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RIAA Uses Local Cops In Oregon Raid 371

newtley writes "Fake cops employed by the RIAA started acting like real police officers quite a while ago — one of the earliest examples unfolded in Los Angeles in 2004. From a distance, the bust, 'looked like classic LAPD, DEA or FBI work, right down to the black "raid" vests the unit members wore,' said the LA Weekly. That their yellow stenciled lettering read 'RIAA' instead of something from an official law-enforcement agency, 'was lost on 55-year-old parking-lot attendant Ceasar Borrayo.' But it's also SOP for the RIAA to wield genuine officers paid for entirely from citizen taxes as copyright cops. Police were used in an RIAA-inspired raid at two flea markets in Beaverton, Oregon. 'Sgt. Paul Wandell, Beaverton police spokesman, said officers seized more than 50,000 items worth about $758,000,' says The Oregonian. But this is merely the tiny tip of an iceberg of absolutely staggering dimensions, an example of the extent coming in a GrayZone report slugged RIAA Anti-Piracy Seizure Information."
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RIAA Uses Local Cops In Oregon Raid

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  • by froggero1 ( 848930 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:36PM (#19472697)
    full article without the annoying request for info popup thing:

    10 arrested in piracy raid at swap meets
    CDs and DVDs - Police seize more than 50,000 items worth about $758,000
    Sunday, June 10, 2007
    HOLLY DANKS
    The Oregonian

    HILLSBORO -- Police closed down two popular swap meets Saturday and arrested 10 people on accusations of selling counterfeit CDs and DVDs in what one recording industry official called Oregon's biggest piracy raid.

    Sgt. Paul Wandell, Beaverton police spokesman, said officers seized more than 50,000 items worth about $758,000. Most of the items were fake music CDs and movie DVDs, along with knockoff designer purses, sunglasses and clothing, and counterfeit brand-name toys, Wandell said.

    Marcus Cohen, anti-piracy counsel for the Recording Industry Association of America, called the number of items seized at the M&M Swap Meet and Millennium Flea Market "overwhelming."

    Besides being "the largest piracy raid in Oregon to date," Cohen said, Saturday's crackdown also was one of the largest operations in the country.

    Wandell said Beaverton police got a tip about counterfeit items being sold at a Beaverton market in December, and the investigation led them to the Hillsboro flea markets.

    Cohen was amazed by the quality of some of the bogus CDs and packaging, saying a good percentage of the Hillsboro discs were being counterfeited by a million-dollar replication machine like the music industry uses.

    About 20 recording and movie industry investigators came from California to help police identify counterfeit items.

    "We were surprised about the size and sophistication," Cohen said, standing in a steady drizzle Saturday afternoon at the chain-link fence that surrounds M&M. "It's something we are going to be paying very close attention to, finding who has a replication machine that shouldn't."

    The names of those arrested and the charges were not immediately available. The owners of the swap meets were not arrested, but Lt. Michael Rouches, Hillsboro police spokesman, said he would ask city officials to look into revoking the owners' business license if they knew what was going on.

    The flea markets are held every weekend.

    Hayde Miranda, one of the M&M owners, said she didn't know any of the vendors were selling anything illegally. "It's unfortunate that some of our vendors, who are independent business owners, were selling things that were fake. We rent to them, but we have nothing to do with what they sell."

    Miranda said M&M would be open today.

    When dozens of police officers arrived about 12:30 p.m. Saturday to serve a search warrant at M&M, there were about 200 customers wandering booths that sell food, clothing, jewelry, trinkets, car parts, music and movies. While police blocked the entrance, a steady stream of drivers and pedestrians approached the gate at 346 S.W. Walnut St., hoping to get in and wondering what was happening.

    "There were some vendors who ran and left their money behind, and some grabbed their money and booked," Wandell said. "But there were no problems, and it was very orderly."

    Customers and vendors leaving throughout the afternoon as police packed up seized merchandise said they were not bothered by the raid. "The police were just doing their jobs," said a car parts vendor who didn't want to give his name. The vendors who were arrested "knew what they were doing was illegal," he said.

    Wandell said customers who purchased counterfeit items would not be targeted because it would be hard to prove they knew the merchandise was fake. The CDs seized Saturday were selling for about $4.50 each and the DVDs for between $4 and $12, he said.

    Fake CDs and DVDs usually have poorly printed labels, loose shrink-wrap or a different kind of covering, Wandell said. Some of the movies seized Saturday included "Shrek the Third" and "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End," which are still in theaters and haven't been released on DVD yet.

    Cohen sai
    • by D'Sphitz ( 699604 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:15PM (#19472997) Journal
      So it's wrong for the police to bust people who are counterfeiting AND selling CD's for a profit? That's not exactly filesharing. So should counterfeiting anything be legal? Or does this only apply to the RIAA?
      • by flappinbooger ( 574405 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @10:21PM (#19473405) Homepage
        I've heard of the cops raiding flea markets to bust people selling counterfeit clothes (think fake Tommy Hilfiger stuff - non-Tommy stuff with the Tommy logo on it). In my book, selling knockoffs, bootlegs, etc, as the real thing is Piracy. Downloading an MP3? Not piracy. Piracy involves money. Copyright infringement can be piracy if you sell it.

