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Richard O’Dwyer Piracy Extradition Battle Ended in New York Court

The epic battle to stop UK student Richard O’Dwyer being extradited to the United States is finally over. His excited mother Julia contacted TorrentFreak from New York with news that all necessary paperwork had been signed and that a brief court appearance had effectively ended legal action against her son. Richard thanks all those who supported him and says he is looking forward to getting his life back on track.

In 2011, Richard O’Dwyer was arrested by police in the UK for his part in the operations of TVShack, a site that listed user-submitted links to TV-shows.

Ever since the student and his mother, Julia, have been fighting an extradition battle to the U.S., where authorities wanted him put on trial for criminal copyright infringement offenses.

In March this year UK Home Secretary Theresa May approved the extradition request from US authorities. But seemingly against all the odds, last month it was announced that a deal had been struck to avoid Richard being tried in the United States.

The so-called deferred judgment agreement requires that Richard does not breach copyright in the future and orders him to pay compensation to rights holders. That amount was revealed today as £20,000, which represents the profits generated by TVShack between December 2007 and November 2010.

The agreement itself was hammered out between Richard’s legal team and U.S. authorities last week, but would not be completed until the student had appeared in court in the United States in a hearing scheduled for this week.

A few hours ago came the news that everyone had been waiting for, delivered by Richard’s mother who has worked tirelessly to fight the extradition.

“In New York now,” Julia told TorrentFreak. “Have just been to the court for sign off of deferred prosecution agreement…..so no extradition! Woo !”

Speaking outside the court with The Guardian, Richard said that the procedure had been very swift.

“The judge read out the terms of the deferred prosecution and I agreed to them and that was that,” he said.

While Richard said that he was very pleased that the U.S. government had decided to drop the case against him, he protested his innocence and criticized the UK government for doing little to help him.

“I still believe that I never committed any crime,” he said. “It really is a pity that the UK government didn’t try and resolve this without us having to come all the way over.”

That sentiment was echoed by Julia, who is thankful that the ordeal is now over but is disappointed by the inaction of the UK government.

“It’s just a pity that the British authorities couldn’t have allowed us to sort this out in the UK in a similar manner,” she said.

Of course, while the matter is now effectively over, there has still been a human cost.

“It’s been quite destructive to life really,” she said. “It messes up your finances, it messes up your relationships and causes stress.”

Offering a “a big thank you” to everyone who supported him throughout his ordeal, Richard said he was hoping to get back to normality soon.

“I’m just looking forward to getting back to university really, and seeing all my friends,” he said, but not before “a little celebration tonight.”

Richard and Julia will fly back to the UK today and will no doubt be looking forward to a peaceful Christmas – together, as a family.

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  • Ole Juul

    I’m glad he maintains his innocence. Way to go Richard!

    • http://twitter.com/DougMaiden1 DougMaiden

      just as Andrew explained I’m stunned that a mom can get paid $5470 in one month on the network.

    • http://twitter.com/DougMaiden1 DougMaiden

      …..goo.gl/5iWmB (Click on Home)

    • http://twitter.com/GregMilan GregMilan

      like Herbert answered I can’t believe that any one able to make $4566 in 1 month on the network.

    • http://twitter.com/GregMilan GregMilan

      …..goo.gl/3AhIW (Click on Home)

    • http://twitter.com/MeghanLambert11 Meghan Lambert

      The judge read out the terms of the deferred prosecution and I agreed to them and that was that,” he said.http://www.youtubeGoogleGetJob.qr.net/jPfD/watch?v=su6YN9gczvM

    • Guest

      (please flag the spambot above)

      also…

      FUCK YOU MAFIAA :)

      • http://netopit.com/noveau/ Ole Juul

        I come here because I support free speech and the pirate movement. That is why I wish Richard well and am particularly glad that we didn’t see an extradition in this case. You will note too that I always post under my real name, because I have the guts to stand up for my convictions on a public forum. I am also old and retired, so please don’t assume that this forum is only read by kids.

