Long Island woman busted for $40M counterfeiting operation
Counterfeiting operation busted
Knockoff designer items from Gucci to Louis Vitton, Chanel and Prada fill boxes now stacked inside an impound facility. Authorities confiscated the items from Linny’s Boutique in Plainview.
NEW YORK – A Long Island woman is accused of operating a store with counterfeit luxury products that would be worth $40 million if they were the authentic brands.
Lindsay Castelli, 31, of Smithtown, is the owner of Linny's Boutique on Old Country Road in Plainview.
Nassau County Police say the United States Postal Inspectors helped carry out an 18-month investigation that included numerous undercover buys. Detectives carried out a search warrant in the store on Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2022. The investigation was dubbed Operation Rainfall.
"It hasn't rained all summer long and it rained every time we went on a surveillance," Nassau County Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder said.
Lindsay Castelli is accused of running a $40M trademark counterfeiting operation out of her Long Island store.
Detectives say Castelli had thousands of synthetic heat-sealed counterfeit labels along with assorted clothing and jewelry in the store. They removed 22 printing press machines and various counterfeit items labeled as Gucci, Chanel, Prada, Dior, Ugg, and Louis Vuitton, detectives said.
"They would take a hat, a $3 hat, add a 50-cent item on the side," Ryder said. "They would heat seal it onto the hat and sell (the) hat for $300."
Ryder said they would take a $10 sweatshirt and put a Chanel logo on it to create a $5,300 product. She would use heat presses and printers to apply fake labels, authorities said. Turning a $10 sweatshirt into a $5,300 product
Nassau County Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder said that a Long Island counterfeiting operation would take cheap products and turn them into fake luxury items with steep price tags.
Get breaking news alerts in the free FOX5NY News app! | Sign up for FOX 5 email newsletters
They put the combined value of the items at over $40 million if they were authentic. Police claim the items were being shipped all over the United States.
Castelli turned herself in to detectives on Oct. 7, 2022. She is charged with trademark counterfeiting. She was released and is due back in court on Nov. 2, 2022.
No one answered the door at Castelli's home in Smithtown. At her store, a woman who identified herself as Castelli's aunt had no comment.
The shop's website says it is a family-owned business and "We stay ahead of the fashion trends to make sure you are always looking your best!"
"This wasn't a mom-and-pop operation — this was sophisticated," Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly said. Image 1 of 6 ?
Lindsay Castelli is accused of running a $40M trademark counterfeiting operation out of her Long Island store.