Kim
Dotcom’s Mega-Lawsuit Could Make Him a Multi-Millionaire Again
13
September, 2013
File-sharing
tycoon Kim Dotcom has a plan to become a multi-millionaire again:
He’s filed a seven-figure lawsuit against the New Zealand
government over the spectacular 2012 assault on his mansion, and the
electronic spying that preceded it.
Court
filings released this week show Dotcom and associates have made good
on a threat last year to sue police and the country’s main spy
agency, the Government Communications Security Bureau, or GCSB, for
the SWAT-style raid in which Dotcom and the others were arrested a
year and a half ago.
The
New Zealand government appealed
a ruling last
year that granted Dotcom the right to sue, but lost last March. Court
documents filed in the High Court earlier this year, but not made
public until this week, lay out Dotcom’s case that the police were
excessively invasive and aggressive in conducting the raid, and used
NSA-like spy systems to place him under covert surveillance.
“The
case will show how the Five-Eyes spy cloud, X-Keyscore and PRISM were
utilized in our copyright case,” Dotcom tells WIRED. “Remember,
I’m not a terrorist.”
Dotcom’s
mansion was illegally raided
on January 20, 2012 by heavily armed police officers from the elite
Special Tactics Group and Armed Offenders Squad, arriving in
helicopters and vans. Some of the officers wore uniforms; others were
dressed in civilian clothes without any police insignia or similar
identification.
The
U.S. government is accusing Dotcom, the founder of Megaupload, of
running a criminal conspiracy that made hundreds of millions of
dollars by letting users share copyrighted files online. The Justice
Department seized the company’s many domain names, servers and
assets at the time of the raid, and is seeking extradition of Dotcom
from New Zealand to the United States for trial.
In
the court documents, which were filed in April and May, and first
released by the New
Zealand Herald this
week, the arrest raid is described as violent, with doors being
broken down and holes knocked into walls, damaging the property.
Dotcom’s
then pregnant wife, Mona, was separated from her three other young
children and kept away from them by force outside the mansion,
according to the complaint. Police also allegedly forced Dotcom to
the ground, leaving him with bruises and abrasions, despite his not
resisting arrest.
“Throughout
the operation the Police paid little or no effective regard to the
rights or needs of the occupants of the properties, and dealt with
them in a highly aggressive, oppressive and intimidatory fashion,
such as to cause significant unnecessary distress and anxiety and
fear,” the complaint claims.
Dotcom’s
legal advisers were also denied access to the property by the police,
who seized cell phones and cut off landlines to prevent any
communication with the outside world.
Citing
GCSB documents, Dotcom’s lawyers allege the spy agency illegally
intercepted Dotcom, family members’ and associates’
communications since at least December 16, 2011.
GCSB
was not, at the time, permitted to spy on legal permanent residents
like Dotcom, but the New Zealand government has since legalized such
surveillance.
Dotcom’s
lawyers also claim that the police seized an excessive amount of
property from the mansion, including network switches and routers,
power supplies and jewellery belonging to Mona Dotcom and Junelyn van
der Kolk, another plaintiff.
Dotcom
is accusing New Zealand’s top spymaster Ian Fletcher of acting
unlawfully, along with the minister in charge who signed off on the
action, Bill English.
All
in all, the claim is for a total of 6 million New Zealand dollars (US
$4.85 million).
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