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The Los Angeles Times reports that when five FBI agents arrested Kevin Cogill at his Culver City apartment,
it marked the newest weapon in the entertainment industry's war on
piracy: felony charges against small-time bootleggers.
Cogill posted nine leaked songs from an unreleased Guns N' Roses album,
which has been in the works for more than a decade, on his music blog
in June. The site crashed under the traffic, and he removed the songs
after a few hours when the Los Angeles-based rock band's lawyers
complained.
Now he faces up to three years in prison and $250,000 in fines. On
Wednesday he became the first Californian charged under a 3-year-old
federal anti-piracy law that makes it a felony to distribute a
copyrighted work on computer networks before its release.
"In the past, these may have been viewed as victimless crimes," said
Craig Missakian, an assistant U.S. attorney in Los Angeles who built
the case with the FBI and recording-industry investigators. "But in
reality, there's significant damage. This law allows us to prosecute
these cases."
Cogill, 27, was arrested Wednesday and released on $10,000 bond. He was
not required to enter a plea. His public defender, Anthony Eaglin,
declined to comment.
"I hope he rots in jail," said Slash, the former Guns N' Roses lead
guitarist. "It's going to affect the sales of the record, and it's not
fair. The Internet is what it is, and you have to deal with it
accordingly, but I think if someone goes and steals something, it's
theft."
Read the full story here.
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