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Kim Dotcom's Assets Seizure Order Ruled "Null and Void"

thomst writes "Cnet's Greg Sandoval reports that New Zealand police filed for the wrong kind of restraining order--the kind that didn't allow for DotCom to have a court hearing prior to the seizure — and that was a mistake, according to a report in the New Zealand Herald. A court has now ruled that the restraining order that enabled police to seize his assets is 'null and void,' and a review of the mistakes made will soon be conducted by New Zealand's attorney general, according to the Herald. The paper noted that there's no guarantee that DotCom will prevail. His lawyers must prove the absence of good faith when the procedural error was made."

22 of 139 comments (clear)

  1. When will they seize Time Warner's assets? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
    1. Re:When will they seize Time Warner's assets? by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There is only one way to find out and that is to force exposure of the corruption of the copyrightists, those that most distributed software to enable copyright infraction in order shut down a public internet and convert it into a mass media controlled internet.

      That video mentioned http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ka5oLSuiUGs needs to be pushed as far and wide as possible.

      Let's see how the corrupt US courts deal with this problem. Let's chain mail this video as publicly and embarrassingly around the world as possible. I have already spent a chunk of time emailing the link to political parties and labour organisations.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    2. Re:When will they seize Time Warner's assets? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Dude - Kevin Rudd is a member of the AUSTRALIAN Labor party. Nothing to do with NZ. John Key (NZ's Prime Minister) is probably the most US friendly leader we've had in a decade.

  2. He chose a wrong name by Hentes · · Score: 5, Funny

    If he named himself Kim Dotnz the Americans wouldn't have any jurisdiction over him.

  3. probably won't help by v1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it's essentially impossible to prove "bad faith" on something like this without a "smoking gun" like an email mentioning how they're just going to take a shortcut or something.

    IMHO, the whole concept of "it's ok to do something illegal as long as you had good intentions" is not something that should work for the law, ever. It rarely helps the citizen. ("good samaritan" laws being the only common exception)

    The whole point of having legal requirements is to force them to make sure they have their ducks in a row before exercising their powers. Once you say "well it's OK if you violate someone's rights, as long as it was an honest mistake", it opens a huge barn door to abuse. Laws should always be slanted in favor of the accused, to lower the incidence of abuse and mistaken application.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    1. Re:probably won't help by Flavio · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Once you say "well it's OK if you violate someone's rights, as long as it was an honest mistake", it opens a huge barn door to abuse.

      And this is why politicians consistently play dumb and ignorant. People can be incarcerated for being corrupt, but not for being unintelligent.

  4. Dammit! by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why do bad things happen to police states?

  5. Re:I'm divided by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So if he was innocent but they had the correct paperwork, everything would be ok with you?

  6. Re:I'm divided by PieceOfShitAndroid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whether or not he is not a tool is irrelevant. His business has already been destroyed. What is important the fact that there is no rule of law. Governments have too much power. This needs to change.

  7. Re:I'm divided by jdev · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Right, return his stuff after the damage is already done. Megauploads is gone. Nothing they can do now can repair their business.

    And to be honest, I think that was the point of this whole exercise. I don't think our government cared about making any kind of legal precedent here. They mostly just wanted to show that they had the ability to take any of these guys down and went after a high profile business to do it.

  8. Re:I'm divided by GmExtremacy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How can you possible be defending Kimble?

    I'd defend anyone from what I believe is abuse. Mentioning his name will not change that for me. That was just a general statement.

  9. Re:I'm divided by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Easy cases make bad law."

    They go after Kim Dotcom because they think they can make an unsympathetic defendant of him. That's part of why all the trumped up bullshit in the complaint vs. "Megaupload" as well (constant words like "mega conspiracy", "child porn", and so on created to scare the crap out of the grand jury).

    If you don't defend him, though, then that sets a precedent and other people get fucked over by the bad precedent. Why do you think the MafIAA run away from court every time they look like they are about to lose a case? It's because settling or "dropping" the case doesn't create precedent, but losing in court would.

  10. Re:I'm divided by Charliemopps · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When they take YOUR rights away, they start by taking them away from someone you find distasteful. Often it is the mistake of the naive to think that Rights only apply to the good and just citizen. What they do not realize is that, if you can make a distinction regarding who deserves certain Rights and who does not, it is only a matter of time before the government finds a way to make that very distinction against you. Rights are not rights unless they apply to everyone, equally.

  11. Re:I'm divided by Znork · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Mr. Dotcom is hardly a hero but any money he makes is unlikely to finance the corruption in governments and trade treaties we see. The money he makes isn't going to turn the world into a police state. It may go towards scamming, but scammers do not usually have storm troopers crashing into the homes of private citizens.

    Any and all ways that deprive the intellectual monopoly corps of revenue are good. Even if it means creeps like Dotcom get money.

