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    A wild online ride hits the digital piracy wall

    WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — On his way up, he fooled them all: judges, journalists, investors and companies.

    Then the man who renamed himself Kim Dotcom finally did it. With an outsized ego and an eye for get-rich schemes, he parlayed his modest computing skills into an empire, becoming the fabulously wealthy computer maverick he had long claimed to be.

    Now his wild ride may be over. Last month he was arrested in New Zealand for allegedly facilitating millions of illegal downloads of songs and movies through Megaupload, his once-popular website, now an important focus of the entertainment industry's war on online piracy.

    U.S. prosecutors are seeking the 38-year-old German's extradition in what they say could be one of the largest copyright cases in history. Dotcom, who denies the charges, was freed on bail Wednesday after a month in jail, and authorities have seized, among other things, his twin giant TV sets, massive statue of the "Predator" movie monster, and Rolls-Royce (vanity plate: GOD).

    His story is one of breathtaking audacity that spans both the globe and the modern computing era. Interviews conducted by The Associated Press and a review of court documents and other records indicate that Dotcom was able to create a legendary past, trade upon it by manipulating the news media and avoid serious consequences when he broke the law.

    Dotcom makes for a larger-than-life defendant in almost every respect: U.S. court papers describe him as about 1.95m (6 feet, 5 inches) tall and weighing 146 kilograms (322 pounds). At various times, he has depicted himself online as a playboy surrounded by beautiful women, fast cars and guns; a terrorist hunter and a technology martyr ready to commit suicide.

    Now he is confined to his home, has refused through his lawyers to grant interviews, and is forbidden to log on to the Internet.

    Born Kim Schmitz in the German coastal town of Kiel, Dotcom grew up with an alcoholic father. As a teen, he created a mystique for himself that led the Sunday Telegraph of London to call him a "superhacker."

    German hackers interviewed by the AP, However, say he did little of what he claimed.

    "He was trying to make half a buck on every occasion offered him," said Dirk Engling, spokesman for the Chaos Computer Club, which eventually banned Schmitz from attending any of their events. "Not having some real skills of his own, he was always using other people's inventions to attack systems and then claim he did it."

    Engling said Schmitz ended up putting club members in legal jeopardy through his recklessnes, but some wanted to work with him anyway because he radiated the social ease they lacked.

    One of his first schemes, according to Engling, was selling pirated software from an online mailbox.

    In 1998, a Munich court convicted Schmitz and an accomplice of computer fraud and of buying and selling stolen phone cards. They got off with a fine and probation for what the judge called "youthful foolishness." Schmitz came to court wearing a black suit and sunglasses, saying he loved "feeling like a spy."

    Three years after his first conviction, he had resurfaced as a high-flying venture capitalist. He told reporters his company was worth $200 million and that he was rescuing the struggling online startup company "LetsBuyIt" with an initial cash injection of up to four million euros ($5 million) and a promise of another 50 million euros ($65 million).

    Reporters published his bogus story, sending the stock skyrocketing. On the first day, LetsBuyIt leaped from 19 cents to 27 cents a share. The next day, it was up to 77 cents.

    He appeared in an online video depicting himself living it up on a superyacht in Monaco, with beautiful women draped on his arms: "Kim Schmitz is a PR man's nightmare and a journalist's dream," wrote the Telegraph.

    A German court would hear later that he had pulled a textbook "pump-and-dump" move, borrowing money to buy Letsbuyit shares, and then quickly selling them to those who swallowed his investment story, gaining himself a quick profit of 1.1 million euros ($1.4 million).

    But before authorities could catch up with him on the LetsBuyIt scam came the Sept. 11 attacks, and he captured fresh headlines by offering $10 million for the capture of Osama bin Laden. He claimed to have formed Yihat — Young Intelligent Hackers Against Terrorism — to wage cyberwar against banks harboring terrorist money.

    That one backfired on him when hacker pranksters calling themselves Fluffy Bunny posted a lewd picture on his website.

    Sought by German authorities over the LetsBuyIt scam, he fled to Thailand In January 2002, writing on his website that "A German high-tech fairy tale is to end."

    He then posted a troubling message suggesting he would commit suicide on his 28th birthday.

    "Enough is Enough. Kim Schmitz will die next Monday. See it on this website live and for free. When the countdown is over, Kim steps into a new world and wants you to see it."

    Authorities got to him first, arresting him at a Bangkok airport a few days before his birthday. He had meanwhile posted another strange message to his site: Henceforth he would answer to the title of "His Royal Highness King Kimble the First, Ruler of the Kimpire."

    In May that year he was back in a Munich court, convicted of manipulating stock prices in the LetsBuyIt scam. Again he got lucky, avoiding jail but drawing a fine of 100,000 euros ($130,000).

    He also claimed to have learned something about the perils of the spotlight. "My mistake was that I embraced the media and gave them the stories they wanted," he wrote on the filesharing-news website TorrentFreak.

