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Europe news: Italian police seize falsely labeled wine bottles

Bottles of wine falsely labeled as prized Brunello di Montalcino are displayed during a press conference in Siena, Italy, Thursday, May 29, 2014. Italian police have seized about 30,000 bottles of wine falsely labeled as prized Brunello di Montalcino, Chianti Classico and other premium wines. Siena Carabinieri Col. Marco Grandini said investigators were alerted to the fraud by consumers who recognized the impostors as "normal table wine." With a bottle of Brunello running some 30 euros ($40), Grandini estimated the fraud in the hundreds of thousands of euros (dollars). (AP Photo/Paolo Lazzeroni)

ROME (AP) — Italian investigators said Thursday they seized 30,000 bottles of falsely labeled premium wine from central Italy, after savvy consumers who realized that the Brunello di Montalcino they were sipping turned out to be normal table wine alerted authorities of the fraud.

Bottles of wine falsely labeled as prized Brunello di Montalcino are displayed during a press conference in Siena, Italy, Thursday, May 29, 2014. Italian police have seized about 30,000 bottles of wine falsely labeled as prized Brunello di Montalcino, Chianti Classico and other premium wines. Siena Carabinieri Col. Marco Grandini said investigators were alerted to the fraud by consumers who recognized the impostors as “normal table wine.” With a bottle of Brunello running some 30 euros ($40), Grandini estimated the fraud in the hundreds of thousands of euros (dollars). (AP Photo/Paolo Lazzeroni)

With a bottle of Brunello going for around 30 euros ($40), the fraud is estimated to be worth hundreds of thousands of euros (dollars), said Col. Marco Grandini of the Siena branch of the Carabinieri military police.

During a three-month investigation, authorities staked out restaurants, wine bars and grocery stores in central Italy which carried the suspect wines. Along with about 10,000 bottles of Brunello di Montalcino, there were also impostors carrying premium labels such as Chianti Classico and Sagrantino di Montefalco. A Sangiovese wine bore opera singer Andrea Bocelli’s label.

The head of the Brunello di Montalcino Consortium, Fabrizio Bindocci, said the wines did not originate from his territory, and that producers were the victims of fraud.

These were made by people who have nothing to do with this territory, he said.

Authorities are expanding the investigation to seize counterfeit wines in other regions of Italy. Some of the falsely labeled wines may have been bound for international markets, including the United States, they added. They did not immediately comment on who the culprits might be.

It was not the first time the Brunello consortium has wrestled with reputation damages to their respected brand.

In 2009, five Brunello producers were cited for mixing unauthorized grapes into their 2003 to 2007 vintages. By Italian law, Brunello must consist only of Sangiovese grapes.

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