        Copyright infringement can also involve fair use, depending on who you ask, LOL.

        Just my two cents worth.
        • by joto ( 134244 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @01:30AM (#19474593)

          In my book, selling knockoffs, bootlegs, etc, as the real thing is Piracy. Downloading an MP3? Not piracy. Piracy involves money. Copyright infringement can be piracy if you sell it.

          In my book, using violence or threat of violence to take control over a ship you do not own, is piracy. Selling counterfeit CDs? Not piracy. Piracy involves vessels moving on the surface of a large body of water, and weapons. Selling counterfeit CDs can be piracy if you stole them from a ship.

          Copyright infringement can also involve fair use, depending on who you ask, LOL.

          Yeah, just like piracy can be legal, if you have a letter of marque.

          • by Hal_Porter ( 817932 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @03:50AM (#19475155)
            Yeah, just like piracy can be legal, if you have a letter of marque.

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_positions_o f_Ron_Paul#Nonintervention [wikipedia.org]

            Congressman Paul advocates a non-interventionist foreign policy that avoids entangling alliances. He believes that when a war must be fought, it must be fought to protect the citizens, be declared by Congress, planned out, won and then left: "The American public deserves clear goals and a definite exit strategy in Iraq."

            At the time of the September 11, 2001 attacks, Paul, defining them as an act of "air piracy," introduced the Marque and Reprisal Act of 2001, which would have granted Letters of Marque and Reprisal, as authorized by Article One, Section Eight, against the specific terrorists, instead of warring against a foreign state.

            Hmm, now that's an interesting idea given that most of the terrorists are essentially pirates.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by kalirion ( 728907 )
            In my book, using violence or threat of violence to take control over a ship you do not own, is piracy. Selling counterfeit CDs? Not piracy. Piracy involves vessels moving on the surface of a large body of water, and weapons. Selling counterfeit CDs can be piracy if you stole them from a ship.

            In my book, an old Scottish way of washing clothes is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting [slashdot.org]. Typing a few words into a textbox and hitting "submit"? Not posting. Posting involves trampling clothes with feet in a tub
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by bentcd ( 690786 )

          I've heard of the cops raiding flea markets to bust people selling counterfeit clothes (think fake Tommy Hilfiger stuff - non-Tommy stuff with the Tommy logo on it). In my book, selling knockoffs, bootlegs, etc, as the real thing is Piracy.

          How about if you do not sell it as the real thing. I.e., you have a sign that says "Tommy Hilfiger knockoffs - almost indistinguishable from the real thing" or somesuch.

          This is basically what is getting at me - if a customer wants to buy a fake shirt or purse or whatever then he should be free to do so. This doesn't really appear to be the case anymore - it seems to be a case of trademarks gone bad.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by BakaHoushi ( 786009 )
        IANAL, but in my opinion, piracy and selling fake copies for a profit are two entirely different crimes and should be treated as such. So, normally, I'm the first to jump on the back of the "let's lynch some record-execs" bandwagon, but I can't really say I'm too bothered by these people's arrests. I think it's one thing to download/burn a copy of a CD, and quite another to charge others for it.

        The morality and legality of filesharing is a blurry line, but I'm fairly certain most of us can agree which side
      • by mpapet ( 761907 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @11:05PM (#19473667) Homepage
        Yes, yes Bad Guys doing bad things are arrested, so what could be wrong with that?

        The outrage could be inspired by a couple of reasons:

        1. the privatization of law enforcement. There is an entire private structure dedicated to law enforcement in the U.S. (private prisons, arbitration, lawyers) This is a case where the line between private and public has blurred.

        2. Outrageous excess. A couple of mega-corporations make enough money to hire their own law enforcement. I haven't even discussed their history of anti-trust, suspiciously monopolistic control of the distribution of entertainment, and a variety of other criminal acts already prosecuted.

        3. Right of First Sale? Right of non-infringing use? These are very important legal concepts that the media conglomerates want to sweep away. They discourage these uses by prosecuting anyone from a Grandmother to some idiots selling counterfeits.

        It's really very easy when you cast every issue in such black-and-white terms. You know exactly who the bad guy is. That must be comforting but it's misguided faith in an organization that history shows harm everyone.
        • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @12:27AM (#19474259) Homepage Journal
          Yes and when a group of gun nut buddies start an armed vigilante group they get arrested. So the second amendment was to allow citizens to control a militia rather than the government, so that the government could be kept in its place. Maybe it's not the government we should worry about. (although the government is the one that allowed the RIAA to get to this point, although not out of malice, just out of weakness)

          I guess power really does lie with who has the money. Too bad corporations are allowed to have money and power even though they are immortal (unlike crazy rich old man who abuses his position).
    • by thc69 ( 98798 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @10:13PM (#19473355) Homepage Journal

      ...officers seized more than 50,000 items worth about $758,000. [...]

