New
Zealand Prime Minister John Key apologized to Megaupload founder Kim
Dotcom, saying the file-sharing tycoon was spied on illegally, since
he was an NZ resident at the time of the surveillance.
RT,
27
September, 2012
Key
apologized on Thursday following the release of an official report
into the New Zealand Government Communications Security Bureau’s
(GCSB) surveillance of Dotcom. The FBI and New Zealand Police
conducted an armed raid at Dotcom’s mansion in January of 2012,
after requesting the GCSB’s assistance in their covert
surveillance.
The
GCSB complied with the FBI’s request, apparently in violation of
New Zealand law – the GCSB is only allowed to spy on foreign
nationals, while Dotcom became a resident of New Zealand in 2010.
"I
apologize to Mr. Dotcom… We failed to provide that appropriate
protection for him," Prime Minister Key said in a statement.
“It
is the GCSB’s responsibility to act within the law, and it is
hugely disappointing that in this case its actions fell outside the
law. I am personally very disappointed that the agency failed to
fully understand the workings of its own legislation,” he said.
On
January 20, 2012, Dotcom, along with Finn Batato, Mathias Ortmann and
Bram van der Kolk were arrested during a New Zealand police raid on
Dotcom’s estate in Auckland, New Zealand.
Washington
has demanded that Dotcom – born Kim Schmitz – be extradited to
the US, claiming that he is liable for $175 million in fines for
alleged copyright infringement, racketeering and money laundering
connected to Megaupload. Dotcom argued that Megaupload only offered
online file storage, not file-sharing.
It
is not yet known whether this latest development will impede efforts
to try Dotcom in the US. The case was dealt its first setback in
June, when New Zealand Justice Helen Winkelmann ruled that the
warrants for the FBI’s raid on Dotcom’s mansion were illegal. And
in August, the court ruled that the FBI must release information
seized during the raid to Dotcom’s legal defense team.
"Without
access to materials relevant to the extradition hearing phase, the
person sought will be significantly constrained in his or her ability
to participate in the hearing," Winkelmann wrote in her August
decision.
In
an interesting turn of events, Kim Dotcom revealed his successor to
Megaupload just before the FBI raided his estate in January and shut
down Megaupload: A music-sharing service called Megabox.
Megabox
was different from Megaupload in that it was a pay-per-download site,
which claimed it would offer artists as much as 90 cents for every
dollar spent on a music download and would even compensate artists if
the download was free. “Yes that’s right, we will pay artists
even for free downloads,” Dotcom announced in a press release.
A
90 percent royalty rate is unheard of for most musicians – even
with physical copies of music like compact discs, artist royalties
rarely add up to more than 20 percent.
Dotcom’s
extradition hearing is set for March 2013.
Here
is comment from Kim Dotcom's New Zealand lawyer
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