Logan Paul is dealing with a lawsuit over copyright violation claims by the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee.
In a lawsuit filed in america District Courtroom for the District of Colorado on Friday, the Olympic Committee alleged that YouTube stars Paul and KSI’s vitality drink firm, PRIME, had been utilizing trademarked symbols and phrases as a part of a latest promotion that includes NBA star and 2024 U.S.A. males’s basketball group member Kevin Durant.
The lawsuit seeks the entire earnings that Prime derived from merchandise that infringed on Olympic emblems in addition to “hundreds of thousands of {dollars}” in damages to be decided at trial.
The phrases included “Olympic,” “Olympian,” “Crew USA,” and Going for Gold,” in accordance with the lawsuit.
The swimsuit pointed particularly to a Prime Hydration drink that featured Durant, the star ahead for the Phoenix Suns, who’s making an attempt to win his fourth gold medal this summer season as a member of the U.S. Olympic basketball group.
The US Olympic Committee is suing Prime vitality, the hydration drink firm by Logan Paul and KSI
They declare the limited-edition Kevin Durant bottles characteristic trademarked Olympic phrases and symbols pic.twitter.com/FBYrUwMXqJ
— Frontier (@FrontierRise) July 22, 2024
On July 10, an Olympic Committee lawyer contacted Prime and requested the corporate to cease utilizing these emblems, the lawsuit stated. Nevertheless, the corporate continued to ship the drink to shops and have the drink on its LinkedIn account after receiving that warning, the swimsuit acknowledged.
“Prime Hydration’s conduct has been and continues to be willful, deliberate, and in unhealthy religion, with malicious intent to commerce on the goodwill of the USOPC and the IOC,” the lawsuit acknowledged, including that the corporate has precipitated “harm and irreparable harm” to the USOPC.
The committee, which is answerable for supporting Crew USA athletes via coaching and funding, additionally acknowledged within the lawsuit that it relied closely on licensing its emblems to fund the U.S. Olympic Crew, because it doesn’t obtain monetary help from the federal authorities.
“First off, anybody can sue anybody at any time; that doesn’t make the lawsuit true,” Paul stated in a TikTok video in April. “And on this case, it’s not… one particular person performed a random research and has offered zero proof to substantiate any of their claims.”