      The CDs seized Saturday were selling for about $4.50 each and the DVDs for between $4 and $12, he said.
      $758,000/50,000 = $15.16 each. Problems:

      1. Their math doesn't add up.
          and
      B. Are they saying that the counterfeit stuff is "worth" that much? I figure they'd see it as quite worthless.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by qbwiz ( 87077 ) *
        I suspect that they were multiplying the price of each item by its legitimate retail value, not its counterfeit retail value (which is somewhat lower).
      • 1. Their math doesn't add up. and B. Are they saying that the counterfeit stuff is "worth" that much? I figure they'd see it as quite worthless.

        The counterfeit $20 bill in your wallet is worthless - but try to pass it off at face value or sell the print run to an undercover cop at a discount and you will be doing hard time.

        Cops, like judges and juries, do not "Think Geek."

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by drawfour ( 791912 )
        iii. You didn't RTFA. (This is /., so this is not a criticism, but merely a commentary.)

        From TFA (emphasis mine):

        Sgt. Paul Wandell, Beaverton police spokesman, said officers seized more than 50,000 items worth about $758,000. Most of the items were fake music CDs and movie DVDs, along with knockoff designer purses, sunglasses and clothing, and counterfeit brand-name toys, Wandell said.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
        Nothing I read said all 50,000 items were CDs. They said other imposter items were seized; movies, handbags.. etc.

        A fake gucci handbag will probably sell like hotcakes for $50... women eat that stuff up.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      "Cohen was amazed by the quality of some of the bogus CDs and packaging, saying a good percentage of the Hillsboro discs were being counterfeited by a million-dollar replication machine like the music industry uses."

      Um, so how is a person who runs a flea market booth supposed to tell the difference?
      This is retaliation on the flea market booth owner for selling second hand CD-ROMs.
      I suspect they can claim any CD is fake, especially if the same CD creation machines are used by "pirates" and the RIAA sponsor c
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by xENoLocO ( 773565 ) *
      Fake designer items at a flea market?? Ya don't say!

      The world really is going to hell in a handbasket if we're raiding fleamarkets to arrest people who sell fruit of the loom tshirts with hilfiger logos printed on them.
  • Wow..... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by XueLang ( 1070368 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:38PM (#19472707) Journal
    Last I remember, impersonating law enforcement was illegal.

    Is it too optimistic to hope they'll get busted for it someday?
    • Except (Score:5, Informative)

      by commodoresloat ( 172735 ) * on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:57PM (#19472883)
      This story is actually about them using REAL local cops (the kind who should be busting drug dealers and burglars) to do their dirty work, not rentacops.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by XueLang ( 1070368 )
        I was moreover commenting on the first segment. This one: http://www.laweekly.com/news/news/music-industry-p uts-troops-in-the-streets/2111/ [laweekly.com]
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Deadstick ( 535032 )
          It would be very interesting to see them try that in Colorado. Can you say "Make My Day Law"?

          rj
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        Sorry but REAL cops don't do anything but give speedy tickets and eat donuts.
      • Re:Except (Score:5, Informative)

        by thegrassyknowl ( 762218 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:54PM (#19473217)

        This story is actually about them using REAL local cops (the kind who should be busting drug dealers and burglars) to do their dirty work, not rentacops.

        In this case they can use real cops because copyright infringement for commercial gain (selling copies at a flea market for a profit) is criminal, not civil. I don't mind them going after the people who do this and make a profit from it - if you're paying for the junk you may as well just pay the original artists for it rather than some freeloader at a flea market who wants to make a quick buck. I get shitty when the [MAF]IAA goes after joe user for downloading a few songs from this new fangled interdoodle thing.

        The only reason they use rent-a-cop for their busting joe home user is because the real police won't touch it; there has been no crime if joe user downloads a song or a movie. In fact, the RIAA should just be filing civil suit in the small claims court, not busting into their house and whooping ass. I'd like to see some of the RIAA rent-a-cops and tossers get their asses shot up one day for busting into some Ilinois Nazi's place.

        If it's not real cops and they don't have real warrants wouldn't shooting up their ass come under reasonable force for self-defence?

        • Re:Except (Score:4, Insightful)

          by CodeBuster ( 516420 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @10:31PM (#19473467)
          If it's not real cops and they don't have real warrants wouldn't shooting up their ass come under reasonable force for self-defence?