        One thing I notice on this site though, is there are a large number of anonymous postings saying “**ck you MAFIAA” and so on. I probably share the basic sentiments of the posters who say that, however disagree with the effectiveness of the language. It doesn’t work. Since I tend to assume that most people who post here are reasonably intelligent, I think those kinds of comments (especially posted anonymously) are likely from trolls who are attempting to make this forum look bad.

        • BobMail

          The only reasons there was no extradition is because he agreed to go to the US to face the charges without waiting to be processed. It doesn’t make him any less guilty, really he just saved himself a long drawn out process that he was very likely to lose at every step along the way. His deferred prosecution pretty much says “I was guilty, but I will be good if you don’t lock me up”.

          “, I think those kinds of comments (especially posted anonymously) are likely from trolls who are attempting to make this forum look bad.”

          No, that actually is pretty much the level that piracy runs at. Very few people are in it to promote true free speech, they are more into it to promote a free lunch. Too many of the people posting here are the children, who think it’s cool to say “f**** the man” without realizing the full implications of their statements.

          Free speech advocates would be wise to distance themselves from the piracy issue, because in the end it will be a negative that will hurt the cause, not help it.

    • Hq

      I had to sign the same agreement (Deferred Persecution) for my site as well.

  • http://twitter.com/MAFIAAFire MAFIAAFire

    Very happy that Richard has his freedom contrary to the cartels wanting to make an example of him.

    Very angry / sad that this got to this point because of the cartels greasing the right channels and the “wimpyness”/corruption/”slimyness”/shamelessness of the UK government against one of its own citizens who did nothing wrong under UK law.

    What next? China jailing masses of Europeans for watching porn because it breaks their laws?

    Shameful.

    • Dondilly

      Worse still would be getting extradited to Saudi Arabia for watching streamed porn.

      • http://www.facebook.com/jack.plissken.75 Jack Plissken

        Geez, maybe off with your head in certain places.Not to kidknap the thread but “honor killings” = speechless

    • Guest

      Yes, in effect that is where all this is going.
      Information is very nearly borderless now.
      There are many who would like to have geographical/political borders done away with as well to enable as close as possible totalitarian rule on a global scale.

      • Amused

        Yep. It’s not far away. The United States of The World.

    • ScrewEwe2

      Think I’ll have to search for “Sum Yung Fuk does Hong Kongs Dongs”, as long as it’s not a Ben Dover production.

    • icec0ld

      Silly!

      Only US law can be applied internationally! /Rollseyes

  • Positron

    £ 20,000 is outright scandalous and ought to be canceled immediately. Though I’m glad the O’Dwyers won’t have to face the ordeal of an extradition no more. As for that UK Home Secretary Theresa May, she ought to be very ashamed of what she did to these poor people, and the best thing for her to do right now is to offer her resignation as well as a public apology.

    • StephenTimmsMP

      Amongst the haystacks and throngs, there are some cold and sharp as a needle.
      Take it from me, Mrs May should be stabbed on the street

      • A1951350

        “Challenge Accepted” -Barney Stinson

    • PenzancePeer

      He admited to the Police that he was turning over £15k a month, we now hear that his profits over 3 years was a mere £20k. Hummmmmm, thats some overhead cost he was carrying, Seems a safe bet that he aint doing Business Studies, or Economics at Uni :)

      • PiRat

        From what I heard he didn’t keep his mouth shut during police interrogation and didn’t get a solicitor either.

        The £20k is mostly off-set by the donations for legal aid he got, currently stands at £13k.

        Very tempting in this sort of situation to bluff, fill your house with fertiliser, tell them to go **** themselves and sit and wait with the clicker in hand.

    • asdf

      Better 20,000 pounds than millions upon millions of dollars he would have had to pay in the US.

  • UKunderUSlaw

    What’s not being reported, especially by the BBC, is what his lawyers said about the USA’s laws applying to the UK citizens i.e. it should have never happened.

