
The
confiscated items included:
o
530
FIFA World Cup 2026 jerseys
o
380
beanies
o
349
Puma, Adidas, and Nike-branded shirts
o
319
other World Cup-related products
·
Most
shipments originated from Hong
Kong and were destined for locations within and outside the
United States.
·
The
operation was based on intelligence analysis and previous trends related to
major sporting events.
·
CBP
stated that counterfeit merchandise harms sports organizations, deceives
consumers, and helps finance criminal networks.
·
Officials
warned that counterfeit goods often include low-quality or unsafe products such
as fake medicines, cosmetics, toys, electronics, and automotive parts.
·
More
than 90% of counterfeit
seizures occur through international mail and express delivery
channels linked to e-commerce.
·
CBP
urged consumers to buy from reputable sellers and report intellectual property
violations.
[ABS News Service/16.06.2026
With the
FIFA World Cup 2026™ in full swing, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers
in Indianapolis were on the job before some teams even arrived for their
matches. Officers conducted Operation Winner’s Circle from June 1–5, seizing 18
shipments of counterfeit FIFA World Cup 2026™ jerseys, shirts, beanies, and
other merchandise. In total, officers intercepted 1,578 items that, if genuine,
would have had a combined Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price of $134,594.
These actions protect American consumers and businesses from intellectual
property rights violations.
CBP organized Operation Winner’s Circle using intelligence
gathering and analysis of past trends before major events. The operation
focused on recipients who accept shipments of goods that violate intellectual
property rights of companies owning trademarks and copyrights associated with
the FIFA World Cup 2026™ and related merchandise. Similar operations across the
country have resulted in the seizure of thousands of items infringing on
intellectual property rights.
The seized shipments included 530 FIFA World Cup 2026™ jerseys,
380 beanies, 349 Puma, Adidas, and Nike shirts associated with the tournament,
and 319 other FIFA World Cup 2026™ related items. Most shipments originated
from Hong Kong and were destined for locations both within and outside the
United States.
“Sports fans often pay big money for sports memorabilia,” said
Indianapolis Port Director, Brett Mueller. “Counterfeit sports memorabilia
de-funds our sports organizations, funds criminal networks, and scams the fans.
Officers in Indianapolis work hard each day to protect our domestic businesses
and American consumers.”
The rapid growth of e-commerce enables consumers to easily
purchase millions of products online, but this access also gives counterfeit
and pirated goods more ways to enter the U.S. economy. Counterfeit commodities
fund smugglers and organized crime. Consumers often believe they are buying
genuine products but soon realize the items are substandard.
In addition to sports-related merchandise, commonly
counterfeited items include fake medications, perfumes, cosmetics, children’s
toys and costumes, fashion, jewelry, luxury products, and unsafe electronics
and automotive parts, which can pose serious health and safety risks to
American consumers due to inferior or harmful materials.
CBP reminds consumers to shop from reputable online sources.
E-commerce sales have contributed to large volumes of low-value, small packages
being imported into the United States. Over 90% of all counterfeit seizures
occur in the international mail and express environments, which are channels
for small, e-commerce packages destined for the U.S. Many of these shipments
contain counterfeit goods that pose the same health, safety, and economic
security risks as large, containerized shipments.
To learn more about what CBP is doing every day to protect
Americans from counterfeit goods, and more about the Truth Behind Counterfeits
public awareness campaign, please visit: https://www.cbp.gov/trade/fakegoodsrealdangers.
CBP protects the intellectual property rights of American
businesses through an aggressive Intellectual Property Rights enforcement
program, safeguarding them from unfair competition and malicious intent while
upholding American innovation and ingenuity. Suspected violations can be
reported to CBP here.
Intellectual property rights violations can also be reported to
the National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center at https://www.iprcenter.gov/referral/ or by telephone at 1-866-IPR-2060.