The
European Union's General Court in Luxembourg agreed with a
complaint by the Italian government that it was immoral to trade
on the name of a "criminal organization" whose "activities
breach the very values on which the EU is founded".
The judgment, which can be appealed to the European Court of
Justice, found that the EU Intellectual Property Office was
right to accept Italy's demand in 2015 to cancel a 10-year-old
trademark held by La Mafia Franchises of Madrid, which runs a
national chain offering pizzas, pasta and other Italian cuisine.
Rejecting the company's arguments about alluding to "The
Godfather" films, the judges said it was not right to grant
legal protection to the slogan "La Mafia se sienta a la mesa" --
"The Mafia's at the table" in Spanish -- because it "promoted"
an organization known for extortion, corruption and murder.
Italy, plagued by the Sicilian crime network for decades, had
said the trademark was contrary to "morality". The court
decision does not prevent the firm from using the slogan, but
means it can't rely on trademark protection to stop others from
using it without permission.
(Reporting by Samantha Koester in Brussels; Editing by Alastair
Macdonald and Peter Graff)
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