Pirates are not just hunting oceans’
floor but also the music industry. There’s
still no way she can pay record companies the $222,000 judgment she owes said
the Minnesota woman at the center of a long-running court fight over the
unauthorized downloading of copyrighted music after the U.S. Supreme Court
declined to hear her appeal Monday.
The justices did not give remark on
their decision. The amount was excessive
argued by the attorneys of Jammie Thomas-Rasset, of Brainerd.
In the early to mid-2000s, the music
industry filed thousands of lawsuits in opposition to people it charged of
downloading music without authorization and without paying for it. Most of these cases were settled for about
$3,500 apiece. Only two defendants refused
to pay and went to trial one of them is Thomas-Rasset while the other was
former Boston University student Joel Tenenbaum. The later also lost and was ordered to pay
$675,000.
Back in 2006, the initial case was
file against Thomas-Rasset. Ever since
the case was filed has gone through three trials and several appeals. According to the evidences presented by the
industry, Thomas-Rasset made available over 1,700 songs to other computer uses
via the file-sharing service Kazaa, though the lawsuit targeted only 24 songs.
"I'm assuming that since they
declined to hear the case it's probably done at this point," she said. But
she also said she needed to consult with her attorneys to determine what
happens next.
Thomas-Rasset at the age of 35 and who
works for the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe tribal government, maintained her claim
that as she has all along can't afford to pay.
"There's no way that they can
collect," she said. "Right now, I get energy assistance because I
have four kids. It's just the one income. My husband isn't working. It's not
possible for them to collect even if they wanted to. I have no assets."
She became a grandmother in June, Thomas-Rasset
added.
She refused both times when the
Recording Industry Association of America offered to settle for $5,000 when it
first sued, and offered to settle for a $25,000 donation to a charity for music
industry people in need after her second trial.
"We appreciate the Court's
decision and are pleased that the legal case is finally over," the trade
group said in a statement. "We've been willing to settle this case from
day one and remain willing to do so."
Kiwi Camara, of Houston, Thomas-Rasset's
attorney, uttered displeasure in the result but oblique in an email that the
legal options may still carry out. He
noted that Tenenbaum's case will still live before the 1st U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals. Tenenbaum is still demanding
the size of the judgment against him. His
attorneys, including Camara, dispute that it's "grossly
disproportionate" to his offense.
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