Kim Dotcom extradition trial continues, tears flow

A hearing in New Zealand attempting to bring Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom to the US on piracy charges has offered plenty of twists and tears.

Kim Dotcom isn't too big to cry.

In court yesterday, the Megaupload founder choked up when he recalled how New Zealand police raided his Auckland mansion in January, and when, as his lawyer described, he was "ripped him away from his family". The US Attorney's Office accuses Megaupload of being a front for a massive piracy operation, and lawyers there are trying to extradite him to the US to face criminal copyright, money laundering and wire fraud charges.

Megaupload was one of the web's most popular cyberlocker services before US authorities shut it down. The US government is trying to send a message that turning a blind eye to piracy can land site operators in jail. Critics say US officials are overreaching, and at most the case is a civil dispute.

Back in court, as Dotcom was tearing up, his lawyers seethed. Dotcom, who has denied being a pirate, was in a New Zealand courtroom on Wednesday seeking a judicial review of the search warrants served on him and Megaupload. His lawyers argued that New Zealand authorities illegally seized data that wasn't relevant to the case. Dotcom wants some of his possessions returned, according to Ira Rothken, the US-based lawyer leading Dotcom's worldwide defence.

But that's only one part of the US government effort that has angered the Dotcom side. According to Rothken, when Dotcom's lawyers asked authorities to give them a copy of the data taken from him, they learned that New Zealand officials had shipped the information to the US FBI for analysis.

Paul Davison, Dotcom's head lawyer in New Zealand, told the media that he was assured by authorities that none of the data seized would leave the country without warning. Without the data, Dotcom can't properly defend himself, his lawyers argue, and they feel betrayed.

"The court will determine whether the United States and New Zealand had the authorisation to remove data from New Zealand absent a court order," Rothken told CNET. "This is a serious international issue, and we believe it requires proportional remedy ...It seems as though the United States is trying to win on tactics rather than on merits."

Some of the data seized from Dotcom's personal computers was also encrypted, and authorities have asked him for the passwords. He has refused to hand them over.

"On certain conditions, Kim Dotcom would consider supplying them," Rothken said. "But not when data was secreted away from New Zealand, away from a New Zealand court and judicial supervision. His password on some of the data is his only protection against unreasonable intrusion."

Via CNET

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I feel so bad for this man. He has done nothing wrong; he simply offered a place where people could share files. Any illegal files were immediately removed when they were reported. They can't physically check every file, that would be against privacy laws
Posted by Haloman800
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