          It probably depends upon the situation, where the raid takes place (which state), when the raid takes place (middle of the night as opposed to broad daylight), whether the raid was announced (even if only five minutes prior to arriving), and finally whether or not there are *real* law enforcement officers accompanying the rent-a-cops. If it was just the rent-a-cops and they arrived unannounced during the night and without law enforcement vehicles in a rural part of Tennessee, for example, then they would probably be picking buckshot out of their asses while they waited real police officers to show up. Some of the states in the American south east and mid west have shoot first and ask questions later laws for trespassers in the middle of the night dating back to the days of horse thieves and cattle rustlers. I would venture to guess that most rent-a-cops would probably retreat if meet with armed resistance (they are not going to risk getting shot for a couple of bucks of overtime pay at their rent-a-cop night job, especially since it may not be covered by their regular health insurance).
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by kamapuaa ( 555446 )
        Yes! Every single policeman should be involved in nothing but busting drug dealers and burglars. Other crime should get a free ride. Oh, if only a man with your wisdom could get elected into the mayor's office!
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by jedidiah ( 1196 )
        Sorry to burst your bubble but IT'S THE JOB OF REAL COPS TO BUST DOWN THE DOORS. You should start complaining when the RIAA uses pinkertons whether they are dressed up to look more like cops than usual or not. Bootlegging was considered criminal even before the recent changes in copyright law were purchased by the RIAA and MPAA.

        The real problem in this case is the fact that the RIAA is trying to cast FUD upon the used CD/DVD scene. It seems to me that the "counterfeits" here are "so good" that reasonable do
    • Re:Wow..... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by wframe9109 ( 899486 ) <bowker.x@gmail.com> on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:54PM (#19473221)
      Seriously?

      I despise the RIAA as much as the next... But this is one of the few things I have *no* problem with. File sharing is one thing. Selling counterfeit copies? That's a far cry from not being able to afford the media, or wanting to casually fuck over the assholes at the RIAA.

      Unlike file sharing, counterfeit sales logically *do* result in lost sales (arguable, but far less so than with file sharing, given the people are shelling out).
      • Re:Wow..... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Atario ( 673917 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @04:35AM (#19475275) Homepage

        I despise the RIAA as much as the next... But this is one of the few things I have *no* problem with. File sharing is one thing. Selling counterfeit copies? That's a far cry from not being able to afford the media, or wanting to casually fuck over the assholes at the RIAA.
        That's the problem — the RIAA has been such assholes that now people want to see them lose even when doing something that previously would have been seen as perfectly reasonable. They've destroyed any credibility and moral authority they may ever have had.

        Sounds kinda like my badly abused country right about now... :(
    • Re:Wow..... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by MillionthMonkey ( 240664 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @11:45PM (#19473989)
      Police officers, soldiers, judges, presidents, congressmen, prosecutors, civil servants, etc. can play the roles of state actors. They have ordinary rights to speech and organized protests that all citizens have, except when they are on duty and speaking with the authority of a state actor under color of law.

      Even on duty, a cop still retains his rights as a citizen. There are obviously some things a cop would get fired for saying while on duty, but as a citizen in general, he can't be put in jail for free speech. (Some people think "free speech" means their stupid posts shouldn't get modded down, but the idea is really that you can't go to jail for saying anything, no matter how abominably stupid it is, unless it reveals, indicates, or results in a prosecutable crime.

      When speaking authoritatively, a cop has to establish that he is a state actor who speaks under color of law. That means, wearing a badge, and yelling things like ("Stop! Police!") at people who are running away. Once it has been made clear that he is a state actor, he can arrest you for not following his lawful instructions- which themselves have the force of law. (Disobeying an unlawful instruction is legal; the cop can't demand a BJ for example, or demand that you incriminate yourself.) You can run away from an undercover cop, since there is no badge, but once he yells "police" there goes that excuse. If the arrest happens, they are forced by law to tell you it is legal to remain silent. THEN the mind tricks begin: "You're only going to help yourself, you know, by confessing to me and incriminating yourself in other crimes as well." At this point an arrested wizard who is clever can respond by uttering his magic anti-cop spell: "I refuse to say anything without counsel present." Cops hate such magic and try to discourage its use by pretending to be therapists, not cops, standing by the side of the road and who just want you to get it all out. "There, doesn't it make you feel better to confess?" "Yeah!" Many of these guys are thieves, not wizards. (You'd think they never got arrested or had therapy before. Admitting you have a problem is the first step to jail- just watch COPS for a few hours. My wife used to be a criminal defense attorney. She's really good at spotting illegal searches or arrests. There's at least one per show, sometimes more. She'll point at the screen- "Did you see that? Did you just see what he did? That was an ILLEGAL search with no probable cause so the arrest was also illegal! Meanwhile narrator John Walsh is finishing up his moralizing bit: "There won't be much pot where THIS stoner is going, ha ha ha.")

      Now say a cop works weekends busting heads for record companies. The badge isn't on him. Basically rent-a-cops are ordinary private citizens, working as security guards. They do not speak under color of law. An RIAA cop cannot arrest you. If one chases you, it behooves you to grab your warez and crackz and tunez and run as fast as you can. He will also not read you your Miranda rights, so remember, shut up, shut up, shut up. If you must say something, stick to obscenities, as to avoid revealing incriminating information. If he pulls out a cop badge and shows it to you, then he's a state actor. This would likely involve negative repurcussions for any cop who tried it while moonlighting for a security company.

