Copyright Troll Lawyer Serves Up BS 'Dead Grandfather' Excuse For Missing Court; Now Facing Sanctions And Arrest
from the looks-like-SOMEONE'S-getting-buried dept
Copyright troll attorneys are the worst. At best (and "best" is very relative here), they're using the judicial system as leverage in their extortion scheme -- one that involves complaint carpet-bombings and the hope that a small percentage of settlements will make the entire operation profitable. At worst, well... they're the worst.
If they're not being called out by courts for their speculative invoicing operations, they're being literally convicted of fraud. Trolls cut and run when faced with any scrutiny from judges and defendants. At least the smart(er) ones do.
Richard Liebowitz -- IP gun-for-hire -- isn't smart enough to do that. He rushes to the sound of his own gunfire, seemingly determined to maximize the self-inflicted damage. In a few short years, he managed to put a client on the hook for everyone's legal fees, been hit with a $10,000 bond demand after lying about his client's licensing agreement, and potentially set precedent that would make trolls like him liable for all ongoing legal fees if settlements higher than the final judgment are rejected by the plaintiff.
Now, Liebowitz has added to his infamy by being sanctioned [PDF] for lying to the judge about a death in the family. (h/t Owen Barcala)
Liebowitz blew off a discovery conference ordered by Judge Cathy Seibel. No call. No email. Nothing. The court only obtained a response from Liebowitz after ordering him to inform the court why he missed the conference and why he shouldn't be required to pay the defendant's legal fees for the conference he no-showed.
Liebowitz's response -- aimed at avoiding having to pay someone else's legal fees -- was deliberately vague.
By letter dated April 15, 2019, Mr. Liebowitz advised that he had missed the conference because of a death in the family which was an “unexpected urgent matter” to which he had to attend. (Doc. 32.) He also said he would be out of the office on April 18 and asked to appear by phone at the rescheduled discovery conference. (Id.)
This might have passed without further comment from the judge, but during this conference, Liebowitz said the "urgent matter" was a death in the family. This, too, might have passed unnoticed if it wasn't for Liebowitz getting in his own way by being the shady IP lawyer he's always been.
During the conference, issues were discussed that reflected negatively on Plaintiff’s counsel’s credibility. For example, Plaintiff had answered interrogatories saying his damages calculation had relied on “contracts, invoices, [and] licensing agreements,” (Doc. 27 at 1), but when Defendant requested those documents, Plaintiff said he could not produce them without a protective order. After Defendant agreed to a protective order and the Court signed it, (Doc. 23), Plaintiff still produced nothing, despite twice promising to do so. (See Doc. 27.) Further, Defendant’s counsel represented that Mr. Liebowitz had told Defendant’s counsel that he could not comply because he was out of the country due to an emergency, when in reality he was at a trade show in Europe trying to drum up business.
Feeling she couldn't trust Liebowitz's assertions about pretty much anything, the judge asked for some evidence of this death in the family. When people die, records are created. Obituaries are published. Funerals are held. Liebowitz provided none of these things.
By letter dated May 1, 2019, Mr. Liebowitz represented that his grandfather had unexpectedly died on April 12, 2019 and that Mr. Liebowitz was needed to assist with certain customs for which arrangements had to be made in advance of the Sabbath.
Wrong, said the judge.
This letter is not responsive to my instruction. Mr. Liebowitz was to document who passed away, when the person passed away and when Mr. Liebowitz was notified. The reason I requested documentation is that there is reason to believe Mr. Liebowitz is not being candid. So a letter from him does not advance the ball. When someone dies, there is documentation including a death certificate and (almost always) an obituary, and nowadays one’s phone usually contains evidence of what one was told and when. Mr. Liebowitz may have until 5/3/19 to supplement this letter.
Not coincidentally, Liebowitz decided to settle with the defendant on the same day he was due to hand over proof of death to the judge. Not good enough.
I’m glad the parties have resolved the case (and, I presume, the issue of Plaintiff’s counsel’s expenses for the April 12 conference), but there remains one open issue: Mr. Liebowitz’s failure to document the death in the family that he says caused him to miss the conference. (See Doc. 38.). He was supposed to address that issue by May 3, but I will give him until May 9. Even if Defendant has been made whole, I still need to satisfy myself that there is no need for disciplinary or other inquiry.
