2nd Circuit Upholds Non-Monetary Sanctions Against Copyright Troll Richard Liebowitz
from the lying-liebowitz dept
Here's a quick update on infamous copyright troll Richard Liebowitz. As you may recall, after tons of stories about Liebowitz's horrendously bad activities in and out of court, federal district court Judge Jesse Furman finally threw the book at Liebowitz in an incredible ruling that literally catalogued dozens upon dozens of examples of Liebowitz lying to his and other courts. Furman issued both monetary and non-monetary sanctions. Among the non-monetary sanctions was a requirement that Liebowitz file a copy of this particular benchslap in basically every court where he is representing a client.
Liebowitz whined about how unfair it all was, and appealed the ruling. On Friday, the 2nd Circuit Court of appeals upheld the non-monetary sanctions, saying it will release its opinion on the monetary sanctions shortly. The ruling is pretty short (unlike Furman's explanation of all of Liebowitz's wrongdoing), but the general conclusion is: all the evidence says that Furman was exactly right, so his sanctions order was fine.
In this summary order, we focus on the court’s non8 monetary sanctions. “We review a district court’s imposition of sanctions for abuse of discretion”; however, because the district court is the “‘accuser, fact finder and sentencing judge’ all in one” when imposing sanctions, “our review is ‘more exacting than under the ordinary abuse-of-discretion standard.’” Wolters Kluwer Fin. Servs., Inc. v. Scivantage, 564 F.3d 110, 113 (2d Cir. 2009) (citation omitted). A district court abuses its discretion if its sanctions are based on “an erroneous view of the law or on a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence,” and where its sanctions “cannot be located within the range of permissible decisions.” Id. (citations omitted).
Appellants’ arguments that the district court abused its discretion in imposing the non-monetary sanctions are unavailing. First, the court’s findings that Liebowitz lied and acted in bad faith when he represented to the court that the mediator gave Usherson permission to attend the mediation by phone and when he alleged in the complaint that the photograph was registered were not clearly erroneous. The evidence in the record––for example, the mediator’s testimony and the email exchange between the mediator and Bandshell’s counsel the night before the mediation––supports both conclusions. United States v. Iodice, 525 F.3d 179, 185 (2d Cir. 2008) (“When . . . credibility determinations are at issue, we give particularly strong deference to a district court finding.”). Liebowitz’s conduct was also not “colorable” as required to contest the court’s bad-faith finding. See Wolters Kluwer Fin. Servs., Inc., 564 F.3d at 114. There exists no “legal or factual basis” to excuse Liebowitz of his duty to reasonably investigate the claims in his complaint. Id.
Second, Appellants’ arguments that the non-monetary sanctions are overbroad because of their nationwide scope fail to persuade. Appellants rely on our decision in Enmon v. Prospect Cap. Corp., 675 F.3d 138 (2d Cir. 2012), where the law firm made several misrepresentations and the district court only required the firm to file a copy of its sanctions order with future pro hac vice applications in the Southern District of New York. See id. at 148. However, unlike the law firm’s misconduct in Enmon, Liebowitz’s misconduct in this case––including violating multiple court orders, repeatedly lying to the court, and filing a complaint with a false allegation––justify the nationwide scope of the court’s sanctions. Moreover, Liebowitz’s pattern of misconduct before many judges of the Southern District of New York and across the country, described at length in the district court’s opinion, squarely defeats Appellants’ suggestions to the contrary. See, e.g., In re Martin-Trigona, 737 F.2d 1254, 1262 (2d Cir. 1984) (affirming “restrictions placed upon [attorney’s] bringing of new actions in all federal district courts” (emphasis added)). See generally Usherson v. Bandshell Artist Mgmt., No. 19-CV-6368 (JMF), 2020 WL 3483661 (S.D.N.Y. June 26, 2020).