      Soldiers can speak and protest as citizens. Not as soldiers. But soldiers are still citizens. If a soldier is wearing his insignia, it is understood that he speaks as a soldier so his statements are expected to reflect official military policy. Without the military insignia he is speaking as a citizen. He cannot carry out military orders. If he shows up to an anti-war demonstration with a big "Semper Fi" T-shirt and shorts, with no insignia, he is obviously there as a citizen against the war who happens to be in the military. This deserves no punishment.

      The Marines are currently after a guy who showed up at an antiwar demonstration with his military fatigues. He wore no insi
  • I'm waiting . . . (Score:5, Insightful)

    by OverlordQ ( 264228 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:39PM (#19472729) Journal
    As a result, eight suspects were arrested and charged. Seized in total as a result of the enforcement actions were a total of 20,800 counterfeit CD-Rs, 71,428 counterfeit movie DVDs

    The enforcement resulted in one arrest and the seizure of 13,000 counterfeit / pirated CD-Rs and 6,505 counterfeit movie DVDs. An additional search on 8th Avenue resulted in five additional arrests and the seizure of 33,600 counterfeit CD-Rs and 19,104 counterfeit movie DVDs.

    Yup, it's still Fair Use. I mean everybody's been paid already right? Why should I have to spend more then I want to get something. I should only have to pay what I want to pay right? It doesn't matter how much they spent to make it right? Since they're an evil movie studio.
    • Re:I'm waiting . . . (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Lithdren ( 605362 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:50PM (#19472825)
      Totally diffrent.

      People who copy CDs for their own use, dont sell them for profit.

      While what they did was scarry, its pretty well justified. They were indeed selling counterfit CDs and DVDs for sale. NOT personal use.
      • While what they did was scarry, its pretty well justified. They were indeed selling counterfit CDs and DVDs for sale. NOT personal use.

        The first problem with your justification is that you assume guilt. That's not hard to do when you presume all music and movies are owned by the MAFIAA, but this is not the case. When and if these people are convicted, we will know they violated copyright.

        The second problem is that copyright is a civil matter. You don't need to drag the police into it any more than yo

  • As it should be (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:40PM (#19472735)
    This is as it should be. Massive copyright violations like this are illegal, immoral, and unethical. Good job cops!

    It's criminals like this who provide justifications for DRM and other annoyance. Everyone who objects to DRM and copy protection should be applauding the cops for investigating the swap meets, and the RIAA for merely informing the local police of the copyright violators, rather than engaging in their own strong-arm tactics.

    That being said, it's a bit disconcerting to see them concerned with "who owns reproduction equipment like this". I really don't think that should be a concern of anyone... owning equipment shouldn't be a crime, even if it is professional-quality duplicators.
    • Re:As it should be (Score:5, Insightful)

      by bhmit1 ( 2270 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:56PM (#19472877) Homepage
      I'll second everything you just said. When someone breaks the law, we tend to call the police to enforce it, rather than having the riaa take the law into their own hands. But to your point:

      That being said, it's a bit disconcerting to see them concerned with "who owns reproduction equipment like this". I really don't think that should be a concern of anyone... owning equipment shouldn't be a crime, even if it is professional-quality duplicators.
      I'd say that owning equipment is perfectly legit. It's using the equipment to violate the copyrights that needs to be stopped. So if you find the equipment owner that created these disks, then you've found a key player in the crime. But to your point, equipment is evidence with the rest of the proof the police have, not a crime in and of itself.
    • Re:As it should be (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Jarjarthejedi ( 996957 ) <christianpinch@g ... om minus painter> on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:24PM (#19473061) Journal
      "That being said, it's a bit disconcerting to see them concerned with "who owns reproduction equipment like this". I really don't think that should be a concern of anyone... owning equipment shouldn't be a crime, even if it is professional-quality duplicators."

      I completely agree. I was reading through this thinking to myself that this wasn't really an issue, the police doing their job, but then that comment just boggled my mind. Since when did it become illegal to own replication equipment? What if you want to use it to replicate 4 CDs so you can put them in 4 different CD players and not have to carry the CD around with you? Of course since this is supposed to be "million dollar" replication machines (whose parts probably cost a couple grand to buy and put together knowing "million dollar" machinery...) there are probably few legal uses for them unless you're some famous celebrity who the RIAA wouldn't get within a mile of arresting. I'm just worried about the possible precedent if they start going after people for owning these things and the government upholds it which doesn't seem that unlikely...
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Aladrin ( 926209 )
      I fully expected to see nothing but the 'RIAA shouldn't get to use our tax dollars' posts and I wasn't even going to read the comments. I'm glad to see that at least some people have more sense than that.

      If my PC was stolen, and I saw it at a flea market, I'd -expect- the police to do something about it. Laws are laws and those who break them should have to face the consequences.