    • Dude

      Him and dotcom will probably team up in the near future

      • Anyone

        they have already been in contact over twitter

    • Anonymous

      that’s because the BBC has been given too much UK government backing and daren’t say anything to offend Cameron and his bunch of gutless fuckers. this government only knows how and is only interested in hitting the poorest in society, the ones that cant defend themselves, whilst doing whatever it takes to protect all their multi-millionaire mates. allowing UK citizens that did not break UK law to become subject to the laws of another country will surely come back to bite the UK government severely on the arse! and it cant happen soon enough! this bunch of twats has sent the UK further down the river than it has ever been before, but they seem to think that as long as there are a few rich people and loads that have fuck all, the country will flourish.duh!!!!!!

  • http://twitter.com/moosewithaj john nuyen

    ….Good for you have a pint on me back in merry ole england.

  • ndmushroom

    Like I said the last time the story was covered, good news for Richard (congrats), bad news for the rule of (US, it now seems) law in the UK and, by extension, the rest of the world.

  • Jimmy

    Great news for Richard!!

    But like everybody else has pointed this is totally scandalous – there’s no way a foreign corporation should be able pull the strings to the extend that they have in this case. Extradition is a very serious and barbaric threat to anybody, and to use it for a civil affair is completely over the top and devalues every crime related to it.

    The precedence that could be set by this whole situation is totally disgusting, for something that was initially dropped by the CPS, the whole thing is just stinks.

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  • hikaricore

    This does seem to set a terrible precedent.. happy for him, but the whole situation pretty much proves that the US copyright industry can get away with just about anything in the name of justice. None of this money will ever even be in view of the producers, writers, actors, directors, etc involved. That in itself is disgusting.

    • Muhahaha!

      LOL 20K Bailout xD for something that coulda have blown up in their faces… or How much is your life worth?
      How much did taxpayer waste on this farce in the long run? All over a few links provided to open up access to TV shows (which were already paid for) in other countries. What a LOAD of SHITE for every single *currency* of taxpayers money wasted on this. Judges should charge the wealthier of each party to handle the courts bills for prostitutes (lawyers) and coke. A huge win for the individual a big loss for company trolls and lots of paydays for the courts and their lackeys.

      People need to be aware of the costs these cases generate. It far outhweighs the gains for said trolls and by far only benefits a few blood sucking lawyers. Everybody else loses something that money CANNOT buy nor replenish. Worst part about it… there were NO damages caused by non-profit file sharing in the first place. So this whole case is a perfect example of the Mafia like monopoly of copyright and the atrocities it causes among the most civilised societies.

      Fuck these old scumbags, their retardedness, anti-progress views and money above all morals. I hope they do not reach 2013 and choke on those 20K. I wish they rot in hell for this and I hope artists learn from this to AVOID them like the plague.

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  • Techanon

    I’m surprised, it wasn’t a trap?

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      I’m kinda surprised about that as well. America has never been one to adhere to agreements that they were supposedly ‘forced’ into.

      • Gen. Eric Guy

        I’m still cautious that they’ll be keeping this as a component for another trap as a card that shows that “We’re reasonable. Remember Richard O’Dwyer?”.

        Always be suspicious of good deeds; I hate to say. Never thought I would be more paranoid of good intentions from anyone and anything (especially these elitist jackasses) than women are of nice guys.

  • uJonesing

    All of that money wasted just to “recoupe” UK$20,000. Even with the exchange rate, that doesn’t even come close to covering the lawyers’ fees on the Industry’s side. I wonder how much money they could have “recouped” if instead of prosecuting, they entered in to a distribution agreement with TVShack. I guess we’ll never know, because the old boys in the Industry are… well, too damn old.

  • http://twitter.com/Power2All Power2All

    And still its weird how people condemn HIM of user-posted links.
    USA is weird in a lot of ways…

    • ScrewEwe2

      That’s an understatement.

      “The Three Strikes Law in California

      Steal a Pizza – Get Life in Prison!”

      “It could happen to you. It did happen to Jerry DeWayne Williams, who was convicted for stealing a single slice of pepperoni pizza from a group of children. He received a third strike sentence because he had two prior felony strike convictions.

