Dotcom
victory 'embarrassing' for US
Kim
Dotcom's lawyer says a High Court finding that the raid on his
Coatesville mansion was illegal is a "tremendous blow" to
the case against the internet tycoon.
29
June, 2012
Chief
High Court judge Helen Winkelmann yesterday ruled that search
warrants used in the raid were invalid because they did not
adequately describe the allegations against the internet
multi-millionaire.
She
said the warrants, issued by the District Court, gave police
authority to seize too wide a range of items.
The
United States claimed Dotcom and his associates were behind the
world's biggest criminal copyright violation through Dotcom's
file-sharing website Megaupload, which carried about 4 per cent of
the world's internet traffic. The men deny the charges.
Dotcom's
American lawyer, Ira Rothkin, told Radio New Zealand this morning
Judge Winkelmann's ruling was "incredibly embarrassing" for
the United States and New Zealand governments, and a "tremendous
blow" to the case against Dotcom.
"The
government was engaged not only in wrongful conduct but in double
wrongful conduct: they weren't allowed to go ahead and do the initial
seizure of the hard drives in the way they did it and then after they
got the hard drives they violated the law again by bringing them
offshore when they weren't allowed to.
"It's
particularly embarrassing when you consider that the United States
has called this matter the largest copyright case in history and one
would think that with such a large case that they would have a higher
standard of care in how they conducted themselves."
Mr
Rothkin said defence counsel would be making arguments to the court
about what remedies Dotcom ought to receive.
"In
terms of egregious behaviour this is at the high end of the scale of
a wrongful intrusion on privacy."
Dotcom,
who got a good reception at a ratepayers' meeting in Coatesville last
night, has not spoken publicly about the ruling, but has taken to
Twitter.
"Sweet!"
He tweeted yesterday evening.
"New
Zealand is beautiful. To all my followers abroad come visit NZ (but
not if you run a cloud storage biz)," he said later.
Dotcom
and Finn Batato, Mathias Ortmann and Bram van der Kolk were arrested
in January after a request for assistance from the FBI.
The
United States claimed the men were behind the world's biggest
criminal copyright violation through Dotcom's file-sharing website
Megaupload, which carried about 4 per cent of the world's internet
traffic. The men deny the charges.
The
ruling yesterday is the third embarrassment in the case for Crown
lawyers, who are representing the United States in the arrest,
seizure and extradition process.
It
has previously emerged they used the wrong type of restraining order
to seize Dotcom's funds and seizing his property without notice when
he should have been given the chance to challenge the seizure.
Then
it emerged the Crown knew it was using the wrong order while the raid
was in progress.
During
the raid, police seized computers, phones and anything which appeared
to contain a hard drive - a total of 135 items.
Ms
Winkelmann said the search warrant was too broad in the way it
described what could be taken.
"These
categories of items were defined in such a way that they would
inevitably capture within them both relevant and irrelevant material.
The police acted on this authorisation.
"The
warrants could not authorise seizure of irrelevant material, and are
therefore invalid."
She
added: "The police relied on invalid warrants when they searched
the properties and seized the various items. The search and seizure
was therefore illegal."
She
noted that even if she was wrong about the validity of the warrants,
it was clear police had "exceeded what they could lawfully be
authorised to do" because they continued to hold irrelevant
material.
She
said police faced difficulties executing the search warrants in a
lawful manner because they were not the investigating officers with
knowledge of the operation.
It
emerged during the hearing this month that FBI staff copied some of
the seized hard drives at the police electronic crime lab in South
Auckland and sent the copies back to the US.
This
prompted Dotcom's lawyer, Paul Davison, QC, to say cloning the hard
drives had "subverted" his client's rights.
The
four accused wanted a declaration the removal of the clones from New
Zealand was unlawful.
They
also wanted an independent lawyer to decide which of the items seized
were relevant to the investigation.
Ms
Winkelmann acknowledged the copies had been sent to the US without
the consent of Dotcom and his associates, but would not go any
further.
She
said she wanted the Crown and Dotcom's lawyers to work out a solution
before a hearing scheduled for July 4.
The
police have previously defended the surprise raid which used
helicopters and the special tactics group armed with automatic
weapons.
Officials
seized Dotcom's collection of more than 20 luxury cars, wife Mona's
jewellery and expensive art works. More than $10 million held in New
Zealand accounts was also seized.
Police
said they were considering the judgment and were in discussions with
Crown Law to determine what further action might be required.
Attorney-General
Christopher Finlayson's office said he would not comment on matters
before the court.
Simpson
Grierson partner Greg Towers said last night the four men were "very
happy" with the decision and were considering their remedies.
Here
is an interview with Kim Dotcom's US attorney
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