Since he apparently didn't have anything to offer as proof of his grandfather's death, Liebowitz doubled down. He "re-certified" his original statement about the death, again without supporting documents. The judge said the "certification" of someone whose honesty is already in question isn't an acceptable substitution for records showing Liebowitz was otherwise detained handling funeral arrangements. Triple down.
Rather than comply with the Court’s order to provide the above documentation, on May 16, Mr. Liebowitz again submitted a Declaration reiterating his belief that his statements contained in the April 15, May 1, and May 9 letters were sufficient to discharge his obligations in response to the Court’s order to show cause.
Her patience exhausted, Judge Seibel told Liebowitz continued failure to provide proof would constitute contempt of court. Liebowitz quadrupled down , claiming his "say-so" was all that was needed since this was a "personal matter." Seibel rejected this assertion and added monetary sanctions to the threat. Liebowitz quintupled down… and decided to tell the judge she was wrong to even ask.
In this Declaration, Mr. Liebowitz argued that he was not in contempt because this Court’s request for his grandfather’s death certificate was unlawful, as it “likely constitutes a usurpation of judicial authority or a breach of judicial decorum,” (id ¶ 14); his previous Declarations complied with my previous orders, (id. ¶ 15); “there [was] no basis to impose monetary sanctions,” (id. ¶ 16); and the Court’s assurance that his grandfather’s death certificate would not be made public was insufficient to protect his right to privacy…
With that, Liebowitz was found in contempt of court and fined $100 a day. Liebowitz twice tried to have the order stayed and claimed it would take "two weeks" to get documentation of his grandfather's death -- the death that had supposedly occurred almost six months earlier. All these attempts did was convince the judge her contempt fees weren't high enough.
Richard Liebowitz, Plaintiff’s counsel in this case, is now in contempt of my August 19, 2019 and September 27, 2019 orders. (See Docs. 51, 53.) The $100 fine he accrues each business day has plainly been ineffective to coerce compliance with the August 19, 2019 Order. Accordingly, the daily contempt sanction is hereby increased to $500 a day, effective November 6, 2019.
And if Liebowitz doesn't have any documents with him on that day, he's going to jail.
Mr. Liebowitz is hereby ORDERED to appear before this Court in person on November 13, 2019 at 10 a.m., and there and then SHOW CAUSE why he should not be incarcerated until such time as he complies with the above-described orders (and, if applicable, the instant order). Failure to appear as directed will subject Mr. Liebowitz to arrest by the United States Marshals Service without further notice.
Richard Liebowitz had better hope he still has a grandfather who's alive. And then he's going to have to go back in time and kill him. Otherwise he's going to jail. If he shows up and admits he lied about his grandfather's death, he's still going to jail because the judge ordered him to produce documentation of this person's death. Since that doesn't appear to exist, Liebowitz cannot fulfill the court's order. One way or another, Liebowitz is going to spend some time behind bars. And once he gets out, he's going to have at least one fewer clients than when he went in. Hopefully anyone else still retaining his services will realize the only thing dumber than representing yourself in court is hiring Richard Liebowitz to represent you.
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Filed Under: cathy seibel, copyright, copyright troll, richard liebowitz, sanctions
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I don't think I can fill this comment box with enough laughter. Sounds like it couldn't have happened to a more deserving person.
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If he went back in time to kill his grandfather, he wouldn’t have to worry about jail. Unless time travel works on multiverse theory, anyway.
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Re:
The guy is obviously a lying douchebag, but it seems odd to expect you can lock someone up until they produce documents they don't have access to because they're locked up.
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I assume if he admitted he had no such documents, he would be given a defined penalty at that point. As it happens, there actually is a document he can produce, it just shows he was lying to the judge (about the date of the death). So now he can go to jail for that.
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My dog ate the Death Certificate.
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Re: Other Certificate Please
All that means is that you now need a certificate certifying that your dog did eat the Death Certificate.
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Re: Re: Other Certificate Please
His dog ate that too ...