      Am I perfect? No.

      But publicly flaunting your lawlessness? They, and the people who buy from them, should be ashamed.
    • It's criminals like this who provide justifications for DRM and other annoyance.

      No, the MAFIAA companies want digital restrictions to prevent competition. Digital restrictions won't do anything to prevent wholesale copy unless general purpose computing is outlawed.

      There is also principled stand that can be made [slashdot.org] against copyright as it exists. Copyright is anything but perfect and it's not having it's intended effect. The rights to free speech and privacy you will have to give up to make digital restr

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:43PM (#19472767)
    I mean, piracy is a crime isn't it? What's wrong with using real cops to bust people pirating stuff?

    Unless people here actually condone piracy, which would be unthinkable for such a law and order crowd.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Funny I thought these were people who weren't acting as official policeman making themselves look like they were acting as official policeman to break into homes and places of work to seize their goods.

      If these people are breaking the law, take them to court or call the police who will then act in an official capacity. Do not impersonate policeman acting in an official capacity, when the people are clearly not (hence the RIAA logos).
  • by HeavensBlade23 ( 946140 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:44PM (#19472775)
    Why SHOULDN'T police officers be involved in a criminal copyright infringement raid? Selling bootleg CDs is WAY illegal.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by XueLang ( 1070368 )
      It's not the police officers that bug me. It's the part about them breaking in on people on their own that bothers me.
  • A little math.... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Rahga ( 13479 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:50PM (#19472821) Journal
    "Sgt. Paul Wandell, Beaverton police spokesman, said officers seized more than 50,000 items worth about $758,000"

    In other words, $15 per item for knock off and counterfeit items, including CDs and DVDs with allegedly unauthorized copyrighted material... Bull. I say alleged because I'm guessing that there were plenty of hip hop mixtapes that are technically illegal but in reality supported by the marketing arms of various record companies, stuff that would never sell for more than a few bucks each. Or maybe illegally imported (but not illegal to own or sell in, say, China) DVDs... Let's face it, the movie studios have certainly perverted justice and the law in order to sell their stuff for $20 a disc in Wal-Mart, so I'm not crying a river for them. It's certainly not a price anyone would pay in a real free market.

    Then there's purses, handbags, stereo equipment, all knock-offs... The assumption behind that $758,000 figure is that people would pay so many thousands of dollars for a Gucci bag, whatever that is, and selling a $20 knock off will hurt sales on behalf of Gucci.

    Let's revise the statement above.... 50,000 items of merchandise at a value of, say $150,000 in market value might be more realistic. I can't see anyone sticking their neck out to sell that many items at a flea market for less than that. :)
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      As someone who knows Beaverton well, I can say that hip-hop mix tapes are not a large item there.
    • The assumption behind that $758,000 figure is that people would pay so many thousands of dollars for a Gucci bag, whatever that is, and selling a $20 knock off will hurt sales on behalf of Gucci. Let's revise the statement above.... 50,000 items of merchandise at a value of, say $150,000 in market value might be more realistic.

      So you'd guesstimate that a purse might sell for $20 and then assume that all 50k items would sell at $3 each to justify a market value that you pull out of your rear. $750k for fa

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      It's probably the same math as they use when busting marijuana grow-operations. Police will claim 5 million bucks worth of extremely dangerous crack like marijuana but how they do it is root the plant whole, throw it in a big pile and then weigh everything (stalks/roots/etc)... what might have been 10 lbs of a decent bud turns out to be 500 in the local newspaper.
    • In other words, $15 per item for knock off and counterfeit items, including CDs and DVDs with allegedly unauthorized copyrighted material... Bull. I say alleged because I'm guessing that there were plenty of hip hop mixtapes that are technically illegal but in reality supported by the marketing arms of various record companies, stuff that would never sell for more than a few bucks each

      Worth it to them. Or does it make you feel any better when you find out the Indian doing your old job is only being paid
  • by Rahga ( 13479 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @08:55PM (#19472871) Journal
    "We were surprised about the size and sophistication," Marcus Cohen (anti-piracy counsel for the Recording Industry Association of America) said, standing in a steady drizzle Saturday afternoon at the chain-link fence that surrounds M&M. "It's something we are going to be paying very close attention to, finding who has a replication machine that shouldn't."

    Wait.... There are people how have replication machines that shouldn't? Is there a law against this? Only thy member of thouest recording industries shalt have duplicator machines?

    Go jump in a lake, Mr. Cohen. Same goes to the rest of the RIAA.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:08PM (#19472951)
      It's kind of like in Montana you can be strapped with a sword or machete as long as it's in plain view and that's cool. Likewise; you don't need a permit for a handgun; you just can't conceal one without a permit. There is nothing illegal about walking around with a handgun stuffed in the back of your pants or with shoulder holsters over your shirt as long as it's visible. A similar law is in place for knives; as long as it's 6 inches or more it must be in plain sight. However, a switchblade or butterfly knife is illegal.

