Kim Dotcom Hires Human Rights Lawyer To Claim MPAA's Chris Dodd Targeted Him In 'Contract Prosecution'
from the seems-like-a-longshot dept
Lost
in all of the hype about the launch of Kim Dotcom's new Mega service
was the fact that he's hired a new high profile lawyer, with a different
focus. Some of the details were buried in
Ars Technica's coverage of the Mega launch party, in which they mention the adding of Robert Amsterdam to the legal team:
Also circling is the latest addition to Dotcom’s ever-expanding legal
team: Robert Amsterdam of Washington, DC and London-based Amsterdam
& Partners. The human rights lawyer says his key work has been in
Venezuela, Russia, and Nigeria. Now he's contracted by Kim Dotcom to
investigate a possible human rights angle on the Megaupload case—in
particular whether one human, former Senator and current MPAA head Christopher Dodd, breached Dotcom’s rights by going out of his way to engineer what Amsterdam said could be seen as a “contract prosecution.”
Amsterdam agrees his work could help Dotcom seek redress from the US
government down the track. But his immediate aim is to publicize Dodd’s
role. “This prosecution should not be afforded the presumption of
regularity," he says. "The way this was done—the helicopters; the
rappelling down the buildings [of Dotcom mansion]; the over-reaction—all
of these are signs of a classic political prosecution.”
Amsterdam will spend the next two days interviewing the Megaupload
team as part of his preparations for a “white paper” he will publish in
around two months’ time.
This strikes me as a huge longshot for a variety of reasons, but it
certainly makes for an interesting storyline to follow. If such an
investigation actually does get somewhere, there could actually be
blowback for those who led the charge against Dotcom. As it stood, it
seemed unlikely that, even if the case fell apart, there would be any
ramifications for those who championed the cause in the first place.
Again, I find it highly unlikely that this exploration will lead
anywhere, but Dotcom's legal team has done amazingly well on a variety
of fronts to date, so perhaps they know more than has been made public
already about all of this.
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