New Zealand's High Court Steps Into Extradition Fight Over Kim Dotcom
from the not-so-simple dept
As the Justice Department continues to pretend there's nothing strange at all about its highly questionable tactics in shutting down Megaupload and having its executives arrested, the courts are still struggling with the details. A few weeks back, we noted that a judge in New Zealand rejected the US's demand that New Zealand merely rubberstamp an extradition order to the US, despite there being numerous questions over the case itself and whether or not extradition is appropriate. As part of that, the judge also ordered the US Attorneys to hand over the evidence they're using to make the case against Dotcom and his colleagues, such that they can properly respond to the evidence. The US, as you might expect has gone absolutely ballistic about this, insisting that such an effort is impossible -- and that "it would take at least two months" to get the evidence together.Of course, to some of us, that suggests that the DOJ hasn't yet looked at the evidence -- and thus it shut down the company and arrested its staff first, without even knowing if a crime had been committed.
Either way, that months-long delay presented a problem, since New Zealand had scheduled the extradition hearing for August 6th, and the Megaupload legal team deserved some time with the evidence to formulate its defense. The latest, however, is that New Zealand's High Court has agreed to an "urgent review" of the original ruling. The court also told the US to start the process of putting together the evidence to hand over to Dotcom's lawyers, but that it can wait until the High Court has reviewed the case before actually handing them over.
No matter what, this is once again showing the US's hubris in this case -- assuming it could waltz into New Zealand, with highly questionable evidence, shut down a company, and extradite the executives to the US without anyone asking questions. With each move in this case, more questions are raised about the competence of the DOJ staff who worked on this case, led by Neil MacBride -- a former "anti-piracy VP" for the copyright industries, who may have let his biases and previous (and future?) employers' interests get the best of him.
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Filed Under: copyright, doj, evidence, extradition, high court, kim dotcom, neil macbride, new zealand, us
Companies: megaupload
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...2 months to say why they dragged MU down?
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I think they don't have ANYTHING.
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Its all BS
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Re:
Not holding my breath, however. It's practically impossible, nowadays, for a significant amount of seized digital data to not include at least some amount of infringing material. My understanding, in this case, that that's not a show-stopper, here, because the US gov't is claiming that MU had no significant non-infringing use (?!), but my guess is that such infringing material would poison any attempt to find the enforcement process itself wrongful enough to give a basis for suing for damages.
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Re: Its all BS
It's a waste of everyone's time and money for them to keep pushing this. Seriously, this happened back in January. It's June now. Just let the defendants have equal access to the evidence so they can show once again how screwed up this entire case was to begin with.
It's not that hard.
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I predict that this woman has a bright future ahead of her as a judicial joke and bain of the NZ justice system.
http://www.kiwisfirst.co.nz/index.asp?PageID=2145845379
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Re: Re:
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Thank You, Come Again
This is not the US, and there is no Patriot Act in NZ. You can't simply arrest people, seize property, and hold both indefinitely without council while you attempt to find something you can use to someday make a case that might potentially stand up in court.
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Hmm...
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Lets see the name of the NZ Judge who granted the US authority in the first place??
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Re: Re: Its all BS
In theory, the DOJ should have given the NZ authorities enough evidence for them least to establish that the arrest was reasonable. Also in theory, there's absolutely no reason why the High Court can't gain access to that evidence. If it turns out that there wasn't any actual evidence presented, or that the evidence didn't provide reasonable grounds for the takedown/arrests, then I'm pretty sure that the whole thing qualifies as a violation of the NZ Bill of Rights...and the High Court has a much bigger problem than just the extradition hearing.
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A quick fix, and a great way to seriously stymie the USG...
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Re: Hmm...
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Re: Re: Hmm...
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Re: Re: Hmm...
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The US is fucked. It's as plain as the nose on your face.
Obama needs wall street's money and the mafiaa's money.
US elections are a joke and the people don't give a shit.
Business owns their political system and peoples' choices are between bad and badder.
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Re: Re: Re: Its all BS
This then will set a huge bar for the USJ in ANY Commonwealth country, as well as even the US itself, since the NZHC is classified as a judicial authority of weight in all countries .
