Even if you buy a stolen car at a legit site and try to sell it later, then you are be charged with selling stolen property. And the women had responded with defiance and hot lawyers involved:
Lawyers in Germany had sent a letter to the woman about the listing, and she had replied: “I object and ask you not to harass or contact me any further. Feel free to file a lawsuit if you insist on the demands." An injunction was filed and the court found in the 'Wonderful Tonight' hitmaker's favour, with the woman then appealing the verdict, stating she had removed the listing after one day and that her late husband had originally bought the CD in 197 at a popular German department store. Gabriele lost her appeal, with the judge insisting it was irrelevant she didn't buy the CD herself. The court ordered her to pay both parties' legal fees, which totalled £2,889 and warned her that if she continued to list the disc for sale, under German copyright law she could be fined up to £212, 353 or jailed for six months. - https://www.kilgorenewsherald.com/eric-clapton-successfully-sues-over-bootleg-cd/article_2027f464-1a21-5e72-bcb3-ed10c86ce656.html
I myself would not sell such music.
Had Duane Allman not killed himself in a motorcycle accident, it's quite possible that Derek and the Dominos would have put Clapton in the HoF for a fourth time. Eric and Duane became close friends during the time together on Derek and the Dominos, and would have produced multiple albums.
It wasn't until I saw Clapton's Crossroads Guitar Festival in Dallas in 2019 that I gained a greater appreciation for his work. I fell in love with the Tedeschi-Trucks band, and their rendition of Keep on Growin'. Little did I know that was a Derek and the Dominos song.
Up until that concert, I was basically stuck around 1984. It hasn't moved that much, but my interests have broadened a bit. That's ok, I had plenty to listen to while stationed in Germany from 77-81. I passed what minimal free time by mixing cassettes from the 10-12 albums I purchased every month...brought home over 400 albums.
So a department store is the one responsible for selling bootleg CDs in the first place? What is their responsibility in this?
Did the woman’s husband (or she later) know that it was bootleg when they bought it?