RIAA Case, Capitol vs. Thomas #2, Starts Monday
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The RIAA's first trial verdict having been tossed out last year, the RIAA is coming back for a second round starting Monday. This time the trial will be in Minneapolis, rather than Duluth, and the defendant will have a team of pro bono lawyers on her side. But perhaps the most important new development is that this time, the 'technical' evidence garnered by MediaSentry and 'explained' by the RIAA's expert witness Doug Jacobson, will not get the free pass it got the first time around. In the 2007 trial in Capitol Records v. Thomas, no objection was made by defendant's lawyer to the MediaSentry/Doug Jacobson 'evidence' upon which the RIAA relied, and the evidence was admitted without objection. This time there will be no free ride, as defendant's tech-savvy lawyers have already filed a list of objections to the RIAA's proposed exhibits. Most notably, they attack the 'technical' materials submitted by MediaSentry and Dr. Doug Jacobson under Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, which requires evidence based on 'scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge' to be based on sufficient facts or data, to be the product of reliable principles and methods, and to be the result of those principles and methods having been applied reliably to the facts of the case. If the evidence fails to meet those standards, it is inadmissible. This judge has already shown acute awareness of these principles in deciding which subjects the defendant's expert could and could not address. This should be interesting."
I know it seems like an unlikely mix, but I've actually pondered adding a law diploma to my IT one. Today it seems like this is the license to print money...
But, when lawyers can't be tech savvy, why can't they hire tech people to explain to them where the (technical) holes in suits lie? They would save themselves a lot of work if they could basically say "your honor, my opponent based his suit on bollocks, and here's why". No judge on this planet wants to look stupid, that's why they can (at least here) call for expert witnesses (or counsels) themselves, without the need for either side to call one. Judges, though, are just like the average human: Overworked and sometimes lazy.
So they usually don't.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
This should be interesting.
This case seems like the exact type of case the RIAA avoids like the plague. Any time any of their methods are subjected to any serious scrutiny, they drop the case and run. They know any serious discovery will kill their racket.
So what's to keep them from dropping this like a radioactive potato when the bevy of tech savvy pro bono lawyers start to tear Mediasentry a new one? It would be nice if the case went on long enough for this Rule 702 thing to kill Mediasentry gathered evidence - which could hopefully be used as a precedent for other cases or requests for retrial. But at this point I'm not counting on the RIAA staying with this one long enough for even that much good to come from it.
Hopefully I'm missing something.
Weaselmancer
rediculous.
Any chance that at least a transcript or audio recording will become available, eventually?
Undoubtedly a transcript will become available eventually. Here is the transcript of the first trial.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
NewYorkCountyLawyer is a well known lawyer and a respected expert in the area of RIAA legislation. When I read his summary, he tells, in neutral terms, about one of the obstacles the record companies have to overcome in this second trial. I can not say how the admissibility issue will pan out and I fully agree with Ray's "This should be interesting."
You are free to have your own opinions about the RIAA and file sharing, I have mine. I would certainly appreciate if you attacked the arguments instead of the writer, it makes for a more grown-up and polite discussion.
Now I'm off to wash my mouth.
extern warranty;
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{
(void)warranty;
}
Maybe that has to do with his contempt of **AA lawers and thier tactics.
I have more than enough of that to go around, but there is none of that in my summary. All I was saying in the summary was demonstrably factual. At the first trial the defendant did not have an expert witness of her own, and did not challenge the RIAA's technical evidence under Rule 702. This time she does have an expert of her own, and has already challenged the RIAA's technical evidence under Rule 702. From that I extrapolate that last time the RIAA's technical evidence got a "free ride" or a "free pass", and that this time it will not. How can anyone dispute the accuracy of those facts, or argue against the terminology "free ride" or "free pass". If the defendant does not challenge the evidence offered by the plaintiff, it goes in.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Maybe I'm just being silly, but I prefer journalism to at least have a pretense of being unbiased.
You are, indeed, just being silly.
Would it kill NYCL to at least try to be a tad even-handed?
Probably not, but it would be phony. Isn't lying what people complain about when they talk about lawyers?
I'm not saying that's a deal breaker if it does, mind you...
I don't understand, it sounds almost like you want him to lie about how he feels even if it kills him.
Honestly, the best news source would be one that presents you with the biases of the authors of articles up front, and which provides you with competing articles with paragraph rebuttals to one another, so that you can get a feel for the different viewpoints. There are often more than two sides to a story, as well. Something like that might look a little bit like Slashdot, except with staff writers and professional editorship; personally, I often find the comments to be the most interesting and insightful part of a story (even when they're not mine.)