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Re: Re: Re: Other Certificate Please
https://mobile.twitter.com/tsgnews/status/1194655628058337281
Looks like the dog may have ate his license ro practice law too (hopefully)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Other Certificate Please
Based upon the quotes in the second article linked to in that Tweet thread looks like the scumbag's day in court did not go well for him.
In an attempt to counter Seibel’s devastating dissection, Richard Greenberg, one of Liebowitz’s lawyers, said his client was “not playing with a full deck,” adding that he shared the judge’s “mystification” as to Liebowitz’s behavior. Greenberg claimed that Liebowitz “was in a daze” following his grandfather’s death, and than any misrepresentations on the lawyer’s part were not “intentful.”
Seibel dismissed that claim, noting that it was “completely implausible” that Liebowitz’s “haze” continued for the many months he “tried to weedle his way out of the problem.”
...
In a letter to Seibel, Greenberg argued that the contempt findings against Liebowitz will damage his legal career.
Quick, someone fetch the nano-violin, I fee a song coming on!
...
Near the close of the hearing, Liebowitz briefly addressed Seibel, saying he was “really, really sorry” and that his repeated misstatements were “really an honest mistake.”
Seibel, however, was having none of it. “Stop kidding yourself,” she told Liebowitz after referring to his months and months of lies. “This was clearly not an honest mistake,” she said. Rather, it was a “concerted campaign of deception.”
Out of all the things you really don't want to hear from a judge, that has got to rank up there pretty high. 'You were lying to me before, and now you're just doubling down with even more lies rather than admitting it.'
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Re: Re: Other Certificate Please
Obviously it would be completely unacceptable for the court to invade his privacy by asking for evidence he owned a dog.
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My late grandfather (a police officer), among the other wisdoms he offered, said "Never piss off a judge." Didn't mean much to me at eight years of age... But perhaps Richard Liebowitz should have been listening.
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All he has to do is go to the judge and tell the truth. Of course then he will likely lose his law license.
Alternatively, he can get a death certificate from a random person and claim it's his grandfather. Of course, then the judge could demand proof of some sort of relationship.
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Re:
i guess just kidding won't work here, huh?
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Alerts
This site needs a good way to set up alerts because I REALLY don't want to miss the conclusion to this one.
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Re: Alerts
Just an FYI for anyone who wants to stay abreast of this show; Search for Richard Liebowitz on Google, then click on News, then on the Create alert link at the bottom of the page.
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Re: Re: Alerts
We need a live stream! And a confetti gun that goes off when the greatest laugh of the week enters the court (though, a grand chase on the highway would also be appreciated)
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I am suing this attorney. I published the excuse "I had a death in the family" years before this. Copyright violation! Where do I send the demand letter?
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Re:
To the famed firm of Liebowitz & Grandson.
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Looks like he screwed this one up. For a dishonest lawyer he's not very good at being dishonest. It seems like a good lawyer should be able to come up with something half true just in case you have to explain yourself.
He could have befriended someone who was a next of kin in an obituary and said "I meant my friends grandfather" after he couldn't come up with something remotely true the first time and brought that bullshit before the judge without making it an outright lie for example.
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Re:
Note quite the same thing, but from Yes Minister:
Sir Desmond Glazebrook : Just the one. If you're incompetent you have to be honest, and if you're crooked you have to be clever. See, if you're honest, then when you make a pig's breakfast of things the chaps rally round and help you out.
Sir Humphrey : If you're crooked?
Sir Desmond Glazebrook : Well, if you're making good profits for them, chaps don't start asking questions; they're not stupid. Well, not that stupid.
Sir Humphrey : So the ideal is a firm which is honest and clever.
Sir Desmond Glazebrook : Yes. Let me know if you ever come across one, won't you.
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Re:
I guess some of his stuff was remotely true. I feel somewhat bad for the guy.
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Lawful Masses with Leonard French has been following his court cases for a while now, and I can't wait for tomorrow's episode on what happened (assuming anyone can get to that hearing).
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Re:
Yeah, I submitted a link to that which might be why this story is here. Lawful Masses is good, but this might've been the funniest episode yet.
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I realize it's trite
But having been on the receiving end of BS by attorneys like him more than once, this is one of the best things I've read in a very long time. Enjoy the shower room, Leibowitz.