Finally, the district court did not abuse its discretion by ordering Liebowitz and his firm to include a copy of the deposit files with each copyright infringement complaint they file for a year. Requiring Appellants to include a copy of the deposit files does not impermissibly shift the burden of proof. Although the party challenging the validity of a copyright registration bears the burden of proof, that burden attaches only for presumptively valid copyrights; plaintiffs bear the burden of establishing that presumption. See Urbont v. Sony Music Ent., 831 F.3d 80, 88–89 (2d Cir. 2016); see also Carol Barnhart Inc. v. Econ. Cover Corp., 773 F.2d 411, 414 (2d Cir. 1985). Courts cannot rely on the face of the complaint to establish this presumption in the cases Appellants bring, given that Liebowitz’s associate “admitted that it is the regular practice of [their firm] to file copyright infringement cases without verifying that the works in question are properly registered.” Special App. 19–20; see also Joint App. 483.
There's also a fun footnote dismissing one of Liebowitz's classically silly arguments:
Appellants’ argument that the sanction would impose a substantial burden because deposit files are expensive to obtain is unpersuasive. As the district court noted, Liebowitz often settles cases “‘in the low thousands or tens of thousands of dollars’ . . . a far cry from the $200 to $1,200 cost of obtaining a deposit copy.”
Liebowitz made some other arguments as well, but the Court notes: "We have considered Appellants’ remaining arguments and find them to be without merit." Nice try, Richard.
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Filed Under: 2nd circuit, copyright, copyright troll, jesse furman, richard liebowitz, sanctions
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Couldn't have happend to a more deserving man
When you are such a known liar that a circuit court agrees with a lower court that it's in the public interest for your history of gross dishonesty to be known to any prospective clients and judges that's probably not a good sign, and should really serve as a good indicator that the person in question is long overdue for being disbarred and prohibited from ever serving as a lawyer again.
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More of this, please!
Like TOG said, it shouldn't take anywhere near this amount of egregious behavior to get sanctions. The sanctions should be much harsher, they should come much quicker, and with considerably less provocation. This guy should have been disbarred long ago.
Ditto (x 10 + prison time) for prosecutorial misconduct.
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It's a good job you can't copyright "being benchslapped for being shitty at attempting to copyright troll" else, Hansmeier and Steele would be also hounding Liebowitz for money.
And lets face it, we'd ALL love to read the legal "handbag fight" between those two groups of incompetents if that were to happen.
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Re: Couldn't have happend to a more deserving man
I believe there have been several cases reported on where Liebowitz failed to follow said sanction, right?
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Re: Re: Couldn't have happend to a more deserving man
Hmm, can't say either way offhand but it would certainly be in character for him to treat sanction as more 'suggestions' than legally binding rulings so it wouldn't surprise me if he had done so.
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While it was written in a slightly different context, By The Power of Three, We Banish Thee! applies here too.
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Re:
Leibowitz, Hansmeier & Steele sounds like the worst lawfirm EVAR!!!
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Re: Re: Re: Couldn't have happend to a more deserving man
That raises the question, will he keep digging?
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Re: Couldn't have happend to a more deserving man
Which is the real problem here. Why the hell would they let run this clown rampant for so long? They only have themselves to blame.
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Re: Couldn't have happend to a more deserving man
True enough. It takes a lot to provoke a judge into losing his shit to the point where he lays down the law like this; "Among the non-monetary sanctions was a requirement that Liebowitz file a copy of this particular benchslap in basically every court where he is representing a client. "
It's sheer legal poetry. I'm not surprised Liebowitz is getting whiny - he's literally been told he has to start every future court appearance with the statement "Oh, before we begin, may the court note that I'm a proven compulsive liar and fraud"...
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Re: Re:
Well, we all know at least one person who'd show up around here and explain that without the stalwart efforts of that hypothetical lawfirm, civilization would no doubt perish as pirates magically vanish the pillars of society by making copies of them...
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Re: Re:
Leibowitz, Enron, Righthaven, Hansmeier & Steele
Now THAT would be a jackpot.
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Righthaven: We're the best copyright trolls ever.
Prenda: You're not even in the big leagues yet.
Liebowitz: Hold my beer.
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Re: Re: Re: Couldn't have happend to a more deserving man
Well, he explained the failure to file in some cases as inadvertence or mistake, rather than a determination that the order to file in all his firms' cases did not apply. He was unsure of the status in some, he said, claiming that they might have been closed and therefore not subject to the order.
He also claimed that his computers were not able to accurately identify all the cases on which the attys in the firm were working.
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