The market trader, Gary Scrimshaw, who was caught with more than 11,500
pirated DVDs and CDs, was sentenced to two years in prison earlier this year for
breach of intellectual property.
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He was also ordered to pay nearly £51,931 within the next six months, or face
an additional eight months in custody, as a result of a confiscation hearing at
Derby Crown Court on Friday.
A raid by the Trading Standards 2006 found a huge haul of counterfeit
software, blockbuster films, chart CDs, and computer games with a street value
of over £600,000.
At the time Scrimshaw pleaded guilty to 16 counts of selling illegal discs,
including software from BSA members Adobe, Apple Microsoft and Symantec.
Najeeb Khan, vice chair, BSA UK member committee said: “We fully support the
actions of Trading Standards in taking this to the courts. It sends a very clear
message that the consequences of piracy can be severe and that serious offenders
will be pursued all the way.
“Mr Scrimshaw was not only robbing creators of intellectual property of the
rewards for their efforts, but also duping consumers and damaging the local and
national economies. Software piracy impacts directly on the amount of money
generated by tax revenues. Any money spent on Mr. Scrimshaw’s illegal goods was
certainly not being fed back in to the local economy and therefore was not
bringing anything back to those businesses investing in this area.”
Khan continued: “We urge consumers to purchase their goods from reputable
sources, and to seek advice from the vendors themselves if in any doubt about
the software authenticity.”
Research conducted by analyst IDC revealed a ten point reduction in software
piracy, currently running at 27 per cent, could create more than 13,000 new
jobs, £1bn in tax revenues and over £4bn in economic growth.
The trial of Scrimshaw follows ongoing investigations by Adobe and Trading
Standards.
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