      Jerry Williams was sentenced to life in prison after pinching the pizza…because he had a history of robbery, attempted robbery, unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, and possession of a controlled substance. Making off with the slice was petty theft, but, because of California state law and Williams’ earlier convictions, the crime was classified as a felony……”

      http://www.lacriminaldefenseattorney.com/Criminal-Defense/Three-Strikes.aspx

      • Eddy123

        “…he had a history of robbery, attempted robbery”

        So this is the third time he has been found guilty of robbery. He seems to be an habitual criminal who committed 3 offenses that probably terrified his victims,, probably all against children.He deserves life. I wish we had this law in the UK.

        • Lawnstone

          Uh, no. You don’t receive life in prison for any theft. That’s just completely unjustified. The punishment is supposed to fit the crime. In this case, petty theft. You might like to take notice that prisons are often referred to as “correctional facilities” and not “punishment camps”. But the US prison system is so ass backwards that it may as well be the latter, so on the problem goes.

          “probably terrified his victims,, probably all against children”
          “unauthorized use of a motor vehicle”
          Children can’t drive! Or less flippantly, quit making shit up. It doesn’t help anybody.

        • ScrewEwe2

          The guy deserved punishment of some type for what he did, but it makes no sense to charge him with a felony for stealing a slice of Pizza from some kids, and to then commit him to life in prison because it’s his “third strike”. Third strike rules should only apply to baseball. In 1995 Williams was 27 years old. If you figure he lives to 78, use the $47,000 per year figure for incarceration (it was likely lower in 1995 but will likely go up in price in future years) he could theoretically be in prison for 51 years and cost California taxpayers $2,397.000 for stealing a $1.00 slice of Pizza. No wonder California is Billions of dollars in debt. No wonder the US government is Trillions of dollars in debt with all the bullshit wars, including wars in other nations, wars on drugs, wars in the name of keeping the oil flowing and wars on piracy. No, life in prison for stealing pizza is not justified unless he killed one or more of the kids.

          It costs an average of about $47,000 per year to incarcerate an inmate in prison in California.
          Over two-thirds of these costs are for security and inmate health care.
          Since 2000-01, the average annual cost has increased by about $19,500. This includes an increase of $8,300 for inmate health care and $7,100 for security.

          Source: http://www.lao.ca.gov/laoapp/laomenus/sections/crim_justice/6_cj_inmatecost.aspx?catid=3

        • Zwan

          r u silly?

          They use them as slave labor… Thats the only way america can compete with china.

  • Guest

    The MAFIAA wanted him extradited, failed.
    Wanted to sue him for insane amounts of money, failed.
    Incurred court costs greater than 20,000 pounds.
    Verdict made MAFIAA suffer a net loss.

    And yet.. Copyright cartel trolls will attempt to somehow spin this in to a victory.

    Poor sons of bitches.

    • Guest

      Yeah no doubt, they will probably say something like If you breech copyright then you will end up paying for it and compensating the rights holders.

      But of course they will leave out that it will cost them more to pursue you and getting you to pay etc, and that they are the ones who will lose.

  • ScrewEwe2

    Congratulations to Richard and Julia (that they didn’t get screwed over worse than this).

    Merry Christmas and a Happy Life 2U.

  • judyryckman

    So So SO HAPPY TO HEAR THAT!!!!!!!! congrats Richard!!!!!! I hope you and your family have an awsome christmas!! Julia, as a mother i know the hell youve been through, congrats girl! you are an awsome mom!!!!!

  • Moop

    what a pretty boy

  • TrueNorth

    HMMMMM…. seems to me someone posted on an earlier article about this case that he would get nothing more than a $50 fine,and i replied “it would be a hell of alot more than that”and they “blah,blah,blahed he wouldn`t” can someone redirect me to that article/my post, i`d like to do another post after this…..

    where i can serve him/her a a BIG slice of humble pie (cold)

    • Techanon

      click your avatar to access you posting history

    • PsuedoSouth

      What are you talking about? He only got a $50 fine, but under the current trading laws it equates to 20,000 pounds! ;p

  • DocGerbil100

    Richard and his mum Julia certainly deserve every congratulations. It’s a little bit of a pyrrhic victory, given that British justice and our facile excuse for a democratic government did both fail them dismally but – given the stress they’ve been under for the last two years – the fact that it’s all over is surely the best Christmas present they could have wished for.

