The
Kim Dotcom affair has made it into Russian media
New
Zealand PM was aware of illegal Kim Dotcom surveillance
The
New Zealand prime minister who authorized the raid the netted
Megaupload.com founder Kim Dotcom in January now admits he was
briefed on the possible illegality of the case less than a month
after it went down.
RT,
2
October, 2012
Only
last month, New Zealand Prime Minister John Key publically apologized
to Kim Dotcom, explaining that the mistakes carried out by the
Government Communications and Security Bureau (GCSB) leading up to
and during the January 20 raid on his Coatesville, NZ home was
“appalling.”
"Of
course I apologize to Mr. Dotcom. I apologize to New Zealand,"
Mr. Key said. "I am personally very disappointed that the agency
failed to fully understand the workings of its own legislation”
when conducting surveillance of Dotcom in the period before his
arrest.
Now,
however, Mr. Key confirms that he sat in on a debriefing meeting with
the GCSB on February 29, during which the state’s spy agency
discussed details of the mission.
Mr.
Key admits to attending the meeting, but blames "brain fade"
for forgetting the actual events of the encounter. A Government
Communications Security Bureau review now confirms that the prime
minister was put in the know only weeks after Dotcom was arrested,
and right at the start of a case that the defendant calls
“politically motivated” and appears to be weakening by the
moment.
“A
paper prepared as talking points for the staff member conducting a
presentation contained a short reference to the Dotcom arrest a few
weeks earlier, as an example of cooperation between the GCSB and the
police,” the GCSB investigation appeals.
Mr.
Key declines remembering the specifics of the sit-down, saying,
“While neither the GCSB Director nor I can recall the reference to
the Dotcom matter being made during my visit to the bureau back in
February, I accept that it may well have been made.” What he does
recall, he says, is seeing an image of Dotcom appear on the screen
during a presentation made during the February meeting.
"They
just flashed through it, I do vaguely remember the screen so I
remember it being put up,” he says.
An
investigation into GCSB practices have forced the agency to admit
that the legality of three surveillance missions dating all the way
back to 2009 may now be called into questions, only expediting the
erosion of New Zealand’s case against Dotcom, a German national who
has been raising a family at his Coatesville estate since being freed
by authorities. His arrest in January was endorsed by the United
States’ FBI, who has indicted Dotcom and his associates for
allegedly operating a vast copyright conspiracy over the Internet.
Dotcom, born Kim Schmitz, maintains his innocence.
Kim
Dotcom's US attorney gives the bigger picture


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