It could be as bad for the USJ for future instances as the recent case that AFACT (as a proxy for the MPAA) lost in the High Court of Australia regarding iiNet.
I stated this at the beginning when Mega and Kim were charged. This is NOT going to end well for the USJ and that I also predicted it would have to go to the NZHC.
Maybe Neil MacBride (and his cronies) who IMHO is an incompetent egotist who has entitlement issues needs to be introduced to Restorative Maori justice ;)
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You sure the US doj ever wanted to win?
"Attempt" to take down Dotcom, while painting him as an evil villain.
Run their own case into the ground.
Cry about how this is the perfect example of why we need SOPA.
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Understand exactly what the DOJ is appealing
The second pile of evidence is that siezed by the NZ Police, acting of a request from the US DOJ. This includes 150TB of disks containing Megaupload corporate data and emails. It is this second pile of evidence which Judge Harvey ordered the NZ Crown Prosecutor to copy and make available to Kim Dotcom and his defence team. While there is an assumption that the NZ prosecutors are acting as sock puppets for the US DOJ, the court orders do not name or apply to any US entity.
So, it is pretty rich for the US DOJ to claim that a defendant before a NZ court should not have access to evidence seized and located in NZ until the defendants surrender to the jurisdiction of a US court.
Now I guessing, but I am assuming that the DOJ did not have access to most (if any) of that data before it filed the case against Megaupload. The DOJ has said that the among the 150TB of seized data is "10 million emails and a large amount of financial data". So clearly, it would like enough time to enhance (or perhaps prepare?) its' case using those emails and financial data while at the same time stopping Megaupload from preparing its defence.
The role of judges is to pick winners and losers, and help winners win while making losers lose. However, most judges have a strong commitment to fairness and due process. They also have have open minds. So even for a certain winner (the vast, vast majority of extradition cases are approved), if they are caught placing a fat greasy thumb on the scales of justice, the Judge may decide to make them a loser.
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Re: Re: Re: Hmm...
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Re:
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Re: You sure the US doj ever wanted to win?
Mega was the big target, and the take down hurt the entire cyberlocker ecosystem.
Has nothing to do with 6 strikes to have been started by now and that 6 strikes has no ability to track cyberlocker downloads.
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Re: Re: Re:
'course, under the previous government odds are good this never would have got off the ground. oh, they were willing enough to bend over for the US government in terms of it's Goals... but methods? nope. play by the rules or not at all. (not that they wouldn't shamelessly take advantage of the rules, but every step along the way would be legit.)
*no, the public did NOT approve. it was yet another 'sneak it through without warning and only tell anyone about it after the fact' law change. a chronic problem here that will not end until we actually get a governor willing to do their damn job. not that there's any hope of That. (seriously, as constitutional monarchies go, NZ's actually set up to be quite absolutist in a lot of ways... and then the monarch doesn't rule directly, but appoints a governor, and then the governor abdicates almost all responsibility to parliament... leaving parliament with those absolute powers WITHOUT a counter-balancing power to keep it in line...)
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Re: Re:
as has been pointed out quite often, the current administration has a majority in parliament (just, barely, squeeked it.), but it has no mandate.
(meanwhile it's pushing HARD for the one thing even it's Own Supporters hated... the PM keeps trying to claim that people voted for it knowing they were going to do the asset sales thing, he won the election, thus they have a mandate to do it. missing that even their own supporters were against That part of their plan, even when otherwise supporting them and considering all other parties to be much worse. a 50%+1 (or maybe 2) majority does not a mandate make when a record 1/4th of the electorate DID NOT VOTE, you got TIES in some electorates, came close enough in others that it had to be disputed in court or whatever due to error margins, and even the people who supported you are speaking out against what you're claiming to have a mandate to do! meanwhile, the whole mega-upload thing is bleeding national of the saner portion of it's voter base (the ones who actually think) due to all sorts of different parts of it's handling. the only people who actually Support the government/US on this are the sort of rabid crazies who think ANYTHING that isn't going exactly how their perfect party wants is due to 'whinging and ignorance' on the part of some nebulous 'left'... never mind that their so called 'left' makes up closer to 3/4ths of the electorate and parliament than 1/2 when nothing suspect happens with the elections and economically only has 'National and ACT need to stop being idiots and trying to copy the Failed US model' in common. )
gah. rant got away from me again. i'm not good at staying on topic at all, am i?