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Thanks, Ray, now I have plenty of bedtime reading!
BTW, I notice that those transcripts were posted on your blog more than a year after the trial itself. We Slashdotters are used to practically instant access to everything, so I'm curious: what takes so long for such transcripts to become available? Could the transparency of the court system improve in the future because of technological advances, or are there lots of legal issues involved which impede this?
The ars article talks about MediaSentry needing a Minnesota license, fair use defense, expectation of privacy, and wiretapping laws. This summary talks about rules of evidence;
402 Irrelevance
403 Prejudice, Confusion, Waste of Time
602 Lack of Personal Knowledge
702 "Testimony by experts" (fact testimony or opinion testimony based upon "scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge" must be based on sufficient facts or data, must be product of reliable principles and methods, and principles and methods must have been applied reliably to the facts of the case")
802 Hearsay
IANAL, but those seem quite different.
The evidence shows that somebody at her usual IP address "made available". IP addresses are spoofable, often temporary computer IDs. They do not identify individuals.
Standard IANAL. The legal response to 'making available' is so what? My reading of the statutes and support of armchair litigators around the net conclude that you actually have to distribute copyrighted material to run afoul of the law. If memory serves, the whole 'making available' jury instruction is what caused the mis-trial to begin with.
I printed a manual for a Grizzly table saw this morning. It is available on my end table. If that copy disappears, I'll have to print another one; woe is me. Should I be fined a gazillion dollars(US) for the disappearing printed PDF?
You can argue that there is a fundamental disconnect between the law and the way things work on the 'net today, but you can't send somebody of the civil river because of that disconnect. Granted, the past 8+ years have seen a serious erosion of the rule of law, but I least like to pay nostalgic lip service to it.
Ars posted a story days ago with better information than what the summary contains. The judge has already allowed the MediaSentry evidence and isn't buying most of the defense's excuses. I like NYCL a lot, but I am surprised he wasn't aware of that. http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/thomas-judge-bars-fair-use-defense-oks-mediasentry-evidence.ars
I was aware of the article and, more importantly, of the ruling to which it refers. That related solely to the motion to suppress on the ground of illegality; it had nothing to do with the Rule 702 objection.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
The ars article talks about MediaSentry needing a Minnesota license, fair use defense, expectation of privacy, and wiretapping laws. This summary talks about rules of evidence; 402 Irrelevance 403 Prejudice, Confusion, Waste of Time 602 Lack of Personal Knowledge 702 "Testimony by experts" (fact testimony or opinion testimony based upon "scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge" must be based on sufficient facts or data, must be product of reliable principles and methods, and principles and methods must have been applied reliably to the facts of the case") 802 Hearsay IANAL, but those seem quite different.
Yes those are quite different. The Ars article refers to this ruling, which deals only with the motion to suppress on the ground of illegality, and has nothing to do with the evidentiary objections that defendant filed.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
Conceivably, the RIAA could move to dismiss, this is true. But it's just a motion and the court may decide that a motion to dismiss should be denied, requiring the RIAA to go through with. Sort of like saying "finish what you started."
The Court would deny a motion to dismiss "without prejudice" but would grant a motion to dismiss "with prejudice". So yes the RIAA could drop this. That would perhaps be the smart play for them, but smart doesn't seem to be their game.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
drinkypoo, what do you think was the giveaway about my "phony" hidden "bias"? Do you think it could have been the part of my Slashdot profile where I refer to my "doing battle with the RIAA & MPAA"? Or do you think it could have been that he saw the part on my blog where I describe the RIAA litigations as an "attempt to monopolize digital music and redefine copyright law", or my characterization of them as "sham"? Or do you think I tipped my hand by using the title "Recording Industry vs. The People" for the past 4 years?
Damn. And here I was trying so hard to keep my "bias" a secret.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
..that this case is not a matter of whether Jammie Thomas is guilty or innocent (because I quite frankly have a negative opinion on this), but what legal standards should determine guilt or innocence, and I certainly feel the current standards fall short of high quality. I feel it's a little like Miranda, who was a thoroughly disreputable guy, but who got off in the wider interests of setting up future evidence and policing standards.
Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
Karma: Chameleon
Help! Moderators! I fell into the trap, and fed the troll with the above comment, and now I've been modded "Flamebait".
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful