Kim
Dotcom goes to court to fight his extradition case as the political
situation in the country has never been worse.
As
John Minto says:
“This
week it will be important for another reason. It will be a litmus
test not of (Kim Dotcom and his internet activities) but of just how
independent our courts are.”
The
egregious invasion of this country’s sovereignty and the scandalous
arrest of Dotcom for what was an alleged civil breach of copyright in
an armed raid has opened up the very nature of political power an
corruption in this country.
The
government has used the revelation of the spies breaking the law to
further extend their power, attack civil liberties and to corrupt all
aspects of this country that are supposed to act as a counterweight
to the abuse of Executive Power.
Police take Hager to court over sources
The
election campaign saw the nature of this come out in public with
Nicky Hager’s book “Dirty Politics” and the public event “the
Moment of Truth” which brought together Julian Assange, Edward
Snowden and others to reveal the truth about how this country has
been taken over by the NSA Surveillance State.
This
should have opened the eyes of the public but instead the public went
into complete denial of the truth and returned the sitting government
to power and opened the doors to what is fascism where all pillars of
state power (including the fourth Estate) are being used to reinforce
corporate power.
This
saw one of this country’s worst criminals (Cameron Slater) getting
his complaints investigated by police which resulted in the policeraid of investigative journalist Nicky Hager’s house. There has
been a campaign of vilification against the government’s critics by
the government itself and the mainstream media. In the meantime,
John Key and his cronies have been whitewashed in every single actionthat has been taken against them.
Secret Police investigations of NZers using spineless corporations
This
is fascism acting under a fig leaf of democracy.
This
trial is, indeed a litmus test of just how independent our courts
are.
Here is the mainstream coverage
Kim
Dotcom’s extradition hearing starts today
A
court hearing to decide whether internet businesman Kim Dotcom should
be extradited to face trial in the United States will finally begin
today.
21
September, 2015
It
has been nearly four years since armed officers and a police
helicopter swarmed Mr Dotcom's mansion in Coatesville, north of
Auckland, arresting him and three other men.
Mr
Dotcom was the mastermind behind the now-defunct Megaupload, a cyber
storage locker that the FBI claims willfully breached copyright on a
mass scale by hosting illegally-created movie, music and software
files.
Three
other men who held senior positions at Megaupload - Mathias Ortmann,
Bram van der Kolk and Finn Batato - were also arrested during the 20
January 2012 raid, and also face extradition.
A
further three Megaupload staff members were arrested overseas.
Kim
Dotcom, left, and Bram van der Kolk. Photo: RNZ
Among
the charges the men face are conspiracy to commit copyright
infringement, money-laundering and racketeering, and fraud by wire
transfer.
However,
the United States' attempt to extradite Mr Dotcom and his co-accused
has been persistently stymied by court action taken by the four men
over the extradition process and mistakes made by New Zealand police
and spy agencies before and during the raid.
Six
months after the raid, a High Court ruling - which was later
overturned - found the search warrants used in the raid were too road.
Then,
in September 2012, the Government was forced to admit the Government
Communications and Security Bureau's (GCSB) spying on Mr Dotcom was
illegal, as he was a New Zealand resident.
That
sparked a review of the spy agency, and a widely-opposed law change
that allowed the agency to spy on its own citizens in certain
circumstances.
Kim
Dotcom told Radio New Zealand the events leading to today's
extradition hearing had taken a personal toll and affected the
friendships with his three co-accused.
Listen
to Kim Dotcom speaking to Kate Newton on Morning
Report ( 4 min 18 sec )
"You're
not always positive because of the sheer power that is opposing you
... governments, Hollywood, the recording industry and all they want
is to crush me and I'm just one guy," he said. "The
pressure can get to you - but I'm still here."
Kim
Dotcom said the four co-accused were no longer close friends.
"When
you go through stressful times like this there are a lot of things
that bubble up where you are stressed and you are annoyed and I think
that kind of led to us all cooling off a little bit.
"We
were very close friends before all of this started and I don't think
we are that close any more."
The case against Dotcom
The
United States' case against Mr Dotcom was summarised in a 200-page
document made public at the end of 2013.
The
FBI claimed Megaupload, while purporting to be an online locker for
people to store large files for their own use, was in fact acting as
a repository for thousands of illegally uploaded movies, television
episodes and music tracks.
Kim
Dotcom's mansion in Coatesville in January 2013. Photo: AFP
Megaupload
did not have a search function, but third-party websites that indexed
files on the site sprang up, allowing internet users to search for
titles.
