TROY L. NUNLEY, District Judge.
Plaintiff UL LLC ("UL"), and Defendant John E. Powell, Jr. ("Powell"), through their respective counsel of record, have agreed to enter into a stipulated Consent Decree and Permanent Injunction in conjunction with their Settlement Agreement.
This order is made with reference to the following facts, which Powell admits:
(a) UL is the owner of the famous UL-in-a-circle certification mark, and variations thereof, in the United States and abroad, including UL® (stylized) (Reg. No. 782,589), UL® (stylized) (Reg. No. 2,391,140), and UL® (Reg. No. 4,201,014), among other trademark registrations (collectively, the "UL Marks"). The UL Marks are valid, famous, incontestable, and enforceable.
(b) Sturgeon Services International, Inc. ("SSI") and Engineered Well Services International Inc. ("EWS") need flame retardant clothing for their line of work. Beginning in at least 2012, Sturgeon and EWS began investigating purchasing flame retardant clothing from Powell's girlfriend, Rebecca Rynders (aka Rebecca Zhu) and her company Zimpex Inc. (collectively, "Zimpex"). At that time, Powell was CEO of both Sturgeon and EWS and an owner of EWS, and directed Sturgeon and EWS employees to purchase flame retardant clothing from Zimpex, although John Powell knew that Zimpex had never imported or sold flame retardant garments before. Sturgeon, EWS and Powell knew that such clothing needs to comply with NFPA 2112, the safety standard that governs flame retardant uniforms.
(c) In January 2014, a laundry vendor provided a written report pointing out that the garments provided by Zimpex did not comply with NFPA 2112, and were not certified by a testing company, such as UL. The Sturgeon and EWS employees who received the report shared it with Powell, who directed the employees
(d) In or around March of 2014, Zimpex provided Sturgeon and EWS what was claimed to be a certificate proving that the garments were UL-certified. Chad Givens, an employee of Sturgeon and EWS, compared the certificate to the information in UL's online product certification directory, and noticed that the certificate Zimpex had provided appeared to list an entirely different manufacturer than the one listed in UL's online directory. Chad Givens informed Powell that the UL certificate provided by Zimpex did not match the information on UL's online product certification directory, and that he had doubts about whether the garments had been tested and certified by UL.
(e) In or around March of 2014, Powell directed Sturgeon and EWS to purchase approximately $70,000 worth of Zimpex products. When the products arrived, the products delivered by Zimpex had labels which claimed that the products had been certified by UL as complying with NFPA 2112. The labels, however, had obvious misspellings, such as the phrase "FLAM RETARDANT" instead of "FLAME RETARDANT." The labels also listed "Zimpex Inc." as the manufacturer. EWS distributed these garments to EWS employees. Danielle Broussard, an employee of Sturgeon, noticed that Zimpex was not listed in UL's online certification directory, and promptly brought this to the attention of Powell.
(f) In or around June 2014, while under Powell's leadership, and at Powell's direction, Sturgeon and EWS made another purchase of purported flame resistant garments from Zimpex, totaling over $300,000. In or about November 2014, Sturgeon purchased an additional $30,000 worth of purported flame resistant products from Zimpex. All of these products purchased in 2014 listed "Zimpex Inc". as the manufacturer and had labels which claimed that the products had been certified by UL. Some of the garments purchased from Zimpex were used by Sturgeon's employees.
The parties have entered into a settlement agreement, and as part of that settlement agreement have stipulated to this Consent Decree and Permanent Injunction. The Court has reviewed and considered, and hereby approves, the stipulated Consent Decree and Permanent Injunction.
It is hereby
It is hereby
Nothing in the Order shall prohibit Powell, and his respective agents, employees, and attorneys, and all others in active concert or participation therewith, from distributing, selling, or offering to sell products bearing genuine UL Marks.