      So I suppose you should be able to have a big ass replication machine in your clandestine warehouse with this equipment if you have a big ass sign on the front of the joint viewable from space that says "Yo, we're copying DVD's and shit in here!". BUT, you can't be copying just a few CD's in your basement on your PC, because that shit is ILLEGAL.
    • The guy's wording was unfortunate (and how can you blame him, being that he works for the RIAA) but you can't deny that the replication machine itself would be strong circumstantial evidence against the perpetrator, and would serve alongside other evidence if/when that person is brought to trial.

      Just because anybody in the US can legally own a firearm, doesn't mean that firearms can't be used as evidence in murder trials, for instance.

  • by ADRA ( 37398 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:06PM (#19472937)
    On the first hand we have people paid to basically impersonate police which most can agree is pretty bad, if not illegal (IMHO).

    In the second case we have police raiding a flea market which was selling counterfeit goods, which I think most of you should realize is perfectly acceptable. If some jerk off is making money of copyright infringement, I hope they're taken to the ringer. At the -very- least their goods should be confiscated.
    • Screwing both sides (Score:3, Interesting)

      by phorm ( 591458 )
      Not only that, but I wonder how legit the discs etc look. If they look enough like the real thing, people might just think they're getting a bargain. The means that they're getting screwed with an illegitimate item, and the creators/sellers of the original are also getting screwed (because the people in question would, at least, appear to be the type that prefers physical goods to downloads).
  • American business interests are hurt by counterfeiting, and not just in music or movies. I was at the Pomona Fairplex a few years ago when San Bernardino county sheriffs came in and seized mislabeled Pentiums (they were 300s internally overclocked to 450 MHz -- yeah, this was a while ago :). Purveyors of fake Louis Vuitton handbags in the garment district get raided too: http://lapdblog.typepad.com/lapd_blog/2006/05/pol i ce_seized_c.html [typepad.com] (1) How likely is it, do you think, counterfeiters are paying colle

  • by westlake ( 615356 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:13PM (#19472985)
    But it's also SOP for the RIAA to wield genuine officers paid for entirely from citizen taxes as copyright cops. Police were used in an RIAA-inspired raid at two flea markets in Beaverton, Oregon. 'Sgt. Paul Wandell, Beaverton police spokesman, said officers seized more than 50,000 items worth about $758,000,' says The Oregonian.

    The threshold for federal prosecution for copyright infringement is $2500. It is well within anyone's rights to ask the police to close down a million-dollar market in counterfeit goods. USDOJ Computer Crime & Intellectual Property Section [usdoj.gov]

    • The threshold for federal prosecution for copyright infringement is $2500.

      But... who quantifies that? Is someone with an 80gig iPod carrying around -millions- of dollars of copyrighted material? By RIAA's definition... ?
  • I'll just keep saying it... Fuck the RIAA. [jinx.com]
  • Bravo RIAA. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by samwh ( 921444 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:16PM (#19473001)
    This is exactly what they SHOULD be doing; getting the the people that rip off the Artist's FOR A PROFIT.

    They should focus more on operations like this and less on filesharers.
  • They confiscated 50,000 bootleg CDs which they valued at $15 each. Of course in reality, these items had a much lower value. It's like busting 1 pound of Mexican Dirt Weed and estimating it's value the same as BC Bud.
  • This is good. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:22PM (#19473045)
    Regardless of your attitude towards people who download copies of music without the copyright holders permission, I don't know of too many people here who would argue that its OK to SELL copies of music without the copyright holders permission.
    This is where the RIAA should be focusing their time.
    • I don't know of too many people here who would argue that its OK to SELL copies of music without the copyright holders permission.

      I would. If individuals can make copies, there's no reason why businesses shouldn't be able to at well. Furthermore, if anyone in either group has more copies than they need for personal use, I see no reason why they shouldn't be able to sell those copies to others. Combining the first and second points, I see no reason why anyone should be prevented from running a business w

      • Individuals make copies for their own purposes, or maybe a few buddies. They don't profit off other people's work. Even versions that are on torrents don't make any profit for whoever posts them - it's charity in a sense. If people make copies for profit, then it isn't altruism. Companies that make the movies DO have to recoup their losses; it costs millions to make a movie. This is why we have copyright law - so companies DO have a reason to produce. Today, we have a lot of abuse of copyrights, but the fu
  • by Rockenreno ( 573442 ) <(rockenreno) (at) (gmail.com)> on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:25PM (#19473067)
    Selling pirated CDs and DVDs for personal profit is illegal and should be. I have no problem with the police assisting in taking out large distributors of this illegal media. The RIAA has no business pretending to be police. They are not civil servents and will not be acting in the best interest of the general public. At least the police are supposed to be working for the greater good.
    Aside from the negative effects this could have on legal retailers, distributors, and artists, consumers could easily be fooled into thinking these items were legitimate copies. Some people do actually watch those extra features.

