In Case You Missed It! Minority Groups, Retailers, Online Marketplaces, and Manufacturers All Agree: Congress Needs to Pass INFORM

December 13, 2021

Media Contact: media@buysafeamerica.org

In Case You Missed It!
Minority Groups, Retailers, Online Marketplaces, and Manufacturers All Agree: Congress Needs to Pass INFORM


The Buy Safe America Coalition (BSAC); the Coalition to Protect America’s Small Sellers (PASS); and the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) sent a letter to Congressional leadership that voices support for the INFORM Consumers Act, citing how the legislation would be a first step in addressing the online sale of counterfeit and stolen products. The groups note that it is “past time” for Congress to update the nation’s consumer safety laws. 

In addition, the National Coalition of 100 Black Women, Inc. (NCBW); 100 Black Men of America, Inc. (100 BMOA); League of Latin American Citizens (LULAC); and Faith for Black Lives (FFBL) sent a letter to Congressional leadership urging lawmakers to pass the INFORM Consumers Act, which would make it harder for thieves to sell stolen merchandise online. In it, the groups point to the recent increase in street crime and its direct impact on communities — a pain that is felt directly through increased store closures and less access to affordable goods and services.

A full copy of both letters can be found below and can also be viewed on the Buy Safe America Coalition website

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LETTER #1

Dear Speaker Pelosi, Leader Schumer, Leader McConnell and Leader McCarthy:

The members of the Buy Safe America Coalition, the Coalition to Protect America’s Small Sellers and the National Association of Manufacturers want to express our strong support for the Integrity, Notification and Fairness in Online Retail Marketplaces (INFORM) for Consumers Act. This important bipartisan and bicameral legislation will reform our consumer protection laws to safeguard families and communities from the sale of stolen and counterfeit products, while also strengthening the ability of manufacturers, retailers and platforms to address criminal elements. We urge its quick consideration and passage.

The Buy Safe America Coalition (BSAC), the Coalition to Protect America’s Small Sellers (PASS) and the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) represent a diverse group of members that encompass manufacturers, retailers and online marketplaces large and small.

While there is not one single solution to eliminating organized retail crime or the sale of counterfeits, passing the INFORM Consumers Act is an urgently needed first step. The legislation requires sensible verification and disclosure requirements designed to disrupt the ability of criminal networks to build a business selling illicit goods online that competes directly with legitimate businesses and entrepreneurs operating both physically and online.

The INFORM Consumers Act is uniquely positioned to help protect consumers and legitimate businesses by increasing transparency online, making it easier for consumers to identify exactly who they are buying from while making it harder for criminal elements to hide behind fake screen names and false business information. The legislation has unified retailers, consumer groups, leading online marketplaces, small online sellers, law enforcement, manufacturers and other groups that are serious about stopping the sale of counterfeit and stolen goods sold online.

Our organizations agree that it is past time for Congress to modernize our consumer safety laws so that consumers, retail employees and businesses are not harmed by organized retail crime and dangerous counterfeit products. Implementing basic transparency and verification protocols is essential and will finally expose criminals who are selling consumers stolen, fake

and dangerous products. This legislation represents a broadly supported, actionable first step that Congress can take right now, and a plank in its continued legislative efforts to find effective ways to tackle the growing problem of both organized retail crime and the sale of counterfeit goods.

We appreciate your support and timely action on this needed legislation. We look forward to working with you and your staff to help protect communities, families, and consumers.

Sincerely,

Michael Hanson, Spokesperson, Buy Safe America Coalition (BSAC)
Chris Lamond, Executive Director, Coalition to Protect America’s Small Sellers (PASS)
Christopher Netram, Vice President, Trade & Domestic Economic Policy, National Association of Manufacturers (NAM)


LETTER #2

Dear Majority Leader Schumer, Senator McConnell, Speaker Pelosi, and Representative McCarthy:

For the past few months, community leaders have witnessed a disturbing trend impacting our families and neighborhoods—a dramatic increase in street crime. While crime and theft are not new problems, what is happening in many communities today is different from petty theft and property crimes of the past. What has taken root is organized and more brazen. What we are witnessing are not people stealing for want or hunger, these are orchestrated and coordinated attacks on local businesses designed to quickly steal thousands of dollars of products that can easily be re-sold online. This is organized criminal activity, and it is beginning to crack the foundation of our local business community.

