Justice Department Refuses To Give Up; Still Going After Peter Adekeye In Vindictive Lawsuit
from the please-stop dept
Wow! We keep pointing out how bills like Senator Amy Klobuchar's S.978 anti-streaming bill and Senator Patrick Leahy's PROTECT IP Act will be abused by US law enforcement, and we keep being told that those bills aren't "intended" to be used the way they could be. I think part of the problem is that people don't realize how the Justice Department and US Attorneys will sometimes stretch and twist the law just to go after someone.Last month, we wrote about the absolutely ridiculous case by the US against former Cisco engineer Peter Adekeye. The details have to be read to be believed, but most of it only came to light because a Canadian judge absolutely blasted both Cisco and the US Attorneys for what clearly appeared to be an unnecessarily vindictive criminal prosecution against Adekeye because he filed an antitrust lawsuit against Cisco, after Cisco tried to block third party companies (such as one of Adekeye's) from accessing necessary patches to service certain Cisco equipment.
The whole story was horrifying, but we thought it ended in May when the judge let Adekeye go and gave the Justice Department a pretty big slap for its actions. But... no. Slashdot points us to the news that the Justice Department has just unveiled a new indictment against Adekeye over the same issue: basically someone at Cisco gave Adekeye a login to download patches, and he did exactly that. This is not, in any way, a matter that should involve the Justice Department. The judge in Canada made that clear. The story about Adekeye shows the Justice Department acting for bad reasons -- either incompetence, corruption or malice (pick any two!). And you would think that someone there might think twice before pushing ahead with bogus prosecution against Adekeye (who's finally back in Switzerland after being stuck in Canada for a year), but that's not how the US works.
And this is why we get very afraid when Congress looks to pass broad new legislation that may impact criminal statutes and the kinds of things that US Attorneys can charge people over. I'd like to believe that US Attorneys are good people trying to stop and punish crimes, but we've seen too many cases where it appears that their actions are incredibly questionable. I'm still hopeful that it's just a few bad seeds among the ranks of US Attorneys, but if we keep seeing stories like this...
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Filed Under: antitrust, canada, extradition, immigration, justice department, peter adekeye, prosecution
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I have to question our sense of justice in this case. There's nothing honorable about trying to force a man through hell because he was given access by an employee to a mainframe.
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for url:
https://secure.www.techdirt.com/registration/?rPage=login&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.techdirt. com%2Farticles%2F20110808%2F11451215435%2Fjustice-department-refuses-to-give-up-still-going-after-pe ter-adekeye-vindictive-lawsuit.shtml%23comments&eRightsSessionExpired=true&forced=true
tr ying to track outgoing traffic Mike?
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https://secure.passport.mnginteractive.com/mngi/servletDispatch/ErightsPassportServlet.dyn?url=h ttp://www.mercurynews.com/crime-courts/ci_18618018?nclick_check=1&forced=true
Notice how it also starts with secure.*? I think it's some script on their side that's not checking parameters properly and just assuming the referral domain is the correct domain to tag secure.* on and try the rest of the stuff with.
Correct URL sans screwed-up server parameter:
http://www.mercurynews.com/crime-courts/ci_18618018
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Nope. Looks like something was screwy with the Merc. But nice of you to jump to baseless conclusions again. And you call me a conspiracy theorist?
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^TinFoil^ - for the conspiracy freaks
Troll [+/-] - for troll with [+/-] being community scoring for if they are or not. At end of week we find biggest community trollers
WTFISTEE - WTF Is that Even English (for Daryl et.al)
and last but not least
RTFANT - Read the Freakin Article Next Time
Maybe in a drop down if white space at a premium?
All those in favour.. (or favor if you're American) say AYE!
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Charge a British citizen with U.S. copyright infringement and want him extradited? Check
Seize the domain of a Spanish website declared legal, TWICE, in its home country? Check
Now, try and stick criminal charges on a man while he's in court proceedings in Canada and arrest him DURING the court session? Check
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More baggery?
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He did? I thought he was just saying that this is the type of unintended consequences that come from broad laws with unclear interpretations...
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For each of those three theories, there will be three additional theories at different layers of crackpottedness (think: 2nd shooter, grassy knoll, mystery gunman) that could be the real reason behind the law (or could just be someone theorizing about how messed up we as a people are).
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Don't you know which side your bread is buttered on?
Oh, wait. Not everyone is a corporate shill who benefits from a corrupt justice system?
/sarcasm
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^TinFoil^
Troll +
RTFANT
for your troubles (read previous comment for Legend)
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I don't understand the reason given
Who was deciding to accord status to Multiven? Was is Cisco? If so why would he need to give Adekeyes access to the site? Is this the site that preferred partners get access too? Was the employee showing Adekeyes what he'd have access to if he decided to become a preferred partner?
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Re: I don't understand the reason given
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Corporate Control
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Re: Corporate Control
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The law grants the government explicitly-defined powers over the liberty of its citizens. To handle that relinquishment of liberty in an irresponsible manner, granting the government more power than it needs to ensure the common good, is a straight path to corruption of a society and a need for revolution simply to take back the liberty owed to its citizens.
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LOL
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President of AFA
Fandom is criminal felony. Fair Use is a infringement felon's own word to steal properties. We will also require State and Federal government to install wireless surveillance cameras in residential homes in America and we will watch you and be sure you do nothing creative, productive, and/or infringe others work. We will put your child, you, your entire family in prison if we see one single drawing, one song, or one of anything you do in your house.
Our Motto is: Be a fan, Go to Jail.
So stay silent, don't do anything we don't like or you'll be labeled as a felon. No Job for Copyright felons.
Protect our Intellect Property, throw fan nerds and consumers who defy and falsely criticize our companies in jail.
Book em' and don't make them see the light.
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So those merely VIEWING content are not committing any crime under this law.
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