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NPHC Sues Converse
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
African-American Sororities and Fraternities File Trademark Infringement Suit Against Converse Suit alleges that Converse gained at the expense of African-American groups and consumers Dallas, TX - December 17, 2003 - The Council of Presidents announced today that they have sued sports apparel company Converse, Inc. for trademark infringement and deceptive trade practices. "We were concerned that Converse, using unfair competition and infringing upon our groups' intellectual property, had deliberately and callously decided to target the members of our organizations for sales of its shoes without obtaining any sort of permission from our groups," said Helen Owens, Chair of the Council of Presidents and national president of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. The lawsuit, which has been filed in the United District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, maintains that Converse has been manufacturing, marketing, and selling athletic footwear, called the GreekPak, to members and supporters of African- American fraternities and sororities and that this conduct constitutes trademark and trade dress infringement, as well as unfair competition and deceptive trade practices. As indicated by Harry Johnson, national president of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., "the Converse shoes we're looking at contain the identical founding year and organizational colors as our respective organizations and was an obvious attempt by Converse to capitalize on the goodwill our groups have worked so hard to develop. This was no coincidence." The lawsuit charges that Converse has enriched itself at the expense of the African-American fraternities and sororities and the unsuspecting consumers who believe that Converse has permission from and endorsement by these African-American groups to sell these shoes. The lawsuit seeks damages for past acts of infringement, punitive damages, and requests that Converse be enjoined from continuing to sell these products without permission. Converse was purchased by Nike in September 2003. "This lawsuit will send the message to large and small companies that our organizations will aggressively protect our rights and will not tolerate anyone infringing upon these rights without us taking action. If any person or organization wants the right to market our intellectual property, they must come to us to discuss a license or endorsement agreement. If they don't, they may find themselves in court, said George Grace, national president of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. To be fair, competition has to be based on a level playing field - companies must compete on the basis of originality and according to the laws of this country. All we ask is that Converse play by these rules and stop infringing our rights." The Council of Presidents is comprised of the heads of the nine predominately African-American fraternities and sororities, which includes Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc., Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc., Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc., Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc., and Iota Phi Theta Fraternity Inc. The Council of Presidents represents the interests of the hundreds of thousands of its members, who are in fields such as medicine, law, professional sports, bipartisan elective offices, accounting, engineering, aviation, finance and banking, print and broadcast media, entertainment, sales, law enforcement, firefighting, communications, teaching, telecommunications, data processing, human resources, social work, etc. The Council of Presidents collaborates on matters upon which the National Pan Hellenic Council organizations share a common interest. The nine NPHC member organizations each have hundreds of chapters on college campuses and alumni chapters in cities across the world and are actively involved in programs that enrich the educational and economic lives of African-Americans. -Intellectual property litigation attorneys Aubrey "Nick" Pittman of Dallas, Texas (214-459-3454) and John S. Kendall of Chicago, Illinois (312-857-1997) represent the fraternities and sororities in the lawsuit. Contact: Helen J. Owens, Chair Council of Presidents 8800 South Stony Island Avenue Chicago, IL 60617 773-873-9000 >> |
A waste of time
I doubt if you can claim ownership of a color.
I doubt if you can claim ownership of a date or year. |
Re: A waste of time
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Re: Re: A waste of time
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So technically, if my great-grandma was born in the year of our LORD 1906, the org. would sue her because she used the trademarked number?!? :rolleyes: |
Re: Re: Re: A waste of time
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I have not had the time to read through the entire original post, but this is to support Sphinxpoet's argument.
If it were JUST 1906 or 06...then maybe I'd buy it [that a trademark lawsuit would not hold up]... ...or MAYBE if it was just black and gold then I would buy it... but 1906 AND Black & Gold...that's a pretty obvious trademark...especially within the community that they were catering. You can sell a shirt that says "1892" (or whatever the year is) and you can sell a shirt that says "AF"..but if your shirt says "AF 1892" then obviously you're going to be getting a letter, hand delivered to you by some lawyers. |
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Converse should've just asked; I'm sure a sweet deal could be worked out where a percentage of the proceeds would be donated to a particular charity |
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I can think of a great future monument that they're working on in Washington D.C. that could have used that money! |
Good luck to the NPHC on this! Hopefully this lawsuit can prevent this from happening to other organizations!
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Damn, Delt Sigs and TKEs should trademark 1892.... A&F would be gettin screwed on all their green/white or red/grey apparel. Those two orgs would be makin some fat cash!
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I don't know what the shoes look like, so I'm flying somewhat blind here, but here's my thoughts.
I don't believe "1906" and "06" standing alone can be trademarked. However, I did do a search on the USPTO website and Alpha Phi Alpha does have 1906 trademarked in conjunction with their name, as well as their coat of arms. Plenty of other fraternities and sororities (mine included) do the same--that's perfectly legal. If Converse is making shoes using 1906 AND Alpha Phi Alpha, and/or in the fraternity colors, there could be a trademark or trade dress issue there. The courts will use several different factors to decide if there was a violation or not, which I won't get into here. Long story short, Converse should probably have asked first. Situations like this are why I try my hardest to purchase items from licensed vendors. That way I know Alpha Gam is being reiumbursed; I don't want random people making money off my sorority affiliation without my sorority getting something in return. I know that sometimes that's easier said than done, though. |
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Was Converse started in 1906?
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It looks as though Converse was founded in 1908 as per their website
"Established by Marquis M. Converse in 1908, Converse is an American athletic shoe brand with nearly a century of authentic sports history and footwear innovation under its laces." taken from http://converse.com/zabout.asp |
You guys, the NPHC isn't stupid. If it was just that Converse was started in 1906 and happened to use black and gold to market a shoe, I doubt they would care (not to mention the fact that it sounds like Converse used ALL the organizations' colors and founding years, so we are not just looking at 1906 black and gold shoes, but 1908 pink and green shoes and all the rest). I don't think that any organization would sue without reasonable suspicion that Converse was trying to capitalize on the organization 's image and use it to sell their own product.
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