The
site also had a rewards system, paying small cash amounts to users
who uploaded files that proved popular among other Megaupload users.
Some
very active uploaders earned more than US$50,000 in this way.
The
evidence summary claimed this rewards system "provided a direct
financial incentive for ... users to post URL links on [third-party]
linking sites".
"It
was known in the public that the Mega Conspiracy rewarded some users
who uploaded popular copyright-infringing works, even despite claims
on the Mega Sites that suggested otherwise."
Legal
document filed against Megaupload Photo: RNZ
The
US alleged - based largely on emails between senior Megaupload staff
- that the accused were willfully infringing copyright themselves, by
uploading and also viewing illegal copies of copyrighted material;
knew that material on their sites was infringing copyright; were
making money from subscription fees and advertising as a result of
hosting those illegal files; failed to block the accounts of
copyright infringers; and failed to remove the infringing material.
"At
a minimum, Megaupload Limited was plausibly aware of the ongoing
rampant infringement taking place on its website," the evidence
summary said.
Third-party
copyright violation was not an extraditable crime under the agreement
between New Zealand and the US, meaning the US would have to show
evidence that Dotcom and his co-accused were in an active criminal
conspiracy with their users.
In
an affidavit filed in North Shore district court last week, Harvard
law professor Lawrence Lessig said the evidence provided did not meet
the threshold necessary to extradite the men.
"There
is ... serious lack of evidence of communications between
[Megaupload] and such alleged users needed to prove an agreement that
is subject to laws of conspiracy," professor Lessig wrote.
"The
United States Constitution prohibits the United States Department of
Justice from prosecuting, as they apparently want to here, a new kind
of criminal conspiracy based on defendants providing an 'environment
of infringement' or their failing to disable all links to an
allegedly infringing copy."
Hearing delay
The
extradition hearing, which has already been rescheduled nine times,
could be delayed again this week.
It
was expected to run for four weeks, in the jurisdiction of North
Shore District Court.
Before
the hearing itself gets under way, the court will hear an application
from Mr Dotcom's lawyers for another delay, because the United States
would not allow Mr Dotcom to spend frozen assets on hiring United
States lawyers and expert witnesses.
Mr
Dotcom's lawyers said this placed their defence at a disadvantage
compared to the United States and the New Zealand Crown, which had no
such curbs on their preparation.
Laila
Harre, Kim Dotcom and journalist Glenn Greenwald speak to reporters
after the Moment of Truth event. Photo: RNZ
/ Kim Baker Wilson
Politics and spies
Kim
Dotcom has loomed large not only in New Zealand's courts since 2012,
but also in the country's politics.
Following
on from the GCSB revelations, Mr Dotcom launched the Internet Party
last year in order to contest the 2014 general election.
A
vote-sharing alliance with the Mana Party was condemned by some
within Mana, including former MP Sue Bradford, who quit the party as
a result.
Internet-Mana
gained just over one percent of the party vote - not enough for any
list MPs - and Mana leader Hone Harawira lost his Te Tai Tokerau
seat.
Just
days before the election, Mr Dotcom hosted an event at Auckland Town
Hall billed as "The Moment of Truth", where he promised to
reveal proof that Prime Minister John Key knew about him well in
advance of the mansion raid, and had a hand in moves to extradite
him.
No
such evidence emerged, but the NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden - who
appeared at the event via videolink from Moscow - claimed the NSA had
access to mass metadata from New Zealanders via a surveillance
programme called XKEYSCORE.
John
Key denied there was any mass surveillance of New Zealanders, saying
while some of the metadata might be from New Zealand, it was not
being collected wholesale.
Mona
Dotcom. Photo: AFP
Kim
Dotcom also played a crucial role in the political demise and
subsequent resurrection of former ACT MP John Banks.
Mr
Banks was convicted last August of failing to declare two $25,000
donations during his 2010 Auckland mayoralty campaign, as coming from
Mr Dotcom.
In
his decision convicting Mr Banks, the trial judge said he found the
testimony given by Mr Dotcom and his estranged wife, Mona, to be
reliable.
However,
the Court of Appeal acquitted Mr Banks of the charge earlier this
year, finding Crown Law had misled the court by failing to disclose a
memorandum in which Mr Dotcom contradicted the version of events he
gave in court
This case is not just about me. This case is about how much control we allow US corporations and the US government to have over the Internet
I can recommend this open letter from one of the most principled people in this coutnry, John Minto.
