However, since a very quick examination of the box reveals spelling mistakes that are revealing as to the non-Intel origin of the boxes, reporting them as "Demo Boxes" was a bad move. It might have been a message from D&H they passed along (But should have verified, since they had a huge scandal developing on their hands and probably had a few of those boxes on-hand, as well), or it could've been an overzealous marketing representative who thought it was a clever way to try and minimize the damage (And failed miserably), but this is not the behavior expected from the "best E-tailer to get computer parts from in the US".
Since when do demo boxes have to come from Intel?
It isn't entirely unheard of to get a 3rd party to make realistic looking demo products. You ever been in a store and seen those fake boxes on the shelves, with tags that say "bring box to counter for real product". I've seen plenty of very bad demo boxes.
And really, if D&H told newegg that they were demo boxes they had made up for another customer to display in their store, that is a plausable thing. I'd certainly accept it an move on, because there are bigger things to worry about.
I don't understand why someone would make a conterfeit and then attempt to pass them off through the Intel distribution chain. Criminals don't leave such obvious footsteps. Wouldn't there be a better chance flogging this via online auctions or dodgy web sites?
Because if you replace what you steal with something that looks real, you are less likely to be caught instantly. Someone along the distribution chain likely swapped the fakes for the real products, and because they looked real enough, no one noticed.
I mean, do people really think the people shipping the processors, and packing them up in newegg's warehouse are reading the backs of the boxes looking for spelling mistakes before boxing the product up?