Federal agents recently swooped in and seized the assets of accused movie-pirating site operators.

On Wednesday, federal agents took control of at least seven sites, including Movies-Links.tv, Now-Movies.com, TVShack.net, Filespump.com, Planetmoviez.com, ZML.com, ThePirateCity.org, Ninjavideo.net, and NinjaThis.net. More than a dozen bank, investment, and advertising accounts were seized, and authorities served search warrants on residences in several different states.

Authorities are searching for operators of the sites as part of an ongoing criminal investigation, according to Virginia Kice, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The crimes that the operators are accused of committing weren’t clear, but some of the sites are accused of distributing film copies prior to their theatrical release.

As of 3 p.m. PDT, some of the sites were still operating, but government officials said they anticipated the sites would come under government control within hours.

The investigation involved multiple law enforcement groups, including the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York and ICE, a unit of the Department of Homeland Security.

Last week, Biden and Victoria Espinel, the U.S. intellectual property enforcement coordinator, told reporters that they wanted to send a message to counterfeiters and pirates that this administration was intent on protecting the nation’s intellectual property. Espinel directed a statement at those people who trafficked in phony goods or unauthorized music and movies: “We have committed to putting you out of business.”

ICE and the Department of Justice both suggested Wednesday that these types of seizures and investigations are just the beginning.

Posted by Admin on July 3rd, 2010
comments
  1. DarkValkyrie says:

    It kinda seems that if you offer downloads of mainstream movies and TV episodes, you become an extremely easy target for the MPAA to complain to the Federal government in order to get action.

    It makes me wonder: if sites just stopped offering these particular forms of media, would the MPAA continue to funnel money as aggressively into taking down websites?

    It would be an interesting internet experiement, to say teh least.

  2. web hosting says:

    Yes, these things are done from time to time regularly!