Open
letter to Kim Dotcom
By
John Minto
20
September, 2015
Kia
ora Kim,
Good
luck with defending the government’s extradition case against you
this week. Whatever the outcome in the District Court I’m sure
it will end up in the Supreme Court eventually so there’ll be a lot
of water to go under the bridge yet.
You
are facing the wealth, power and wrath of corporate America because
you provided an efficient means for people to share files on line
which allegedly included some copyrighted songs and movies as is done
on many internet platforms.
But
instead of taking a civil claim against you Hollywood’s corporate
moguls want to make an example of you. They want you in jail forever
as the modern-day equivalent of the body left hanging on the scaffold
for the vultures or the severed head on a pike… Don’t mess with
us is their Mafiosi-type message.
The
political environment in which your case is heard is more critical
than what the law says. A case of alleged copyright infringement has
no basis for extradition hence the desperate claims of “conspiracy”
and “racketeering”. If our courts have honesty, courage and
backbone they will toss this out as a corporate-inspired abuse of
legal process.
The
truly embarrassing aspect is just how our GCSB (Government
Communications Security Bureau) and police fell over themselves to
help out corporate America with their keystone-cops raid on your
home. That’s an issue which will be addressed only when New Zealand
withdraws from the five eyes network and develops an independent
foreign policy. It won’t happen tomorrow but it will
happen.
Your
millions and uber-capitalist lifestyle are a turnoff to me but during
the election campaign I was impressed with what I took as your
genuine commitment to the progressive policies of Internet MANA. Had
you wanted us to change MANA policies – even with a single comma –
we wouldn’t have had a bar of any relationship with the Internet
Party. From our point of view your campaign donations that came with
no strings attached were welcome. In contrast Labour and National’s
very existence depends on corporate money which in turn depends on
them adopting corporate-friendly policies.
I
have always disagreed with your analysis of the election outcome. It
was not your so-called “poisonous politics” which defeated
Internet MANA or lost Hone Harawira his seat as MANA MP. In fact the
strategy MANA adopted in our decision to go into a strategic alliance
with the Internet Party was a successful strategy. Hone gained more
votes in last year’s election than he gained in the previous 2011
election and Internet MANA gained significantly more party votes than
MANA received by itself in 2011.
(Hone’s
vote in Te Tai Tokerau increased from 8,121 in 2011 to 8,969 in 2014
while the MANA vote in the Maori electorates increased from 25,889 to
29,207. The Internet MANA party vote increased by roughly 50% from
the MANA 2011 party vote – up from 24,168 to 34,094)
What
lost Hone his seat was the political establishment of right-wing
Labour MPs, the Prime Minister, National Party, Maori Party and
Winston Peters all urging their supporters to back Labour MP Kelvin
Davis. For most of the Labour Party leadership the highest priority
at the election was to drive MANA out of parliament. Had Labour been
able to get close to government it would have needed the extra seats
Internet MANA could have brought to a Labour-Green-Internet MANA
government. However Kelvin Davis preferred to be a backbench MP in a
losing party than be part of a winning team to change the government.
Despite
the election outcome I remain proud of the risk MANA took in the
relationship with the Internet Party. We did so with our eyes open
and as I said that aspect of our campaign was successful.
I
think where the Internet Party made a serious error of judgement was
in the handling of the “moment of truth” meeting at the Town Hall
a week out from the election. It was a “moment of truth” in its
revelations of mass surveillance of New Zealanders by the US National
Security Agency but this was buried in the media’s expectation of a
more detailed revelation of John Key’s knowledge of your case much
earlier than he claimed.
In
any case that issue was never going to go far. Key has lied and
dissembled so often about his memory on a whole range of issues that
he would simply have shrugged his shoulders and most media would have
accepted it and moved on quickly.
Fixated
as they are on trivial political sideshows the mainstream media
ignored the issue of mass surveillance and launched a tsunami of
negative publicity – led by the Herald and TV3 – which swamped
the Internet MANA campaign and dropped the party vote to less than
two percent when it had been up to four percent a month earlier.
Your
case has already been of importance to this country in helping reveal
the extent of lying and illegal mass surveillance of New Zealanders
conducted by the GCSB.
This
week it will be important for another reason. It will be a litmus
test not of yourself and your internet activities but of just how
independent our courts are.
Kia kaha, kia toa, kia manawanui.
Kia kaha, kia toa, kia manawanui.
Here is the recording of the full Moment of Truth
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