    For us out here, I think it’s worth thinking about the settlement sum of just £20K – a painful amount, certainly, but a lot easier to manage than transatlantic jail-time – or the impossible millions the MAFIAA are commonly awarded in civil judgments. I wonder if that’s down to being a criminal complaint (rather than a civil one) and having an actual prosecutor prosecuting instead of just the MAFIAA’s bent lawyers?

    In any event, it’s finished, it ended relatively bloodlessly and thank god for all of that.
    Congratulations and happy Christmas to Richard and Julia. :D

  • mary hinge

    i wouldn’t pay these people a single penny, but i suppose he will as the alternative is staying in place that is not nice to foreigners at the moment. if America does not start doing some nice things in the world, or on their own shores soon, then they will have alienated an entire generation, which is not a bad thing, as it has had a very easy time freeloading with debt that it has exported for too long. raw capitalism is as dangerous as raw communisim

    • HairyMinge

      Raw communism isn’t dangerous. Like any ideology it only becomes dangerous when steered by despots!

  • townie2

    congrats Richard, it never should have gone this far.

  • http://www.itchimes.com/ Dexter Ejaz

    The procedure had been very swift by Richard in this student age, I would like to say congratulate to Richard that government is decided to drop the case against him.

  • JordanKratz

    You guys who live in Foreign Nations need to work harder to get Protests and Boycotts going against my A-Hole USA & The MAFIAA Forces.

    There are many of us who hate our Government and would love to see an End to their BS and an End to MAFIAA.
    Attack and hack/crack so you can dig the treasure of Dirty Laundry to Air out for the whole World to see.
    The Truth Shall Set You Free !

  • Realist

    ““It’s been quite destructive to life really,” she said. “It messes up your finances, it messes up your relationships and causes stress.”

    FUCK YOU.

    Artists aren’t afforded a decent wage or health care and you complain after being punished for parasitically making money off their work?

    Fuck you. I hope you die in a fire. Karma will get both of you c*nts.

    • Fredrika

      > “Artists aren’t afforded a decent wage..”

      Artists currently make more money than ever before.

      > “..or health care..”

      All people have acess to health care, that’s provided by the government.

      > “..and you complain after being punished for parasitically making money off their work?”

      There’s nothing parasitic about operating a fully legal site that offers an appreciated service, indexing links that no artist is responsible for.

      > “Fuck you. I hope you die in a fire. Karma will get both of you c*nts.”

      Hhmm, ok..

      • Realist

        Fuck your pirate ass too, Fredrika.

        There is no national health care in the US.

        Your willful blindness to the pain caused by piracy to artists shows what a greedy, selfish, narcissistic c*nt you also are, and I wish you the same fate as the O’Dwyers.

        • Fredrika

          > “Fuck your pirate ass too, Fredrika.”

          Because you are upset? When you get upset people should get fucked in the ass? Oh my..

          > “There is no national health care in the US.”

          How is the US’s failure to secure what almost every other country in the world has the responsibility if the pirates? Maybe if health care is important to people they should get rid of the Republicans, the pharmaceutical lobby and the insurance lobby once and for all, or take employment and work for a salary instead of risking everything by becoming an entrepreneur?

          > “Your willful blindness to the pain caused by piracy to artists..”

          That pain doesn’t exist in reality. You simply claiming it does doesn’t make it so. In reality, artist do currently make more money than ever before, and no scientific evidence supports the thesis that non-profit piracy constitutes any sort of a problem to neither society, the economy, creators, culture, the content industry’s current record revenues or the goal with copyright.

          > “..shows what a greedy, selfish, narcissistic c*nt you also are..”

          Helping you with the facts and pointing out your misconceptions makes a person greedy, selfish and narcissistic cunt? Ok then..

          > “..and I wish you the same fate as the O’Dwyers.”

