what's next ?!

Arno Tronche

Arnaud Tronche
Fake JC

Hundreds of bottles of fake Jacob's Creek have flooded the market in northeast London.

Havering Council are warning retailers to be extra vigilant after officers seized 340 bottles of the counterfeit Australian Chardonnay from 19 retailers across the borough.

Pernod Ricard, owner of Jacob’s Creek, launched an investigation after receiving a growing number of complaints from customers about the quality of the wine they had bought.

Over the past week, the council has been seizing counterfeit bottles from the shelves of drinks retailers and corner shops.

While the contents of the fake Jacob’s Creek is of ‘substandard taste’, the council has stressed the wine poses no health risk if consumed.

William Adams, chief Trading Standards officer at Havering council, said the bottles had been imported from China and were being sold at around the same price as genuine Jacob’s Creek.

He said the only obvious sign of fraud was the missing ‘A’ in the spelling of ‘Australia’ on the lower bottom back label.

Councillor Geoff Starns, in charge of Community Safety in Havering, said the authority had ‘moved very swiftly’ to get rid of the fake product.

He added: ‘We don’t want consumers to be ripped off by buying illicit wine and at the same time we want to protect jobs in local responsible retailers who suffer as a result of this crime.’
 
originally posted by Tristan Welles:
It must be asked, what standard does real Jacobs Creek rise to? How bad the ersatz bottlings must have been.
Maybe someone figured out a way to repackage all their premoxed white Burgundies.
 
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Tristan Welles:
It must be asked, what standard does real Jacobs Creek rise to? How bad the ersatz bottlings must have been.
Maybe someone figured out a way to repackage all their premoxed white Burgundies.
Why bother? The auction market continues to be strong for them.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Steven Spielmann:
Google shopping will tell you that it is under $10 per bottle, sometimes well under.
Interesting. Low margin, high volume fraud.
Just an Australian variation on the usual blending frauds that plague Italy and France.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Steven Spielmann:
Google shopping will tell you that it is under $10 per bottle, sometimes well under.
Interesting. Low margin, high volume fraud.

not the first time - if you recall, our british friends were telling us waitrose got hit with some fake
 
From The Sun.

I love that the labels were photocopied.

And the addendum about the wronged customers who were given reimbursement vouchers: "Some Tesco customers are not exchanging their Clubcard vouchers but flogging them for cash on eBay - and making up to a 400 per cent profit."

Perfidious Albion!
 
I want to know what you put in Yellowtail bottles to save money!

If I were arbitrarily wealthy I would refill a bunch of Gallo Hearty Burgundy bottles with La Tache and try to get them into stores.

Actually, Gallo should buy DRC, those bottles would look better with "Hearty Burgundy" on them. (Photoshop fun for tomorrow?)
 
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Tristan Welles:
It must be asked, what standard does real Jacobs Creek rise to? How bad the ersatz bottlings must have been.
Maybe someone figured out a way to repackage all their premoxed white Burgundies.
Why bother? The auction market continues to be strong for them.

ah, so then it's the other way around.
Now we know where all the real yellow tail has gone.
 
This may be a dumb question but how do these fake bottles enter the supply chain? Are they switching containers on ships and sending the real JC to China? I thought they were only interested in Laffite.
 
hb.jpg
 
Back
Top