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Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom bailed

handcuffs

By Reuters

Posted on 22 Feb 2012 at 09:52

A New Zealand court has released Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom from jail, putting him under house arrest with a ban on using the internet.

The court, in upholding a bail application by the German founder of file-sharing website Megaupload, cast some doubt on the multi-millionaire's purported flight risk pending an extradition hearing scheduled for August.

"I'm relieved to go home and see my three little kids and my pregnant wife," a smiling Dotcom, 38, said after the ruling, as he was hustled toward a waiting car by supporters and lawyers.

I'm relieved to go home and see my three little kids and my pregnant wife

Kim Dotcom, who has New Zealand residency and is also known as Kim Schmitz and Kim Tim Jim Vestor, had been in custody since his arrest in a military-style raid on 20 January on his mansion outside Auckland by local police acting on a US warrant.

Under the bail conditions, Dotcom, who kept a private helicopter as part of his lavish lifestyle, must live in a small house near the mansion he had rented and wear an electronic tag. He will be restricted in how far he can travel. The judge also banned helicopters from flying to or landing on the property.

Prosecutors say Dotcom was the ringleader of a group that netted $175 million since 2005 by copying and distributing music, movies and other copyrighted content without authorisation through Megaupload.com and related websites, among the world's busiest before they were shut down last month.

Dotcom's lawyers say the company simply offered online storage and that he strenuously denies the US charges.

Multiple passports

Dotcom obtained bail on his second attempt, after the judge said a review of the facts and Dotcom's circumstances showed he was less of a risk of fleeing than before.

This month, the High Court had upheld a lower court judge's ruling that there was a major risk Dotcom, who had passports and bank accounts in three names, might try to flee the country.

But Judge Nevin Dawson Wednesday reasoned that bail could be awarded, given that there was no new evidence that Dotcom had undisclosed funds he could use to aid in a flight from justice.

He said prosecutors had been unable to find any new funds or assets that had not already been seized, and prosecution claims that he was a wealthy man was not sufficient reason to hold him.

Dotcom's three co-accused were also bailed until late August for the hearing of US extradition request.

A US Justice Department spokeswoman declined immediate comment on the New Zealand bail ruling.

Judge David McNaughton, who presided in previous hearings, set August 20 as the earliest date he could hear the extradition case, which he has scheduled to last three weeks. Prosecutors said the formal extradition application has not yet been received but was expected by early March.

Legal experts have said extradition hearings are likely to be drawn out with appeals likely all the way to the country's highest court.

Last week, a US grand jury added more charges against Megaupload and its executives, alleging they took copyrighted material from sites such as YouTube for its own service.

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User comments

Since when...

has the post of CEO been renamed ringleader? I'll have to tell my boss to print new business cards. :-D

And, house arrest, as long as it isn't his own house? :-S

By big_D on 22 Feb 2012

Presumably he could choose between a day's bail for just 99 cents, or a month for $17.95, or the full year (our most popular choice) for just $99.95.

By Grace_Quirrel on 22 Feb 2012

Adding charges

(especially relatively minor ones) is usually a sign of weakness in a case or a ploy to gain advantage in plea bargains.

By dubiou on 22 Feb 2012

big_D, since when did Managing Director stop being a valid title in the UK?

By Grace_Quirrel on 22 Feb 2012

@Grace_Quirrel

I'm not in the UK, I'm in Germany... Here it would be Geschäftsführer. ;-)

By big_D on 22 Feb 2012

@dubiou - no it's not. It simply means that the originals were merely "holding charges", which allowed him to be detained while further investigations were made.

By Grace_Quirrel on 22 Feb 2012

@Grace_Quirrel - quite the holding charge $175m!

By dubiou on 22 Feb 2012

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