          Every time you encounter someone who you can’t manage to argue against, you wish them the fates of O’Dwyer’s, to shift focus from your ignorance? Ok then..

        • Realist

          Musicians aren’t “making more money than ever before”. Wow, what a lying pig.

        • Fredrika

          > “Musicians aren’t “making more money than ever before”.”

          Nor did i ever claim that they did, now did i??????????? I wrote artists, which was what you initially referred to. If you can’t keep track of the argumentative thread you yourself started, then the problems lies with you.

          > “Wow, what a lying pig.”

          The only one lying is you yourself, which you did when you put the word musicians together with my quote.

          A musician performs work for hire and he is therefore an employee, and if an employee wants more money he should take it up with his employer. If he of his own free will has chosen to take a poorly paid employment that his problem.

    • Anyone

      the MPAA posts record year after record year, the music industry is also growing (the RIAA labels are shrinking because artists leave them for independent labels)
      if the artists can’t afford a decent wage then it is not the fault of “piracy” but of things like “Hollywood Accounting” or the labels skimming of 90% of the profits from the artists
      (and if they can’t afford healthcare then it is the fault of the country they live in, I’m assuming the US, since that is the only western country without proper healthcare)

      so redirect your hate to where it is appropriate, pirates are simply passionate fans that love to share their passion with others, the industry is fucking the artists over

    • DocGerbil100

      “Artists aren’t afforded a decent wage or health care”

      Who’s fault is that? My family are musicians. We decided two generations back – long before piracy became an issue – that if an artist chooses to work in an industry notorious for running what – in today’s terms – are basically a glorified collection of price-fixing, market-rigging, bribery-protected, illegal sweat-shops, then that’s their own bloody lookout and nobody else’s.

      You pays your money and you takes your choice – and if you don’t like it, leave.

      • Realist

        And if you don’t want to pay for it, don’t rip it off.

        That’s something a child knows.

        • Fredrika

          > “And if you don’t want to pay for it, don’t rip it off.”

          If the price doesn’t correspond with the economical worth of the product, you go home and manufacture it yourself instead, that’s something that every sane capitalist understands.

          > That’s something a child knows.”

          Children are well taught regarding the concept of sharing and the concept of being economical with scarce resources, not wasting them on buying useless crap that holds no economical value.

        • icec0ld

          I ind your name, tone and ignorance to be incredibly ironic. Continue to loose your shit for my amusement.

        • Guest

          I paid for it. I didn’t rip it off. And yet I’m still subject to laws and your bullshit accusations that treat me like a pirate.

          If you’re going to treat all of us like criminals, exactly why would anyone want to pay for that privilege?

  • JoTimmJo

    The mighty US seriously needs to start minding its own business and deal with its own problems! For once!

    http://www.AnonHide.tk

  • Anon

    This was not a happy ending. If he believed to be innocent of the charges he should never agreed to pay a dime to these monsters. This man is not a hero. He is a coward and should be ashamed not from creating a site like this but for allowing these people to extort him.

    I am starting to think this was all a setup.

    • Anyone

      he was sold out by his own government
      if forced to defend himself in the US it would have cost him a lot more than the $20000, even if he would have been found innocent at the end

      the US “justice” system is fucked up like this, but the blame should squarely lay with the UK government and especially Theresa May for selling him out like this, it’s really shameful

      • Anon

        Why not defend himself with a free attorney? I am sure the law grants him that right. Instead, he decided to pay and make the problem go away believing this was something honorable. Going to jail would make him a hero like TPB guys and someone to inspire others, someone that doesn’t give up and can put up a fight (if he truly believed to be right). Instead, his “legacy” to the world would be to be branded a coward, another pawn in their sick game. Way to go, dude.

        • Anon

          Correction: the english term for free attorney is PUBLIC DEFENDER.

          ***********
          The term public defender is primarily used to refer to a lawyer appointed to represent people who cannot afford to hire an attorney in the United States and Brazil. It is also a literal translation of the Spanish-language term defensor del pueblo, which usually refers to an ombudsman office, and is the English-language title of the Jamaican ombudsman.
          ***********

        • Anyone

          I guess that would be one of the advantages for making this a criminal case, you get a public defender

          still, that would have been many years of his life that he lost, I can’t blame him for taking the deal, even if it is a shitty deal

    • Guest

      No, you are a coward because you are just insulting him behind a computer.