    But it didn't take him long to get back in the fast lane. George Gurley, a reporter writing for Vanity Fair magazine, came across him at the 2004 Gumball 3000 rally, an unofficial European road race for jet-setters, driving at 250 kph (155 mph).

    "He's a controversial figure here, part buffoon, part Dr. Evil, but a skilled and very fast driver," the reporter wrote.

    The next year he launched his most significant venture, registering Megaupload.com in Hong Kong. And he reinvented himself, legally changing his name first to Kim Tim Jim Vestor, then to Kim Dotcom.

    "Hong Kong, what an awesome place to do business and to host my new phantom persona," he wrote on TorrentFreak. "People there leave you alone and they are happy for your success."

    It took a few years before authorities began paying attention to Megaupload.

    In 2009, Forbes magazine wrote that little-known Carpathia Hosting had increased its business 100-fold almost overnight, and was suddenly generating 0.6 percent of all online traffic, at the time twice the bandwidth consumed by Facebook. It was because the hosting site had some new clients: Megaupload.com, Megarotic.com, Megaclick.com, Megavideo.com.

    "Forbes readers probably haven't heard of them," Craig Labovitz of Arbor Networks, the Internet security provider, told the magazine. "Almost every teenager has."

    The sites, Forbes said, were open to anyone with little or no money to download songs, TV shows or movies.

    His notoriety again on the rise, Dotcom nevertheless managed to secure New Zealand residency in 2010, under a scheme to attract wealthy investors to the country. He invested 10 million New Zealand dollars ($8.4 million) in government bonds and sponsored a fireworks show in Auckland, the main city, to the delight of many including the mayor.

    He leased one of the country's plushest mansions, worth $24 million. He also appeared to be settling down, having married Mona, a Filipina, and had three children with her.

    In early 2011, U.S. porn site Perfect 10 sued Dotcom and Megaupload, claiming he was running a pirate site engaged in massive copyright infringement. Megaupload responded that it operated a virtual locker service, and had no control over what its users uploaded. The company added that it routinely removed any offending content whenever it received a notice of infringement.

    The case was settled out of court. But Dotcom's problems were not over.

    Kevin Suh, the senior vice president of content protection at the Motion Picture Association of America, said the association filed a detailed complaint against Megaupload in 2010, which triggered a federal investigation. Prosecutors claim the "mega conspiracy" netted Dotcom and others $175 million in illicit advertising revenue and download fees.

    "He is the biggest copyright infringer in the world," Suh said to the AP.

    Megaupload's lawyer, Ira Rothken, said the claims are without merit and will be fought vigorously.

    He called the case an unwarranted show of force by authorities desperate to prove they are serious about battling copyright fraud. If federal authorities had a problem with Megaupload, Rothken said, they should have sued first in civil court rather than having people thrown in jail.

    Dotcom now faces a series of charges in the U.S., including copyright fraud and money laundering. The racketeering charges alone carry a maximum sentence of 20 years.

    In New Zealand last month, 10 years after threatening to kill himself on his 28th birthday, Dotcom planned a big celebration for his 38th. After all, those youthful fantasies of wealth and notoriety had come true.

    But police were ready. On Jan. 20, the day before his birthday, they swooped down in helicopters onto the grounds of his mansion and cut their way into a safe room where they found Dotcom hiding. They also arrested three of his colleagues.

    The party is on hold.

    ___

    Associated Press writer David Rising in Berlin contributed to this story.

     

    35 comments

    • Noah  •  San Diego, California  •  3 mths ago
      Have you seen the way hollywood lives? Regardless of downloaders, these people are still making 100s of millions even though 90% of all movies and network TV shows suck.
      • william 3 mths ago
        My thoughts exactly, well said Noah!!
      • Doctor Biobrain 3 mths ago
        What's your point? They make the content and people pay them for it. Kim Dotcom and other pirates, on the other hand, are just thieves getting rich by stealing from others. Is it ok for other people to steal your work?