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Re: I realize it's trite
Let's not promote the idea that prison rape is an appropriate punishment for any crime, let alone contempt of court.
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Rule 68 is an excellent anti-SLAPP mechanism, in the absence of any SLAPP laws.
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Re:
Can you explain rule 68 to us non-lawyers please?
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Re: Re:
It's explained in this linked article about Liebowitz:
It's not really anti-SLAPP, as a SLAPP is when someone tries to prevent someone from speaking. It's more anti-troll, when someone tries to get paid for something you made that they argue infringed upon something they made..
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Re: Re: Re:
Its a way of promoting settlements, and making parties evaluate their cases.
If its a reasonable offer, think twice about rejecting it "out of principle" or in order to hurt the other party. Even if you win, you can lose.
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hypocratic oath for lawyers??
honesty, integrity??
Any one??
When did this end??
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Re: hypocratic oath for lawyers??
End? It never started.
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Re: Re: hypocratic oath for lawyers??
They spelled it wrong. There was an extra 'i' in their oath....
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Re: hypocratic oath for lawyers??
It's no coincidence that "liar" and "lawyer" sound so close to the same. Ok, it's totally a coincidence but no less serendipitous.
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Re: Re: hypocratic oath for lawyers??
Though it is one that goes back millennia, before written language itself.
Proto-Indo-European "legʰ" (to lie down) is the presumed root of the word "law", essentially through the meaning of "laying down the law".
Whereas Proto-Indo-European "lewgʰ" is the presumed root of the word "lie" as in telling a falsehood.
So for approximately 6,000 years, nearly all of Western civilization has had remarkably similar words for "liar" and "lawyer".
A very interesting coincidence indeed.
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Re: Re: Re: hypocratic oath for lawyers??
you dont have a 'Leg' to stand on.
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Re: hypocratic oath for lawyers??
I think you misspelled hypocritic ?!?
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Troll sized please
I knew I should have gone for the unlimited popcorn pass.
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What amazes me is that there are people that think they can talk their way out of anything and miss all negative consequences for the lying.
Makes me feel so warm inside when they get caught.
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What Grrrrrreat a day
The sun is shining, the sky is bright blue and to top it all off, a troll is going to jail!
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Who knew that a spawn of Satan had a grandfather?
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Well, as the saying goes, “Insanity is trying the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” Why did he think the same argument would work the third or fourth time?
While this technically follows Carreon’s Law, I don’t know that Carreon ever went this far after so many warnings from the judge.
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Re:
My guess is he figured he had not much to lose. There's no dead grandfather (or at least no recently dead grandfather), so he cannot comply with the order. He could either come clean, at which time he would be hit with contempt of court, and referred to the bar association for an ethics investigation, or he can try to weasel out of it. If he fails, he's no worse off than if he hadn't tried (except for the fines).
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'Trust me', said the known liar
Imagine that, get a reputation for dishonesty and try to avoid court and the judge in question isn't willing to trust your excuse for why and does the fiendish thing of demanding evidence...
Ah, with so much bad news these days always nice to see articles like this, with scum and spreaders of suffering facing some real punishments for their actions.
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But his Grandfather really *did* die..3 days before!
Seems Mr Liebowitz mostly exhausted the judge's patience, and was just shading the truth, via @FCT on twitter:
https://twitter.com/obarcala/status/1194061023038332928?s=20
The grandfather's death cert is 3 days before the excuse.
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Re: But his Grandfather really *did* die..3 days before!
Then providing the court a copy of the death certificate shouldn't be a problem for him.
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Re: But his Grandfather really *did* die..3 days before!
Oh, that is not going to help his case, though it does explain why he absolutely refused to provide the actual documentation, as doing so would provide irrefutable proof that he'd lied to the judge as to when his grandfather died.
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Re: But his Grandfather really *did* die..3 days before!
He was so shocked that he lost consciousness of time! Now he only needs to convince the officers that they came on the wrong day and the arrest is not due yet.
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Hey, Hamilton.
Remember when you warned us because we said Liebowitz was a copyright troll?
Eat the crow, asshole!
