Leaders of Megaupload &
Vestor Charged with Widespread Online Copyright Infringement
January 20, 2012
Seven individuals and two
corporations have been charged in the United States with running an
international organized criminal enterprise allegedly responsible for
massive worldwide online piracy of numerous types of copyrighted works,
through Megaupload.com and other related sites, generating more than
$175 million in criminal proceeds and causing more than half a billion
dollars in harm to copyright owners.
This action is among the largest criminal copyright cases ever brought
by the United States and directly targets the misuse of a public content
storage and distribution site to commit and facilitate intellectual
property crime.
The individuals and two corporations – Megaupload Limited and Vestor
Limited – were indicted by a grand jury in the Eastern District of
Virginia on Jan. 5, 2012, and charged with engaging in a racketeering
conspiracy, conspiring to commit copyright infringement, conspiring to
commit money laundering and two substantive counts of criminal copyright
infringement. The individuals each face a maximum penalty of 20 years in
prison on the charge of conspiracy to commit racketeering, five years in
prison on the charge of conspiracy to commit copyright infringement, 20
years in prison on the charge of conspiracy to commit money laundering
and five years in prison on each of the substantive charges of criminal
copyright infringement.
The indictment alleges that the criminal enterprise is led by Kim
Dotcom, aka Kim Schmitz and Kim Tim Jim Vestor, 37, a resident of both
Hong Kong and New Zealand. Dotcom founded Megaupload Limited and is the
director and sole shareholder of Vestor Limited, which has been used to
hold his ownership interests in the Mega-affiliated sites.
In addition, the following alleged members of the Mega conspiracy were
charged in the indictment:
Finn
Batato, 38, a citizen and resident of
Germany, who is the chief marketing
officer;
Julius Bencko, 35, a citizen and
resident of Slovakia, who is the graphic
designer;
Sven
Echternach, 39, a citizen and resident
of Germany, who is the head of business
development;
Mathias Ortmann, 40, a citizen of
Germany and resident of both Germany and
Hong Kong, who is the chief technical
officer, co-founder and director;
Andrus Nomm, 32, a citizen of Estonia
and resident of both Turkey and Estonia,
who is a software programmer and head of
the development software division;
Bram
van der Kolk, aka Bramos, 29, a Dutch
citizen and resident of both the
Netherlands and New Zealand, who
oversees programming and the underlying
network structure for the Mega
conspiracy websites.
Dotcom, Batato,
Ortmann and van der Kolk were arrested today in Auckland, New Zealand,
by New Zealand authorities, who executed provisional arrest warrants
requested by the United States. Bencko, Echternach and Nomm remain at
large. Today, law enforcement also executed more than 20 search warrants
in the United States and eight countries, seized approximately $50
million in assets and targeted sites where Megaupload has servers in
Ashburn, Va., Washington, D.C., the Netherlands and Canada. In addition,
the U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., ordered the seizure of 18
domain names associated with the alleged Mega conspiracy.
According to the indictment, for more than five years the conspiracy has
operated websites that unlawfully reproduce and distribute infringing
copies of copyrighted works, including movies – often before their
theatrical release – music, television programs, electronic books, and
business and entertainment software on a massive scale. The
conspirators’ content hosting site, Megaupload.com, is advertised as
having more than one billion visits to the site, more than 150 million
registered users, 50 million daily visitors and accounting for four
percent of the total traffic on the Internet. The estimated harm caused
by the conspiracy’s criminal conduct to copyright holders is well in
excess of $500 million. The conspirators allegedly earned more than $175
million in illegal profits through advertising revenue and selling
premium memberships.
The indictment states that the conspirators conducted their illegal
operation using a business model expressly designed to promote uploading
of the most popular copyrighted works for many millions of users to
download. The indictment alleges that the site was structured to
discourage the vast majority of its users from using Megaupload for
long-term or personal storage by automatically deleting content that was
not regularly downloaded. The conspirators further allegedly offered a
rewards program that would provide users with financial incentives to
upload popular content and drive web traffic to the site, often through
user-generated websites known as linking sites. The conspirators
allegedly paid users whom they specifically knew uploaded infringing
content and publicized their links to users throughout the world.
In addition, by actively supporting the use of third-party linking sites
to publicize infringing content, the conspirators did not need to
publicize such content on the Megaupload site. Instead, the indictment
alleges that the conspirators manipulated the perception of content
available on their servers by not providing a public search function on
the Megaupload site and by not including popular infringing content on
the publicly available lists of top content downloaded by its users.
As alleged in the indictment, the conspirators failed to terminate
accounts of users with known copyright infringement, selectively
complied with their obligations to remove copyrighted materials from
their servers and deliberately misrepresented to copyright holders that
they had removed infringing content. For example, when notified by a
rights holder that a file contained infringing content, the indictment
alleges that the conspirators would disable only a single link to the
file, deliberately and deceptively leaving the infringing content in
place to make it seamlessly available to millions of users to access
through any one of the many duplicate links available for that file.
The indictment charges the defendants with conspiring to launder money
by paying users through the sites’ uploader reward program and paying
companies to host the infringing content.
The
case is being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern
District of Virginia and the Computer Crime & Intellectual Property
Section in the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. The Criminal
Division’s Office of International Affairs, Organized Crime and Gang
Section, and Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section also assisted
with this case.
The investigation was initiated and led by the FBI at the National
Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center (IPR Center), with
assistance from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland
Security Investigations. Substantial and critical assistance was
provided by the New Zealand Police, the Organised and Financial Crime
Agency of New Zealand (OFCANZ), the Crown Law Office of New Zealand and
the Office of the Solicitor General for New Zealand; Hong Kong Customs
and the Hong Kong Department of Justice; the Netherlands Police Agency
and the Public Prosecutor’s Office for Serious Fraud and Environmental
Crime in Rotterdam; London’s Metropolitan Police Service; Germany’s
Bundeskriminalamt and the German Public Prosecutors; and the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police – Greater Toronto Area (GTA) Federal Enforcement
Section and the Integrated Technological Crime Unit and the Canadian
Department of Justice’s International Assistance Group. Authorities in
the United Kingdom, Australia and the Philippines also provided
assistance.