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Re: A quick fix, and a great way to seriously stymie the USG...
let's just say, combined with the asset sales, the curren't government's odds of staying in power are pathetic.
that said, given who's in it, the asset sales make sense in light of that... they try to run the country like a corporation, and their leadership is known for being of the mindset that 'asset stripping things then selling the failing husk on is totally legit business' and the like... guess that would explain the asset sales...
added bonus: they're putting serious effort into breaking the school and social welfare systems too. (the social welfare system has issues that are basically unfixable without a fundamental shift in how the government views the economy and economics as a whole, however. and just tossing it entirely would probably collapse the government far more easily than the so called 'constitutional crises' which would supposedly happen should the GG actually do their job...)
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Re: Understand exactly what the DOJ is appealing
DoJ walked into Carpathia, locked down the building and in a few hours got everything they wanted. They then claimed Carpathia was free to delete the servers and reprovision them. The DoJ wants to pretend they never took control of the entirety of the MU servers, even as they cut off everyones access to them and cherry picked data off of them.
Much of the evidence presented to the Grand Jury came from data they can not explain how they came into possession of, internal emails from inside the company as well as Skype calls. It appears from an unindicted co-conspirator they were able to gain this information, one wonders what crimes they charged this person with to gain insight into the company.
The second pile was taken in violation of NZ law and the order of the court. Evidence in a trial in NZ was handed to the FBI who dubbed copies while it was in their possession, in a country where they were just guests, and quickly FedEx'ed them out of the country.
Anyone else have a problem with giving a 3rd party access to evidence in a "criminal" proceeding with no oversight?
The DoJ wants time to go through the 150TB of data to find anything to support the case they presented to the Grand Jury.
The DoJ wants to block MU from hiring a lawyer who represented companies who might be plaintiffs in a future civil matter, by that same reasoning shouldn't the former BSA lawyer be barred from running the the DoJ case?
There is a good chance the extradition case is going to collapse, and then with a small push the US case is going to be sunk. Then the real fight will begin trying to get back everything they took from Mega before 2025.
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Re: Hmm...
(If you didn't get that joke, please go watch Idiocracy. It's an excellent documentary of the future of the United States of America. There's also a scene in there that I'm convinced was the inspiration for Windows 8's Metro interface, but that's beside the point.)
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Re: Re: Hmm...
Idiocracy looks like utopia compared to the present day US.
From the Wikipedia entry on the film:
"Joe is arrested again and taken to the White House to become Secretary of the Interior, on grounds that his I.Q. test identified him as the smartest man alive."
Now can you imagine that happening today?
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MEGAMUSIC
Enable visitors to the site to up vote music they like in the different genres and give rewards for people up-voting the top 10, like a t-shirt or something along those lines. Encourage people to donate to the artists they like and put up stats to the website relating to all traffic and money artists have made on a weekly basis. Even give people micro payments if they support the website , i am sure there would be a way to make a site like this grow so big that most artists with common sense would join it. Then there would be a new top 40 on the radios and tv shows would be allowed to use music in there shows for a small fee, something in the region of 10% of what the studios charge.
All copyright would always remain with the artist but once it reached a certain level of support the artist would agree to keep it up on the site. Or some other rule that would prevent the studios from stealing the top artists.
Maybe even allow other sites to share the music with the only provision being that there was a link to donate to the artist if people wanted to.
If he does this as soon as the case is dropped , which i am sure it will be , he will be able to destroy the copyright monopolists very very quickly.
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Re: MEGAMUSIC
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By contrast, in the UK, the seizure of rnbxclusive.com by SOCA: There seems to have been no news whatsoever, no news of charges being brought, nobody at all seems to be following up on it in any way, in the 4 months since the site was seized with bizarre talk about if ppl had downloaded music from the site they definitely had damaged the careers of musicians and veiled threats against anybody visiting the site.