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You have to admit, he does have pretty good hair, though I would admit it doesn't appear to be covering anything useful.
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Assholes don’t eat crow.
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Well they do say “You are what you eat.”
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His meltdown and pretending to be Mango was kind of amusing, though.
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Now Hamilton just pretends to be different posters and has separate meltdowns on why he can't read his Melania/Shiva fanfiction without having to click a grey line of text, the horror!
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Reminds me of Prenda
Steele & Co. also thought they could outfox judges - how'd that work out?
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The Troll's Prayer
I seem to be in a bit of a pickle
I pray for deliverance Saint Prenda Paul
The Judge was a tiny bit fickle
With my antics, she was not tickled
My only hope now is Better Call Saul
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Not quite. He's ordered to show cause why he should not be incaracarated for not complying with the order, and if the death didn't happen, that would certainly be valid cause as to why he couldn't produce documentation.
Of course, that would mean admitting he previously lied to the court, and that comes with its own problems.
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A self-imposed rock and a hard place
'Your Honor, as these records show I couldn't provide documentation to show that my grandfather died on the day I said he did in court documents under penalty of perjury, because doing so would have shown that in fact he died on a different day, making clear that I lied in court documents, under penalty of perjury. As such it would be unreasonable to hold me in contempt of court for refusing to provide evidence because doing so would have provided evidence of perjury.'
Yeah, I don't see that going over too well with a judge already out of patience with him.
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Re: A self-imposed rock and a hard place
Petty much?
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What if he brought his living grandfather to court?
Suppose he brought his living grandfather to court with him?
Look! It's a Miracle!
He's alive!
The judge should be so overwhelmed with joy that she will forget about needing to produce any documentation of his death now that he is alive again.
(If his grandfather is not available, some stand in actor would do.)
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UPDATE: report on the hearing of 13 November
OUCH!
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/buster/cathy-seibel/richard-liebowitz-folo-128543
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Re: UPDATE: report on the hearing of 13 November
In an attempt to counter Seibel’s devastating dissection, Richard Greenberg, one of Liebowitz’s lawyers, said his client was “not playing with a full deck,” adding that he shared the judge’s “mystification” as to Liebowitz’s behavior. Greenberg claimed that Liebowitz “was in a daze” following his grandfather’s death, and than any misrepresentations on the lawyer’s part were not “intentful.”... In a letter to Seibel, Greenberg argued that the contempt findings against Liebowitz will damage his legal career.
The behavior of copyright lawyers continues to mystify me. It's not as though they're practicing in a particularly strenuous area of law. It's not as though they're playing on the losing side. Copyright law has consistently been the aspect of law that has the easiest of passes.
Just whisper "copyright" and there's no shortage to the doors or legs you open. Jurors jump to your defense. Judges willingly close their eyes. Even the government lets you get away with warrantless surveillance, or collusion between the judge and prosecution. It's like Open fucking Sesame!
So why do copyright lawyers consistently fuck up in the most asinine ways? They work in a fucking silver-spoon-in-the-mouth industry! It's like giving them a spoon to drink soup with and they end up stabbing themselves with the fork! (But where did the fork come from, you might say. That's how dumbfucked these copyright idiots are. Then again, considering some of the clients these assholes have, maybe it just runs in the IP-incestuous family.)
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Re: Re: UPDATE: report on the hearing of 13 November
Ego, greed and assumptions based upon past events.
If someone gets away with a particular act multiple times then they will start to believe that it's safe to do it more, even if they should have been punished for said actions in the past. It was only due to the judge digging in her heels and refusing to just let this slide that he got caught out after all, how many judges would have seen the settlement between the two parties and just washed their hands of the whole thing?
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Re: Re: UPDATE: report on the hearing of 13 November
Those are just the ones you hear about. Probably tons of copyright cases are totally routine and the lawyers don't do anything crazy, so nobody reports on it.
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Re: Re: UPDATE: report on the hearing of 13 November
He's one card short of a full deck
He's not quite the shilling
One wave short of a shipwreck
He's not his usual top billing
He's coming down with a fever
He's really out to sea
This kettle is boiling over
He thinks he's a banana tree
Oh dear...
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