Jammie Thomas May Face RIAA Trial Alone
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "With her trial coming up on June 15th, Jammie Thomas has received a motion by her lawyer to withdraw from the highly publicized case, Capitol Records v. Thomas. Ms. Thomas said in a written declaration (PDF) obtained from her by her lawyer that she was not opposed to the lawyer's withdrawal, and waived any hearing on the matter. The court papers submitted by the lawyer (PDF) also indicated that the RIAA was not opposed to the withdrawal — i.e. it graciously consented to Ms. Thomas having no legal representation — but was opposed to any continuance (i.e. the RIAA wants to make sure that Ms. Thomas does not have sufficient time to find other legal representation, or to prepare to handle the trial herself, or to enable new counsel to prepare to handle the trial). Nice of them."
I'm not terribly convinced Jammie Thomas is a great case to fight the RIAA with;
Have I misunderstood the paperwork? reading between the lines it appears her lawyer is withdrawing and he is concerned that he has information contradictory to the line of argument his client wants put forward, and as an officer of the court, money matters aside, he feels he cannot go on.
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Karma: Chameleon
Only bad lawyers walk away from a guilty party just because of their guilt. Hell that's what corp. lawyers could paid in the millions for.
More than likely a financial, reputation, personal, or conflicting issue.
You know, for all the vitriol on this board, it seems surprising to me that money isn't overflowing this nice lady's coffers for lawyers.
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I'm not trying to be a troll, and I happen to dislike (and disagree with) the RIAA and their tactics as much as anyone else here. But....
I suspect you are a troll, but...
1. He is leaving because he hasn't been paid.
2. I have never expressed any opinion about the underlying case; I am not familiar with the facts of this particular case.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
So which is it?
Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
What truth?
There is no dupe
or maybe she is guilty as hell, her lawyer knows it, and didn't want to fight a battle he would inevitably lose badly?
But no, as she is being prosecuted by the record companies, she MUST be innocent right?
Amazing though it sounds, a lot of people DO pirate music, some of them get caught, and a very few of them are stupid enough to try and feign innocence in that situation.
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Is this the kind of justice we can expect in America? Having your life financially ruined by astronomical damages for copying songs?! How can any sane judge with any sense of justice even allow this to continue?
We all knew stories about backward country with religious zealot wielding harsh laws punishing poor oppressed victim for seemingly trivial offense, but this kind of cases are telling you the America is not that much different, it is just that corporates+money have replaced the religious zealots+dogma.
MediaSentry is an unlicensed investigator. As such, any evidence they gained is inadmissable.
If you believe everything you read, you'd better not read. - Japanese proverb
They play both sides, and cut their losses and run if things get sour.
Our NYCL makes out to be a good guy (and I'm sure he is personally), but don't get confused by the fact that he's defending "our side" of the battle against the RIAA. He won't do anything that isn't in his business interests either. Ethics don't come into it for lawyers.
So yes, this is the state of "justice" in America. It's a business.
(Worth noting that Europe is somewhat unique in the world in this area. While EU justice is far from perfect, the word "justice" does actually mean something *strong*, and your ability to pay has very little bearing on the process. It's one of the aspects of Europe that has survived with high integrity, amid generally falling standards.)
Reading the Toder memorandum, it seems that Ja[m]mie's lawyer isn't getting paid.
That's what it's all about. Most lawyers, like most other people, don't like to work if they're not getting paid for it (unless that's what they agreed to do, which he didn't). Lawyers like anyone else have families to support and bills to be paid.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Why doesn't Ms. Thomas set up a legal fund donation page via PayPal, for example? I'd contribute some funds to this cause. It deserves attention.
Has she sought legal aid? Or the support of the ACLU, EFF or a law school? Her time is running short. This is an unfortunate situation because the likelihood of setting an important precedent very favourable to the RIAA is quite high, now.
I care just as much that the RIAA not behave outrageously towards guilty defendants as for innocents. If a tactic or procedure is not kosher, it's not kosher no matter who's in the box.
No, it's not. It's documented, billable time that Thomas' lawyer could have spent working on other cases that produced real income, that is now gone forever.
I don't agree with the way things are working out for Thomas, but don't dare say this lawyer hasn't incurred a very real loss.
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Individuals defending against lawsuits from corporations should be given public defenders. The only reason that right isn't in the Constitution is because corporations didn't exist at the time it was written.
also. lawyers aren't there to always win a case. Sometimes you need one just to help get a reduced sentence, or to settle out of court. Not to mention that they also already know what paper work or forms you may need to file to assist with what it is you are trying to do.
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