Victorious RIAA defendant gets
attorneys' fees, turns to class-action plans
Calling the RIAA's case unjustified "as
a reasonable exploration of the boundaries of copyright law," a
federal magistrate judge late last week awarded former RIAA
defendant Tanya Andersen attorneys' fees for her nearly
two-and-a-half-year fight against a copyright infringement
lawsuit.
Andersen is a disabled single mother
living in Oregon with her now 10-year-old daughter. In February
2005, she was sued by the record labels, which accused her of
using KaZaA to distribute gangster rap under the handle "gotenkito."
From the outset, she denied all wrongdoing, and in October of
that year, filed a countersuit against the record industry,
accusing it of racketeering, fraud, and deceptive business
practices.
The RIAA continued to press its legal
claims against Andersen, despite any evidence other than an IP
address tying her to the alleged infringement. Andersen even
provided the name, address, and phone number of the person she
believed was responsible for the "gotenkito" account.
Inexplicably, the RIAA chose not to contact him for over two
years, then chose to take his denial at face value, choosing
instead to continue prosecuting the case against Andersen.
Throughout its prosecution of the case,
Andersen accused the RIAA of underhanded investigative tactics.
These included what Andersen describes as inappropriate attempts
to contact her daughter. In one instance, the RIAA's
investigators allegedly contacted her elementary school, posing
as a relative in an attempt to speak with then-eight-year-old
Kylee Andersen about the alleged infringement. Even the RIAA's
own forensic investigator reported that he could not find "any
evidence whatsoever" that Andersen had used KaZaA.
In June of this year, the RIAA finally
came to the conclusion that it had an unwinnable case and
decided to drop the case prior to its going to trial. The
parties stipulated to a dismissal with prejudiceāunusual for the
RIAA, since it made Andersen the prevailing party and eligible
for attorneys' fees. Andersen dismissed her counterclaims
without prejudice (meaning she can refile them) after she filed
a malicious prosecution lawsuit against the RIAA.
In his order awarding Andersen
attorneys' fees, US Magistrate Judge Donald C. Ashmanskas noted
that he had to make a decision on this case "without ever
addressing the merits of the claims or the counterclaims."
Despite that, Judge Ashmanskas noted that there had been a
"material alteration of the legal relationship of the parties,"
and that with the sole exception of attorneys' fees, Andersen
had gotten "all the relief available to a defendant of a claim
for copyright infringement."
Judge Ashmanskas also cited the RIAA's
admission that the "evidence uncovered during discovery proved
inconsistent and inconclusive," a fact for which the labels
could provide no explanation. He concludes that the RIAA lacked
the prima facie evidence to support the claims of
infringement.
"Whatever plaintiffs' reasons for the
manner in which they have prosecuted this case, it does not
appear to be justified as a reasonable exploration of the
boundaries of copyright law," wrote the judge. "Copyright
holders generally, and these plaintiffs specifically, should be
deterred from prosecuting infringement claims as plaintiffs did
in this case."
While Andersen's attorney adds up the
bills, Andersen is seeking class-action status for her malicious
prosecution lawsuit. Saying that the RIAA "has engaged in a
coordinated enterprise to pursue a scheme of threatening and
intimidating litigation in an attempt to maintain its music
distribution monopoly," Andersen wants to make a class from
those who have been wrongfully sued by the RIAA; if successful,
the RIAA could find itself locked in a long and costly legal
battle.
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