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life coach organization customersThat decision earned Kim a "cease and desist" letter from a law firm representing Coach that accused her of selling counterfeit goods in violation of state and federal law. The letter threatened her with up to $2 million in penalties, instructed her to sign a statement admitting wrongdoing, and demanded she pay Coach $300.Now that letter and the removal of her eBay ad has prompted Kim to sue Coach for state Consumer Protection Act violations, defamation and other claims. market for counterfeit goods."If Coach wants to send letters threatening $2 million lawsuits against their own customers, they should at least do minimal investigation to see whether those claims are accurate," says Jay Carlson, one of Kim's attorneys. District Court in Seattle this week alleging violations of the state Consumer Protection Act, defamation, interference with her business relationship with eBay, and other claims. The lawsuit, which seeks class action status, claims that Coach's real motive in sending out the letters is an attempt to suppress the online sale of used items and force people to pay top dollar directly to the company if they want a Coach handbag.Nancy Axilrod, associate general counsel at Coach, called it frivolous."We strongly believe there is absolutely no merit to the allegations in the lawsuit and we intend to vigorously defend against the claims," she said.Last October, eBay deleted Kim's handbag ad after receiving a complaint about it from Coach. Kim said that at first she was just confused, but then she received the letter from Coach's law firm, Gibney Anthony and Flaherty in New