  12. Re:I'm divided by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a very small step between bending the law to go after people we know are doing something illegal to bending the law to go after people the police or people in power don't like. That's the point of the rule of law: sometimes it protects asshats, but that's better than it not protecting anyone.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  13. Re:I'm divided by blahplusplus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "How can you possible be defending Kimble? He's not some patriotic defender of our IP rights. He has, time and time again, setup illegal businesses, had the government stop them and move on with a slap on wrists. He is a crook."

    You mean like most modern businesses? At this point there is little difference between kimble and what is the status quo for the corporate sector. You're blind otherwise.

  14. Re:I'm divided by Asic+Eng · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If we want to live in a society which respects the rule of law, then the law also protects assholes, and taking that protection away from them takes it away from everybody.

  15. Re:I'm divided by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Insisting on due process is defending ALL of us. If he's as bad as you say (and that's likely), then he can be nailed to the wall without endangering the rights of everyone by following due process to the letter.

    I would have to say this was a very serious violation. Everyone should have known what due process was here, but somehow, nobody seems to have noticed that they were doing the wrong thing based on the wrong paperwork being filed? I'm supposed to believe that? The judge should be especially ashamed for being so quick with the rubber stamp that he didn't notice.

  16. Re: jailed for good? by King_TJ · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My feeling is this... If Kim was guilty of stealing credit cards, stock scams or selling cracked games to pirate factories, he should be arrested and tried on those counts.
    Instead, it looks like they decided it was far more lucrative to take down his MegaUpload site, which is relatively legitimate by comparison to ANY of those other things.

    Justice shouldn't be opportunistic, waiting for the "bad guy" to build up something "really worth seizing".

  17. Re:I'm divided by Fallingwater · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Right, return his stuff after the damage is already done. Megauploads is gone. Nothing they can do now can repair their business.

    Megaupload was/is the most famous sharing site, and all this buzz around it after the arrest/shutdown only made it more widely known. If Dotcom can bend the laws enough to restart it without getting thrown in jail again, he'll be making thrice as much money from Megaupload as he was before.

  18. Re:I'm divided by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Exactly. You know the post the other day regarding the American getting charged with child pornography for having manga on his PC? This one:

    http://news.slashdot.org/story/12/03/15/2034252/canadian-charges-against-us-manga-reader-dropped

    That happened because the government created the precedent by prosecuting John Sharpe for his drawings. Since Sharpe also had pictures of child pornography, and indeed was likely a child toucher, it was an easy win because the public vilified him for BOTH things (drawings/books and the pictures) and therefore decided that throwing away their rights was worth it to put him in prison rather than realizing there's two separate cases there (the thought expression vs. the pictures).

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._v._Sharpe

  19. Obviously foreign states can sue you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Does the local police force working under the direction and supervision of a foreign govt count as a 'procedural error' as well?

    Just in the case that you're actually interested in the response, it's going to disappoint you : no. Imagine if that were true : you'd just have to cross a single jurisdiction line and you'd get away with any crime whatsoever. That doesn't quite work.

    We have this thing called international treaties. These days, if you commit a crime, it doesn't really matter if the victim of said crime is in your own country or in another one. If the victim decides to sue, or a foreign state decides to sue (as in this case), they can do so (although relatively high minimum damage levels are enforced : you can't sue a foreignor for less than about $2000). With a big exception in the EU, the proceedings are executed according to local law (in civial matters), and there local laws apply (in the EU foreign treaties take precedence of local laws, even constitutions, so it's much worse there). Foreign states are special in that they can start both civil and criminal proceedings. You do need to have violated a local law : you can't sue a muslim for beating his wife nearly to death if he manages to get into Morocco was a pretty high-profile case recently (and maybe this law will change, something to do with a number of suicides in that country).

    What is going on here is that the police has seized his property because they believe he has committed a criminal offence and that someone (e.g. Time Warner) will seek damages, and has a reasonable chance to get them. They believe there is a big chance that given the chance, Kim Dotcom will cut and run (apparently he's done that before in Germany), and the judge agreed with that.

    One of the things any lawyer should tell you : if you violate a legal principle that applies both in your country and in a foreign country, but only has foreign "victims", you won't be protected by jurisdiction limits. So the simple thing is : in America, insult whatever political figure or religion or ideology you like, and don't worry about morons like North Korea or Saudi Arabia suing you. Don't violate American law, even if you're "only hurting" foreigners.

    If you want to change copyright, by all means go ahead. However if you try to do this through the court, you will fail, and you best be prepared to be bankrupt for the rest of your life. Any real action will be played out in congress. Democracy does not mean you do what you want, rather that the majority of the country, represented by freely chosen congresscritters, has to agree you're allowed to do it. If you can't convince enough of your fellow Americans (ie. 150 million), it's not going to happen.