Appeals Court Says Feds Can File Oversized Brief In Weev Case, But His Defense Has To Keep Its Reply Short
from the due-process! dept
The case against Andrew "weev" Auernheimer is already crazy enough. He's been charged by the feds with a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA) for finding a huge security hole created by AT&T. Still, a court found him guilty. The appeal is ongoing, with the DOJ basically arguing that weev broke a rule that it made up. And, now, the third circuit appeals court is apparently stacking the deck against weev.The government had made a request to file an "oversized" brief to present their case. In response, weev's lawyers requested the ability to file an "oversized" brief in reply to the government's brief. The DOJ did not oppose this request. Yet, the court approved the government's request while denying the defense request. In short: the government can file a giant brief throwing the kitchen sink of legal theories at weev, while weev's team is limited in how much space it has to reply. No matter what you think of weev, who seemed to take joy in pissing off just about everyone, at the very least you'd think he deserved the right to present a full response to the claims made against him by the government.
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Filed Under: andrew auernheimer, cfaa, doj, oversized brief, weev
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If the "court" (and I use the term loosely) is going to act like a redneck clown court, then I see no reason why it should be given any modicum of respect.
So much for justice.
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We are seeing this on multiple levels. At GITMO, those accused are not allowed to use memory of torture in their defense against any charges that may have come about from said torture. The military broke all legal precedence in spying on the client/lawyer in talks, without mentioning it at all to either party. Nor is it likely to be admissible evidence in that kangaroo court.
Make no mistake I am all for giving terrorists their just due but there is a huge question that the right terrorists and financial supporters are even in the states. One might start with looking at the wealthy and those in power in Saudi Arabia and releasing the redacted report sections on that from the 9/ll investigation that Bush decided were national security issues. Those congressmen who have read the report have stated they have come away both pissed and amazed that the politicians have allowed the government to go in the direction it has gone rather than after the real perps.
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Oh, wait...
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America is no bastion of the free world.
Live long enough to see yourself become the enemy.
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The Government must be allowed to do anything it needs to to keep its corporate sponsors happy, and to apply the rules evenly is just a pipe dream in the minds of the cogs in the machine.
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Because the exploits the NSA's doing have kinda done a bit of damage to American's tech corporations (Microsoft, Google, Yahoo, Apple, etc.) by destroying consumer trust in U.S. tech [which, last I checked, is one of the only industries America hasn't completely outsourced yet].
So, who are they trying to appease again?
All that being said, following the 'stacking the deck against them' line of thought, it feels like we're seeing the judge/dealer let the DOJ start out with a full house and deals weev's defense a bad hand and they're only allowed to bluff.
This stinks of bullshit to high heaven.
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AT&T.
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We spend billions and billions with them on snake oil.
We hire their workers and give them access to their competitors, and have the honor system that none of the data that might benefit the future of the corporation won't make its way to them.
And gee they hire all of those people who got them these laws and access, and we pay them more to support them indefinitely.
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Justice
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Well of course the rules are different
Honestly given how much a sham the whole thing has been and continues to be, I'm surprised the court let the defense file at all, it's pretty obvious the outcome has already been decided, and the courts are just going through the motions to make it look good.
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Hell, at the pace the appellate courts run, he'll be out before this is settled.
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Our World. Delivered.
I miss the company that was once an innovating monopoly, not this pile of crap it is today.
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Constitution, right to a fair trial...
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weev tormented even CHILDREN...
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