As a result of these attacks, several retailers have closed their doors or shortened hours. Some political leaders have bemoaned these outcomes and attacked the retailers for making these decisions, but the reality is that no business—big or small—is going to invest in a community if they can’t keep their business or their employees safe. And what has been lost in the finger-pointing, is the impact on law abiding citizens in these communities. When stores close and hours are shortened in our communities, its often to the detriment of those who can least afford to lose conveniently located, affordable goods and services.

Local retailers and pharmacies are more than just a convenient place to buy food and medicine, they are important outposts for vital services like wellness checkups and vaccinations. We saw how vital these services were to our communities during covid, as local retailers made it their mission to quickly and safely vaccinate millions of Americans, especially those with pre-existing medical conditions and auto-immune complications which made them particularly vulnerable to
life-threatening complications from a covid infection and for those in socially vulnerable communities.

We cannot afford for these stores to abandon our communities, but neither can we expect these stores to stay open when their goods are routinely ransacked and their employees are threatened by marauding criminal rings.

When hours shorten, it impacts working families with busy schedules. When stores close, it often means longer and more costly transit to the next available option. And if the problem persists, it has a domino effect on the rest of the local business community. As any community leader knows, it can be tough to combat this trend if a particular block or corner becomes “undesirable”, and the impact spirals to the detriment of other small businesses nearby that depend on regular foot traffic.

This problem is complex, but there is a viable common-sense solution on the table that all policymakers should support to combat this trend: making it harder to build a business selling stolen products online.

Legislation at the state and federal level called the INFORM Consumers Act would make it harder to anonymously sell goods online. It’s simple legislation that would require businesses to provide basic, verifiable information to weed out crooks using online marketplaces to anonymously unload stolen products. In addition to making it harder to sell stolen goods behind fake screen names and bogus business information, it would have the added benefit of making it harder to rip off consumers by peddling counterfeit and knockoff products too.

How would online transparency impact Main Street businesses? Simple: Make it harder to sell stolen goods online, and you reduce the incentive and profit motive of criminal networks to steal. Criminals aren’t as dumb as some politicians like to think they are. If they have nowhere to sell stolen goods—or there is a much higher risk of getting caught—some of these career criminals will call it quits.

We’ve got to stop the finger pointing and start advocating for common-sense solutions to reducing crime in our communities. INFORM is one of those solutions, and it should have the support of every local business and community leader that cares about reversing the trend of stores closing and shortening hours in our community. The most vulnerable in our community that depend on these businesses are counting on us to act.

Sincerely,

Elizabeth A. Jones, National President, National Coalition of 100 Black Women, Inc. (NCBW)
Thomas Dortch, Jr., Chairman, 100 Black Men of America, Inc. (100 BMOA)
Sindy Benavides, CEO, League of Latin American Citizens (LULAC) 
Reverend Stephen A. Green, Chair, Faith for Black Lives (FFBL)

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The Buy Safe America Coalition represents a diverse group of responsible retailers, consumer groups, manufacturers, intellectual property advocates and law enforcement officials who support efforts at all levels of government to protect consumers and communities from the sale of counterfeit and stolen goods.

Discover More About the Coalition

About Coalition

About Coalition

The Buy Safe America Coalition represents a diverse group of responsible retailers, consumer groups, manufacturers, intellectual property advocates, and law enforcement officials who support efforts to protect consumers and communities from the sale of counterfeit and stolen goods.

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The Problem

The Problem

The marketplace today for common, everyday goods is flooded with counterfeit and stolen products. Absent reform, legitimate businesses, and consumers will continue to be harmed.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What constitutes a counterfeit product? Why aren’t major online marketplaces doing more? Answers to common questions around the issue of organized retail crime.

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