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Re:
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Now its time for NZ to show its own people where its loyalties are placed. Does it respect its own justice system and people more than a foreign bully boy country? It shouldn't be a hard question for any country to answer, but the cancer of corporate interests and international alliances has infected the world.
Don't think I'm standing up for kim dot megajerk. He made his insane money on the piracy of creative peoples hard work, he knows it, everyone knows it! But the US behavior is far worse and far more of a danger to civilized society.
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Used for evil piracy related files? Probably. Used by legit busineses and people using it as Kim intended? Yes!
It was a service that worked and is missed now that it is gone and all other services like it act like scared little kids now.
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No it's not the US, it's the US DOJ
Nope, it's not the US that is doing this it is the Obama administrations Department of Justice.
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Re: Re: Understand exactly what the DOJ is appealing
Anyone else have a problem with giving a 3rd party access to evidence in a "criminal" proceeding with no oversight?
I think you have this wrong. In an extradition, the government seeking the extradition is like a plaintiff. An extradition is not a criminal proceeding per se. It is custodial in nature. While details of the crime are germane to the proceeding, it's not up to NZ to try the case. It makes sense that both Dotcom and the US Attorney have access to the information.
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Re: Re: Re: Understand exactly what the DOJ is appealing
https://torrentfreak.com/fbi-did-not-steal-megaupload-evidence-because-its-digital-120607/
This allowed them access to evidence gathered during the NZ raid of the Dotcom mansion, that they might not be entitled to... a court has yet to rule if the DoJ has a worthwhile case. Copies were taken and will most likely be used in the US case against Mega, no US court issued a subpoena for this data, and a US court order does not supersede NZ law.
It is up to NZ to see if the case actually has merit, which is why the Mega indictment has elements that make no sense in reality but carry prison terms of just enough to satisfy NZ law regarding extradition.
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Not the world police
The USA is becoming more and more like Nazi Germany every day.
No wonder they are becoming the most despised country in the world instead of the most admired.
Greed has and will always bring down empires.
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Dear DOJ
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Re: Re: Re: Understand exactly what the DOJ is appealing
For this to occur the trier (in this case the judge and not a jury) is wondering why "procedural fairness" in both it's shapes has not even been seen to be done. This is where the US legal system (and the USJ and people here fall down) Procedural fairness is a absolute and MUST be shown to occur. It's more than due process it's a state of English law that is older than the US Constitution.
For this to occur a defendant has to be able to face their accusers and the prosecution has to be shown to be impartial allowing all facts and other matters to be available to the defence.
It might not be up to NZ to try the case, but it is absolutely up to NZ to make sure the case before it is tried conforms to all and every procedural fairness doctrine that is under NZ law.
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Re: No it's not the US, it's the US DOJ
Most reasonable people in the world understand that the average US citizen doesn't or wouldn't if they knew of this sort of thing happening. On the other hand, with or without your semantics there is no doubt that the average US citizen is to blame though their part in the blame is very minor, for your current administration now, previously, and in the future no matter there political allegiance.
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They have achieved there goal
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what i think this points out is that regardless of whether the DoJ actually does have any real evidence against Kim and Co., the incompetence is staggering! anyone that was trying to prosecute someone would surely at least keep all evidence found in chronological order and backed up on a computer as well as on a removable drive, in case of some disaster or other?
i think it also brings into the open the absolutely disgraceful behaviour of the DoJ and their expectation of being able to do exactly what they want, when they want regardless of where they and their victim(s) may be, without even the slightest concept that they are not in charge of that world, that different countries have different laws to the USA and those countries are not obliged to uphold US laws. i am still waiting for the threats to be issued to the NZ court and government and how quickly they fold to US pressure. fascism seems to be alive and thriving quite well in places no one would normally associate it with. might just as well have saved millions from dying needlessly and let it rule 70+years ago!
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Re: Re: Re: Its all BS
Actually, it was just a blank sheet of paper with the word "JUMP!" printed on it.
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Re: Thank You, Come Again
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Re: Re: Hmm...
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The US DOJ is now merely a tool of corporate terrorism.
As are an increasing number of other US government agencies.
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Obamma and the hollywood romance
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Re: Re:
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Re: The US is fucked. It's as plain as the nose on your face.
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