    All that being said, I still think the RIAA is despicable and their attack on online media distribution is patently absurd and abusive. They need to work with the consumers instead of against them and realize that their model is outdated and irrelevant in the modern world.
  • It sounds like they were doing more than selling unsanctioned copies -- they were selling counterfeit copies. In other words, the sellers were misrepresenting the provenance of the goods.

    That's fraud. And I support police actions against fraud. If the RIAA and MPAA would confine their attention to combating counterfeiting and other acts of fraud, they'd have a hell of a lot more public sympathy.

    Schwab

  • by Proudrooster ( 580120 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:35PM (#19473121) Homepage
    These busts are nothing compared to the container loads full of pirated CD's, DVD's, cosmetics, toys, bikes, medicine, clothing, batteries, cameras, and electronics coming in from China [businessweek.com]. The goods coming in from China look identical to the legitimate item, except that sometimes the batteries explode due to defects in cloning the original and the medicine, costmetics, and food sometimes kill and/or poison. If our government fails to contain China, the US will become to China what England was to the 13 Colonies. If the RIAA really wants to stop mass piracy and copyright violations, they should start with the container ships and the Walmart supply chains [theiplawblog.com].

    P.S. - Take my advice, don't feed the wheat-gluten from China to your pets.
  • ...go and bust people that treated me badly?

    I believe its called impersonation and its against the law.

    So why are they not busted for it?
  • Look, RIAA bashing is fun and all, but that article has some fairly significant bias to it.

    What's the problem with the police being involved? Mass commercial copyright infringement? Yeah, that's a CRIME. Those FBI warnings at the front of the movie aren't just for show. And criminal law enforcement is the job of the police.

    Would we prefer that the RIAA could arrest people? They might.
  • by dpbsmith ( 263124 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @09:59PM (#19473263) Homepage
    "A tip-off on fake CDs is that they will have 20 to 24 tracks each, instead of 12 or 14," says Marcus Cohen [oregonlive.com] anti-piracy counsel for the Recording Industry Association of America.

    Yes, sir, and beware of one-pound cans of coffee that contain sixteen ounces instead of thirteen, sleazy operators that will sell you a four by four by eight foot "cord" of wood, and call the cops if your bag of a dozen bagels turns out to contain thirteen.

    Short measure, your infallible sign of genuine U. S. music industry product.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Torodung ( 31985 )

      A tip-off on fake CDs is that they will have 20 to 24 tracks each
      Interesting. That description fits many of the classical music CD's I own. I had no idea Sony and EMI were piracy groups.

      --
      Toro
  • if they come knocking on my door they'd want to clearly identify themselfs as police officers or there will be nothing but hot lead greeting them.
  • by man_ls ( 248470 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @10:18PM (#19473387)
    Wait, let me get this right. People are outraged that the RIAA used the local police department to seize unauthorized and unlicensed duplicates of their copyrighted works which were being sold for profit?

    That's an actual felony in the United States, not the civil matter that small-scale P2P usage is.

    Of course the police would be involved. I'm only surprised it was the local cops, not the U.S. Marshall's office or some similar Agency.
  • Yes, they can dress up as cops and go out into public, but if they impersonate law enforcement officers, they can be arrested and punished just as much as a bootlegger. BOTH are FELONIES.

    So, by dressing up in raid uniforms, and behaving like police officers, they are impersonating law enforcement officers, which is unlawful, and in my words, just plain eerie.

    What's next? RIAA Humvees or surplus troop carriers?
  • Sleazy article (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Torodung ( 31985 ) on Monday June 11, 2007 @10:58PM (#19473605) Journal
    I'm just going to add to the chorus here:

    Selling counterfeit goods in a mass market is a real felony violation called infringement for personal gain. It carried a jail sentence decades before the DMCA ruined copyright law. This is exactly the kind of crime that needs to be busted up by the cops, and I don't care that the RIAA was the one who tipped them off.

    Way to go RIAA. Keep doing your job to protect your members' interests.

    The rent-a-cop raids are atrocious, but they have nothing to do with a sensible raid seizing "50,000 items worth about $758,000." That kind of infringement is wrong. I hope the people who ran the market enjoy their cell.

    --
    Toro
  • The RIAA doesn't seem to feel their plate is already full. Now they're going after Hip-Hop mix tapes as well. [hiphopagainsttheriaa.com] I don't know what it's going to take to stop them, but I hope they hit it soon.
  • by Bones3D_mac ( 324952 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @02:39AM (#19474889)
    Isn't the kind of situation where the RIAA send their own militia to "assist" in raids like these a dangerous conflict of interest? If there are enough of these goose-stepping RIAA gestappo guards running around during the raid, misdirecting the actual law enforcement officers around them, what would prevent any additional RIAA guys from walking in during the chaos to plant evidence (like the duplication machine they mention), ensuring they can detain at least one person to make an example of before the public?

    It's almost like giving the ok to a rape victim's family to participate in the bust of the suspect and trusting that none of them would throttle the guy before the police got to him.

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