It is also the case of two young “entrepreneurs” from Moscow who managed to develop a real business by counterfeiting engine oil in four large abandoned storages. The business was even more blooming as they were also using cheap and illegal labor force, engaging illegal immigrants with no residence permits in Russia.
A thorough police investigation of Moscow`s so called “abandoned” storage from suburbs has led to the discovery of hidden “factories” used in counterfeiting engine oil, and then sold under the names of world`s largest engine oil manufacturers, like Shell, Mobil, Elf, Castrol, BP, Elf, Liqui Moly, and also engine oil for BMW, Volkswagen, Ford, Toyota, Mazda, Nissan and GM.
The factories were stuffed with oil canisters brought from Belarus and used as the processing place. The next step was filling up cheap plastic cans with the counterfeited engine oil, applying labels which perfectly imitate the legal ones. The caps of the cans were also looking exactly like the original ones. The equipment used and the entire labelling process can be seen in the photos below.
According to the police, the monthly income of the business war around one billion rubles, or the equivalent of 273.900.000 Moldavian lei. The fake Shell, Mobil or Castrol oils were to be sold to different auto parts shows in Moscow.
Below you can find a detailed photo gallery with their entire operation illegal and process, the equipment used in the labelling of the engine cans, or the poor living conditions of the illegal immigrants.
Nowadays, it is easy to imitate or counterfeit an original product than going through the exhausting and money spending process of creating a legal one. But if you play with fire, like these two chaps here, you definitely get burn.