November 7, 2007 5:14 PM PST

Senators want Justice Department to sue P2P pirates

American peer-to-peer users worried about being sued into oblivion by the recording industry may soon have a much bigger concern: facing off against the U.S. Department of Justice.

Two senators, a Democrat and a Republican, introduced a bill on Wednesday that would unleash the world's largest law firm on Internet pirates. It would authorize the Justice Department to file civil lawsuits against people engaged in peer-to-peer copyright infringement--with the proceeds going to the company or person who owns the copyright.

"This legislation is a simple bill that would give the Department of Justice the authority to prosecute copyright violations as civil wrongs," Sen. Patrick Leahy, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said during a hearing on Wednesday. Sen. John Cornyn, a Republican, is a co-sponsor.

This is not the first time this bill, called the Pirate Act, has surfaced in Washington. Despite criticisms from civil liberties groups and complaints from peer-to-peer companies that it amounted to corporate welfare for copyright holders, the Pirate Act has cleared the Senate three times. (Here's our coverage after the June 2004 vote.)

The Pirate Act enjoys strong support from large copyright holders. The Recording Industry Association of America said on Wednesday: "We commend Senators Leahy and Cornyn for their commitment and leadership to ensuring improved enforcement of IP protection."

And Dan Glickman, chairman of the Motion Picture Association of America, said the Pirate Act will "strengthen the government's law enforcement resources to crack down on intellectual property theft."

Oddly, though, the Justice Department has been less than enthusiastic about the measure in the past. One top department official said a few years ago that the idea is "something that people should take with a grain of salt"--and while "the Justice Department is there to enforce the law, there's something to be said for those who help themselves."

The Pirate Act's portion devoted to civil copyright enforcement is identical to the 2004 version. It says that "the attorney general may commence a civil action in the appropriate United States district court against any person who engages in conduct constituting (a copyright) offense." Anyone who reproduces or distributes copyrighted works that total $1,000 is liable for punishing statutory damages.

In addition, a federal judge "shall" award "restitution to the copyright owner aggrieved by the conduct."

Criminal charges? Nah.

Under a 1997 law called the No Electronic Theft Act, federal prosecutors can file criminal charges against peer-to-peer users who make songs available for download. A July 2002 letter from prominent politicians to U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft urged the prosecution of Americans who "allow mass copying from their computer over peer-to-peer networks."

But the Justice Department has been less than eager to file criminal charges against people like Jammie Thomas, who recently was found liable for $222,000 in damages in a lawsuit brought by the RIAA. Federal prosecutors have indicated that they're hesitant to target peer-to-peer pirates with criminal charges for two reasons: Imprisoning file-swapping teens on felony charges isn't the department's top priority, and it's difficult to make criminal charges stick.

The relative ease of winning civil cases compared to criminal prosecutions is one big reason why the RIAA and MPAA adore the Pirate Act, called the Intellectual Property Enforcement Act in its latest incarnation. The burden of proof is lower, and a civil defendant has far fewer rights under the law.

There are two other benefits for copyright holders. It's cheaper for copyright holders because they don't have to take the the risk of hiring expensive lawyers to sue a defendant who's judgment-proof (and can't cough up a check if found liable). And judges and juries may be more likely to side with Justice Department prosecutors, who claim they're looking out for the public interest, than law firms employed by the for-profit companies comprising the RIAA.

The new version of the Pirate Act, in addition to civil enforcement, also:

* Creates an "operational unit" of at least 10 FBI agents to investigate intellectual property offenses. It requires the Justice Department to assign a federal prosecutor to Hong Kong and Budapest, Hungary, "to assist in the coordination of the enforcement of intellectual property laws" and allocates $12 million per year.

* Awards $20 million per year in additional funding to the FBI and the Justice Department's criminal division to investigate computer crimes.

* Amends existing law dealing with criminal forfeiture. Says that "any property used, or intended to be used, in any manner or part to commit or facilitate the commission" of certain intellectual property offenses is subject to forfeiture. Civil forfeiture is also included. This expands on a recent counterfeit goods-related law.