  • MegaN

    He was only providing a site which allowed user-submitted links to content, NO content was stored on his website, so therefore this whole mess is a sham.

    There is no crime for “website linking” so why the hell this started in the first place should have been fully addressed, He’s just basically given away money which he cannot afford to do.

    A very bad ending to the case in that way, He should of fought more for his rights, “Website Linking” is not a crime, if it was, the whole internet would die, Google would be shut down (as that site also links to content as well, illegal or not)

    Diabolical !!

  • Guest

    “The so-called deferred judgment agreement requires that Richard does not breach copyright in the future and orders him to pay compensation to rights holders.”

    Well that’s a laugh considering he never breeched copyright in the first place as the was no court trial and no verdict of him being guilty either,

  • Guest

    I bet that not one penny of the £20,000 will ever go to the artists and that it is all kept by the RIAA to cover the expense of trying to get O’Dwyer extradited.

  • Forensics Man

    He still has to go to the US. Or did no one read that part? Just get him to the US, make up some new charges, and bam! Prison.

    • Guest

      He is already in the US and has already signed the agreement.

      Last part of article “Richard and Julia will fly back to the UK today and will no doubt be looking forward to a peaceful Christmas – together, as a family.”

    • Dustin Forp Rints

      You must not have read the article at all – he’s already in the US, which is where this case has just been heard. See pertinent part of TFA:

      “In New York now,” Julia told TorrentFreak. “Have just been to the court for sign off of deferred prosecution agreement…..so no extradition! Woo !”

      Speaking outside the court with The Guardian, Richard said that the procedure had been very swift.

      “The judge read out the terms of the deferred prosecution and I agreed to them and that was that,” he said.

      Also see video at the end of TFA with the title “Richard O’Dwyer speaks in New York after avoiding extradition to the US”.

      I see your forensic deduction is lacking Mr Forensics Man ;p

  • http://gene-poole.tumblr.com Gene Poole

    So his profits amounted to less than 7000 pounds a year?? These are the massive piracy profits the MPAA keeps harping about? Wouldn’t a job pay better?

    Clearly this criminal mastermind was all in it for the money.

    • Anyone

      I’m surprised that it even was that much money
      servers ain’t cheap

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  • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

    Case resolved?

    Not so fast.

    This is the Time for Richard, and all supporters, to get even more publicly active in the face of Theresa May and everyone else in the UK political establishment whose failure to value national sovereignty has produced this disgraceful display of collective national boot-licking.

    How valuable is the missed opportunity to become the unavoidable example for that increasing segment of the UK population that shares his disgust that a Citizen, who has committed no crime under British Law, should be summarily extradited to a foreign country that acknowledges no such reciprocal obligation in respect to its own citizens?

    The Theresa Mays and David Camerons of British Power will continue to treat private citizens with such contempt for precisely as long as average citizens allow it.

  • senior-citizen.1924

    Eat my from ass MAFIAA turds.

  • senior-citizen.1924

    ny. ny.

  • Pingback: Richard O’Dwyer evita la extradición por piratería con firma de acuerdo en Nueva York

  • ScrewEwe2

    Seemed like time to switch out my avatar again after a friend turned me onto this picture, which I did a few pirate edits to.

    Live Free or Die.

  • feogeo
  • Pingback: Richard O’Dwyer evita la extradición por piratería con firma de acuerdo en Nueva York | Noticias de Internet

  • Dingo

    Fuck the US and their corrupted judicial system.

  • Pingback: Richard O’Dwyer Piracy Extradition Battle Ended in New York Court | Zombie Torrents - Ultimate Torrents Downloads

  • Pingback: Richard O’Dwyer Piracy Extradition Battle Ended in New York Court | The Illuminati

  • Jane

    Any updates on this???

  • BTGuard - BitTorrent Anonymously

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