Link: Full article
Ben Sisario, over at the NY Times, has an article noting the official RIAA statement on the matter. Both Ben and the RIAA itself were kind enough to send me the full RIAA statement:
"We referred this particular site to ICE for investigation because of its long history engaging in the unauthorized distribution of copyright content prior to its commercial release. ICE conducted its own independent investigation of the site and ICE along with the Justice Department concluded that there was a basis for seizing the domain name. Rights holders and the RIAA were requested to assist law enforcement and made every attempt to do so in a complete and prompt manner. As we stated previously, we were disappointed with the decision to not seek forfeiture but we respect that this is a judgment that properly lies with the government."
For what it's worth, I also asked the RIAA if it could provide me the date on which it actually responded to ICE's questions, and I was told, politely, that the RIAA had "nothing further to add for now."
Beyond that, however, the RIAA's statement is ridiculous. First, it admits that it was the one who told ICE to seize this domain - as had been suspected all along, but now has been admitted. At the very least, this raises significant questions about the all-too-close relationship between the federal government and the RIAA. The RIAA claims that "ICE conducted its own independent investigation," but that's clearly untrue. In both the original affidavit and the unsealed documents last week, ICE makes it clear that it relied heavily on the RIAA's statements. As we noted soon after the affidavit came out, ICE's "investigation" consisted of downloading four songs and asking Carlos Linares, the VP of Anti-Piracy Legal Affairs for the RIAA, if they were infringing. He said yes, and that was good enough for ICE to move forward with the seizure. Of course, as we pointed out, on one of the songs, Linares had no right to speak for the artist, since it wasn't even an RIAA artist. On the other songs, it appeared that the RIAA did not check with the labels' own promotions people who had sent the tracks.
That said, the really ridiculous claim here is that the RIAA helped in a "complete and prompt manner." If that were true, then 10 months after the domain was seized, ICE wouldn't be whining to a judge that it needed to censor the blog for another two months because the RIAA wasn't responding or providing the necessary evidence. It's hard to square the RIAA's statements with the government's.
It's truly amazing that ICE and the RIAA still can't even admit how wrong they were here, let alone give an apology to Dajaz1.com. I guess that would be tantamount to admitting just how badly they violated the site's free expression and due process rights.
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