INDIANAPOLIS —
NFL Super Bowl officials were hoping to score some major media attention with the arrest of a “web pirate” accused of illegally streaming sporting events over the Internet.
They ended up with news stories that led with Super Bowl-bound quarterback Tom Brady admitting he watched last year’s NFL championship game on an illegal website.
On Thursday morning, the NFL joined federal agents at a press conference at the Super Bowl media center in Indianapolis to announce what they said were “record-breaking results” of a sweeping criminal investigation aimed at counterfeiters of NFL goods and online pirates stealing NFL-copyrighted telecasts.
The federal investigation, dubbed “Operation Fake Sweep” led to the seizure of more than 42,000 phony Super Bowl items and the shutdown of 16 websites that illegally streamed major televised sporting events. It also led to the arrest of a 28-year-old Michigan man, Yonjo Quiro of Comstock Park, accused of operating nine of the 16 illegal sites.
John Morton, head of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, told reporters that international counterfeiting rings and foreign agents were responsible for violating NFL-branded copyrighted material.
“In sports, players must abide by rules of the game, and in life, individuals must follow the laws of the land,” Morton said. “Our message is simple: abiding by intellectual property rights laws is not optional; it’s the law.”
Shortly before Morton spoke those words, the New England Patriots’ Brady was at an unrelated press conference with Super Bowl sports writers.
Asked for his thoughts about the upcoming game, Brady said: “Last year, I was rehabbing my foot in Costa Rica watching the game on an illegal Super Bowl website, and now I’m actually playing in the game, so it’s pretty cool.”
The NFL didn’t include that quote in their daily news releases that recap players’ quotes. But Brady’s comment quickly hit the online editions of several New York newspapers, including the Wall Street Journal and the New York Daily News.
By midday, the Associated Press was leading its story on “Operation Fake Sweep,” with Brady’s admission that he’d viewed last year’s Super Bowl on an illegal website.
The NFL declined repeated requests for a comment on Brady’s comment, saying only: “We are vigilant about protecting our copyrighted game telecasts and continue to monitor and take legal action against those who infringe.”
During his press conference, Morton made clear that the violators of the NFL’s copyrights are the people who profit off fraud: the manufacturers and sellers of counterfeit goods and the web pirates who are stealing NFL telecasts and illegally streaming those telecasts over the Internet.
Morton said it was extraordinarily difficult to pursue those criminals because people too often saw the crime as victimless. He described intellectual-property thieves as “criminal parasites” who damage the U.S. economy and cost Americans jobs.
Morton said “Operation Fake Sweep” was launched in October 2011. He said multiple teams of federal agents worked with the NFL and various law enforcement agencies throughout the nation to identify illegal shipments imported into the U.S., as well as stores and vendors selling counterfeit trademarked items.
By Thursday, those teams had seized 42,692 items of phony Super Bowl-related memorabilia along with other counterfeit items, for a total take of more than $4.8 million.
An additional 22,570 items of counterfeit merchandise and clothing representing other sports leagues, including Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association and the National Hockey League, were also seized.
Those federal agents also shut down 307 websites. Sixteen of the sites illegally streamed live sporting telecasts over the Internet, including NFL games. The remaining websites were illegally selling and distributing counterfeit merchandise, Morton said.
Maureen Hayden is the CNHI Indiana Statehouse bureau chief. She can be reached at maureen.hayden@indianamediagroup.com.
State News
Brady throws NFL, feds curveball
Patriots QB watched illegal webcast of Super Bowl XLV
- State News
-
-
Hundreds pay respects to slain Indiana soldier
Hundreds of people turned out for the funeral of a northeastern Indiana soldier who was killed by enemy rocket fire in Afghanistan.
-
Allisonville Road bridge project in Indianapolis begins Wednesday
The already rough commute on the Northeastside of Indianapolis will only get longer this summer.
To complete a $19 million road improvement as quickly as possible, state highway officials Wednesday will close the Allisonville Road bridge over I-465 for up to 110 days.
-
Delaware County grandstand likely done by July
Delaware County says the show will go on this summer with new fair grandstand after it demolished the old one because of safety concerns found during an inspection prompted by the deadly Indiana State Fair stage collapse.
-
Fort Wayne officials give tax breaks another look
Officials in a northeastern Indiana city are taking another look at their policy on property tax abatement, which critics consider too generous but supporters contend is needed to attract businesses.
-
Police probe similarities in missing IU student
Police in Bloomington say they have contacted authorities in Louisiana about their search for a college student whose disappearance has similarities to that of an Indiana University student who has been missing for nearly a year.
-
Census: Hispanics boosting Indiana's small towns
Hispanics are fueling population growths in many small Indiana towns that are seeing their white populations shrink, census figures show.
-
Indy 500 in the books, but heat isn't a record
Fans sought shade under the grandstands and beneath umbrellas. Misting stations got a healthy workout. But Sunday's Indianapolis 500 won't go down in the record books as the hottest in the 101-year history of the race.
-
Rose-Hulman renames center for late president
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology is renaming its Student Innovation Center after late President Matt Branam.
-
Ohio casinos will cut into nearby states' winnings
The opening of casinos in Ohio this spring means the luck is running out for neighboring states that have pulled in an estimated $1 billion each year from gamblers who've been crossing the border to wager at riverboats in Indiana, gaming tables in Michigan and casinos in western Pennsylvania.
-
Dry spring causing concern for holiday weekend
An abnormally dry spring has farmers worried about crops and the Indiana fire marshal concerned about fireworks, cookout and bonfires sparking fires during the Memorial Day weekend.
- More State News Headlines
-
Hundreds pay respects to slain Indiana soldier