News.com's Anne Broache contributed to this report.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 57 comments (Page 1 of 3)
Why do the tax payers have to pay for this?
by astrotrain1000 November 7, 2007 7:12 PM PST
So these guys want to spend my tax dollars so the already rich MPAA and RIAA can sue a bunch of people for dowloading music/movies? Also, why should we (the taxpayers) have to pay for an "operational unit" to work in foreign countries so that yet again the MPAA and RIAA can make even more money. If they want to pursue copyright enfringement in foreign countries let them do so but not on my(and your)dime.
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corporate welfare
by rdupuy11 November 7, 2007 7:30 PM PST
it is exactly corporate welfare. We can take it a step further...why buy an auto alarm for my car. The government can simply sue anyone who steals my car, and force them to pay restitution. Why should anyone do anything...let the government pick up the tab and be responsible for making it right.
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As a Vermonter....
by cidman2001 November 7, 2007 7:52 PM PST
I'm disgusted that Leahy would propose tax payers foot the bill to protect the music/movie industry who have overinflated their products value to society. I'm sure there are plenty of homeless people who would benefit from the thousands of tax dollars spent, even before they ever try a case. I'm sure their are thousands of elderly people who can't afford medicine who could care less if Metallica loses a few bucks to pirates. I say the recording/movie industry is a victim of the pandora's box called "digital formats" they themselves created. If you leave a box on the curb with a "free" sign on it, don't complain about your stuff being taken. I don't feel sorry for them, nor do I want my tax dollars (or my vote) suppoting people who have been sticking it to the consumer for years! Senator Leahy should really think about which lobbyists he lays with...Vermonters hate stupid spending that benefits nobody but corporations!
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Witnessing History
by bigpicture November 7, 2007 8:03 PM PST
You may not know it but you are witnessing history, the demise of the USA. Fallen far away from the vision of the founding fathers "these truths we hold to be self evident" don't seem to be "self evident" any more. Greed, corruption, and self interest in high places is "very evident". The recipe for when societies decline and pass away into history. And so history repeats itself.
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These People Need to be Unelected
by R. U. Sirius November 7, 2007 11:00 PM PST
Good god, they want me and you to pay taxes to support the RIAA and MPAA? This guy Leahy is out to lunch. It's time to unelect every damn one of these people. This is no longer a congress of the people, it's a congress of the rich and powerful. Disgusting.
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Coup de tête from the RIAA..
by imacpwr November 7, 2007 11:23 PM PST
"I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the Recording Industry Association of America, and to the Republic for which it stands: one Nation indivisible, with (no) Liberty and (no) Justice for all..."
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Time to take the power back...
by zincmann November 8, 2007 3:44 AM PST
Its time someone gets a hold of EVERY Senator and congressman that has voted for this bill and in the next election not vote for that person. Vote for his/her opponent. The only way we can make the government pay for these mistakes against the backbone of this country is to vote them out of office. You want to support some big corporate conglomerate? Do it on your own time with your own dollars, dont make me pay for something I dont believe in.
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This isn't going away.
by matthewcsims November 8, 2007 4:20 AM PST
This whole P2P RIAA thing isn't going away on its own. Voting people out of office just isn't going to do it. I thought it would at first, but it won't. Because of the money involved, many of the people that would be voted in to replace them would get right on board themselves. I thought maybe the Government or RIAA would catch on, but they're just too dense. They can't get past the greed to realize that this is not a morally justified way of solving the problem at hand. This is going to take some real out in the streets protesting and action. Signs, yelling, Oprah and everything, if anything is going to change. The whole concept of civil law never really sat right with me anyway. At least not the way it is being used in America right now. It is being used as a cop out to say, well you don't get all the protection of the law because you're not a real criminal. Hmm, I haven't actually broken any laws, yet I still somehow am being punished? If I am not a real criminal then why don't you let me go home and we can forget about all this? It's just a cop out. Either charge someone, or don't.
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Every previous poster...
by lkrupp November 8, 2007 4:49 AM PST
Ironic how you all want to reap the benefits of artistic endeavor while not paying for the music you listen to but are outraged by the alleged greed of the RIAA. You have no ethics, no moral code and believe it is perfectly ok to steal an artist's (and producer's) work but label the RIAA as evil personified. You'll download a song without paying for it but wouldn't walk into WalMart and shoplift a CD. Or would you? How perfectly ironic.
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You are incorrect.
by matthewcsims November 8, 2007 4:57 AM PST
I don't download music or movies, but I also don't buy CD's, I don't buy movies, I don't go to the theatre, and I no longer listen to the radio. I only listen to independent music from the web, the music made by my own band, and mostly read books instead of watching TV. When I do watch TV it is usually the news. Copyright law is wrong, but I do not break it.
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  • About The Iconoclast

  • Declan McCullagh has covered politics, technology, and Washington, D.C. for over a decade, which has turned him into an iconoclast and a skeptic of anyone who says: "We oughta have a new federal law against this."

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