        And just so you know, not everyone in Hollywood is rich. The writers, producers, and actors get a piece of the money whenever a DVD is sold or a movie is shown on TV. These are the people the thieves are stealing from too. Sure, some producers are rich, while others need this money as their living.
      • Anonymous 3 mths ago
        The theft-metaphor is problematic in the sense that a key element of stealing is the removal of the original, which is not the case in file sharing since it is copied and shared. Theft of profits hardly. The number one pirated game MW3 still broke all sales records for a game and it was just the same #$%$ new name. Most things pirated are crap put out to make a quick buck, if you have a good product it will sell or enough hype and you can sell a turd to. The whole download movies,music, to burn and sell and become rich is media #$%$ yeah maybe some #$%$ makes a few bucks here and there but i promise you they are not rich off it. Dotcom was not selling burned dvds out his backdoor.
    • Hello  •  3 mths ago
      So when are the executives of UPS, FEDEX, and the USPS going to be arrested for transport of stolen goods? What about executives at Ebay and Craigslist for all the stolen goods sold through those sites? What about the owners of storage locker facilities that have customers who keep their illegal stuff there. I could go on but I think you get the picture. The criminals in Megaupload are the uploaders of the digital media. The government knows they would go broke trying to prosecute all of them. If the site owner here can be convicted then any website owner who handles any customer uploaded media can be convicted.
      • Guru 3 mths ago
        Hey Hello, might as well add drug trafficking to UPS, FEDEX, and the USPS. All three (3) have shipped drugs & they are still doing it.
    • Susan  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 mths ago
      His mistake was not bringin in Goldman Sachs, he's be walking free, a multibillionaire and living the dream. Instead he gave them the snub and see what happens when you do that?
    • TRADE REDD NOW  •  Amsterdam, The Netherlands  •  3 mths ago
      When will arrest the bankers and traders for 'facilitating' the mortgage meltdown?
    • David  •  3 mths ago
      His 1st mistake was not immigrating to the USA where he could have formed some lobby relationships or maybe even run for office himself. Don't try to out cheat the big boyz.
    • Altan  •  Fremont, California  •  3 mths ago
      Free Kimdotcom, its a witch hunt. Bureaucratic over reach. Lets see the bankers go to jail, lets see Don Rumsfeld and DICK Cheney go to jail.
    • Wolf  •  3 mths ago
      This article is totally not bias at all! (sarcasm)
      • Allank 3 mths ago
        Nick Perry is an #$%$
    • TRADE REDD NOW  •  Amsterdam, The Netherlands  •  3 mths ago
      " Last month he was arrested in New Zealand for allegedly facilitating millions of illegal downloads of songs and movies through Megaupload..."

      Beware the slippery slope. Can we hold McDonald's responsible for facilitating an obesity epidemic? Or Colt for the amount of gun violence? Or Potash Corp. for making fertilizer that can be put in bombs?

      Or Koch Industries for selling the Iranians the materials to build a methanol plant for bomb products?
    • Thomas Dixon  •  3 mths ago
      The FEDS and their corporate bosses want to be the only gang on the street. In a few years I think China will have something to say about that.
    • buckyr  •  3 mths ago
      This must be a cover story for why we are going to take your freedoms from you, a month old story still in main headlines??
    • julio  •  Madrid, Spain  •  3 mths ago
      FREE DOTCOM!!! All he's done is make it easier to share culture, and there can't be a price on culture. Although artists and creators are entitled to earn something from there work, they can't keep it away from the people who cannot pay, no one can. People, the government controls you but it isn't you, there authority doesn't exist, you are not inferior but equal to them, they too where born from a similar hole that you. So why not live in equality and not superior or inferior to others?
      • DR 3 mths ago
        I both agree with you - regarding the free and open sharing of culture, and disagree with you - regarding setting this guy free.
        Dotcoms story sounds like an advertisement for the benefits of greedy, unregulated, free-market capitalism, and that is something I find criminal.
        Had this guy not succumbed to greed and excessive profit he could have been a cultural hero.
    • Dan W  •  Eugene, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      What I find most disturbing is that a non US citizen who did not reside in the US has been arrested and will be tried by the US. It seems to me that this is not the US jurisdiction.
      • A Yahoo! User 3 mths ago
        The US does what they want, where they want
    • DR  •  3 mths ago
      Dotcoms story sounds like an advertisement for the benefits of unregulated, free-market capitalism.
    • Lucixir  •  Wichita, Kansas  •  3 mths ago
      Blah Blah Blah, He made money and has money so therefor the authorities want it and will do whatever they can to get it.

      Corporations are just upset they cannot have all the money in the world and enslave us all to the with low pay and no benefits while they reap the rewards from our labor.

      This guy probably is no saint, but he doesn't do anything that any common person without any money does, see the difference? Money or no money... makes a difference who they target though.
    • Mr. L  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  3 mths ago
      the only pompous #$%$ i can tell from this story is the writer
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      They were jealous of that bitchin' predator statue.
    • William S  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  3 mths ago
      The writer, Nick Perry, wishes he was smart enough to pull off something this grand, but he doesn't have the nads!
    • Guru  •  3 mths ago
      Good luck with stopping piracy online.Below is just pure B#$%$ (Bored #$%$They can & will stop this illegal online piracy problem.......Just like they have stopped drugs from coming into the U.S.A. Hell of a job the U.S.A Government has done on the war on drugs to, did they win that war? Oh yea, HELL NO they didn't muwahaha!
    • Guru  •  3 mths ago
      Hey Hello, might as well add drug trafficking to UPS, FEDEX, and the USPS. All three (3) have shipped drugs & they are still doing it.
    • Ivan V  •  3 mths ago
      Can't log on to the internet ? So i guess he's stuck to single player mode ? No problem , just add bots to that cs 1.6 map.
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