Protecting your brand demands more than legal action—it requires strategy, speed, and global reach. We deliver coordinated, technology-driven enforcement solutions to identify, disrupt, and eliminate counterfeit activity while preserving your brand’s integrity and market value.
At The Sladkus Law Group, our comprehensive anti-counterfeiting and brand protection practice combines legal expertise, innovative technology, strategic partnerships, and tailored enforcement plans to protect our clients’ brands and combat global counterfeiting. Counterfeit products tarnish a brand’s reputation and value and pose an ongoing serious threat to brand integrity and consumer perception.
For over twenty (20) years we have worked closely with our clients to address counterfeiters’ ever-evolving strategies – both online and offline – in order to police and protect valuable brands. From complex federal litigation to boots-on-the-ground investigations, our firm is committed to combatting the counterfeiting epidemic.
Our attorneys and anti-counterfeiting professionals combine extensive legal and practical experience with proprietary enforcement tools, proven procedures, advanced technology, and a broad network of domestic and international partners—including law firms, investigators, and law enforcement. Together, these capabilities enable us to identify, disrupt, and eliminate counterfeiting wherever it occurs.
Trademark counterfeiting is the most egregious form of trademark infringement, involving the unauthorized reproduction of a trademark on a product to deceive consumers into believing the product is authentic, when it is not.
Trademark counterfeiting causes financial loss to rightsholders and can endanger public safety. Frequently, the proceeds of counterfeiting are used to fund organized crime and promote exploitative labor practices.
Rightsholders can pursue civil and criminal remedies including court-ordered seizures, injunctions, and monetary damages.
No. All trademark owners are obligated to protect their marks by policing their brands so even the smallest companies should take basic measures to enforce their trademark rights.
Trademark cybersquatting is the bad faith registration of another’s trademark in a domain name and frequently goes hand-in-hand with trademark counterfeiting.
Rightsholders affected by cybersquatting can pursue administrative actions and lawsuits in federal courts to prevent and rectify the misuse of their trademarks in domain names and online.
If you still have questions, please feel free to contact us at info@sladlaw.com.
We’re here to help you protect what you’ve built. Reach out to discuss how our team can support your brand and business goals.