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Author Topic: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias  (Read 14990 times)

Offline chip!

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The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« on: April 25, 2009, 09:30:14 am »
The Circus Widens In Aftermath of Pirate Bay Verdict
Posted by kdawson on Saturday April 25, @04:19PM

http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/25/1723222&from=rss


MaulerOfEmotards sends along an in-depth followup, from the Swedish press, of our discussion the other day about the biased trial judge in the Pirate Bay case. "The turmoil concerns Tomas Norström, the presiding judge of The Pirate Bay trial, who is suspected of bias after reports surfaced of affiliation with copyright protection organizations. For this he has been reported to the appeals court (in Swedish; translation here). The circus around the judge is currently focused on three points. First, his personal affiliation with at least four copyright protection organizations, a state the potential bias of which he himself fails to see and refuses to admit. Secondly, Swedish trials use a system of several lay assessors to supervise the presiding judge. One of these, a member of an artists' interest organization, was forced by Mr. Norström to resign from the trial for potential bias. The judge's failure to see the obvious contradiction in this (translation) casts doubts on his suitability and competence. Thirdly, according to professor of judicial sociology Håkan Hydén (translation), the judge has inappropriately 'duped and influenced the lay assessors' during the trial: 'a judge that has decided that "this is something we can't allow" has little problem finding legal arguments that are difficult for assisting lay assessors to counter.'"

  -  https://convivea.com  -   And...  boom goes the dynamite.

Offline chip!

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Re: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« Reply #1 on: April 25, 2009, 09:33:47 am »
so, sounds like there's a chance the whole trial will be thrown out and have to be repeated.. but if not, then it will move on to the upper appeals court.
  -  https://convivea.com  -   And...  boom goes the dynamite.

Offline billyfridge

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Re: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« Reply #2 on: April 25, 2009, 07:40:36 pm »
so, sounds like there's a chance the whole trial will be thrown out and have to be repeated.. but if not, then it will move on to the upper appeals court.

Good.... [high5]

Offline olddays1

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Re: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« Reply #3 on: May 13, 2009, 03:41:30 am »
And so it goes.......

Pirate Bay Closer to a Retrial, Demands New Investigation
Written by Ernesto on May 11, 2009
http://torrentfreak.com/pirate-bay-getting-closer-to-a-retrial-090511/

The connections of Pirate Bay judge Tomas Norström to national and international pro-copyright lobby groups are even more far reaching than initially reported. Consequently, many leading figures within the Swedish judicial system are now convinced that a retrial is necessary so the defendants can have an unbiased trial.

A few days after the verdict in the Pirate Bay trial was made public, judge Tomas Norström was heavily criticized for his involvement with pro-copyright lobby groups. To everyone’s surprise, Norström never declared these activities before he took on the case.

Together with several of the lawyers who represented the movie and music industries, the judge was a member of the Swedish Association of copyright (SFU) and the Swedish Association for Protection of Industrial Property (SFIR).

These engagements automatically make him a member of two major international pro-copyright organizations, ALAI and AIPPI. In their statutes, these organizations state that it’s their goal to ensure that the interests of copyright holders are satisfied. Indeed, by sentencing the Pirate Bay defendants to a year in prison in addition to the high damages they were ordered to pay, the judge lived up to these expectations.

Initially, many Swedish legal system insiders doubted whether the connections to the Swedish groups were enough to warrant a retrial, but the ties to ALAI and AIPPI have changed that perception, according to Swedish radio. Many of the insiders and experts wish to remain anonymous, but Eric Bylander, Associate Professor of Procedural Law at the University of Gothenburg said that “confidence in the judicial system requires that the court of appeal see this as bias.”

If a retrial is granted this would mean another win for the Pirate Bay defendants and a replay of the ‘Spectrial’, with possibly a rewritten ending. Pirate Bay’s Peter Sunde, one of the defendants convicted by the biased judge, hopes to see a retrial. “In the best interest of the Swedish people’s trust in the system a retrial should be not only granted, but pushed for,” he told TorrentFreak. Requests for a retrial have been filed and we will hear more about the outcome in a few weeks.

Aside from the biased judge, Peter and the other defendants will also request a new police investigation. The investigation on which the prosecution built its case was headed by Jim Keyzer, who already knew that he was going to be employed by Warner Bros. when he interviewed the defendants. “We want everything to be in the eye of the public so that we can get help to see that everything is correct,” Peter writes on his blog.

Offline olddays1

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Re: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« Reply #4 on: May 21, 2009, 01:40:00 am »
Biased Pirate Bay Judge Judged by More Biased Judges
Written by Ernesto on May 20, 2009
http://torrentfreak.com/biased-pirate-bay-judge-judged-by-more-biased-judges-090520/


To determine if the verdict in the Pirate Bay case was biased, the connections of Judge Tomas Norström to national and international pro-copyright lobby groups will be reviewed by another judge. However, the judge that was initially appointed has already been replaced because she was linked to the same organizations as Norström, and her replacement is not exactly unbiased either.

Pirate Bay judge Tomas Norström’s objectivity has been called into doubt because of his ties to national and international pro-copyright lobby groups. Furthermore, one of the defense lawyers claimed to have evidence that Norström was handpicked and not assigned to the case randomly.

To investigate these accusations of bias, the appeal court appointed a judge, Ulrika Ihrfelt. Her task is to decide whether or not Norström’s verdict could have been biased since this issue must be resolved before they will look into the appeal request. If it’s determined that Norström was indeed biased, the case will be resubmitted to the district court for retrial, meaning that an appeal is not needed at this stage.

However, soon after the appointment of Ulrika Ihrfelt, it became known that she too had been a member of the same pro-copyright organizations as the ‘biased’ judge. The appointment was criticized by several judicial analysts who said she wasn’t fit either. Judicial praxis dictates that the court must not only be unbiased, but also be BELIEVED to be unbiased, which is clearly not the case here.

As a consequence and in order to avoid more negative press, the appeal court sent out a press release today in which they announce that Ihrfelt has been taken off the case. She has been replaced by three new judges from a separate division of the court.

In the press release, the appeal court writes: “The reasons for this is that the question of whether the original judge was biased needs to be tried by other judges other than those that later may have been given the case. Furthermore, because of the content of the claim of bias, it has been deemed proper that the question should be answered by a division that is not specialized in copyright.”

“None of the three judges are or have been members of the [pro-copyright] organizations in question,” the appeal court announced. But is this really the case?

With a simple Google search Pirate Bay’s Peter Sunde has already discovered that one of the replacements, Anders Eka, is connected to the The Stockholm Center for Commercial law, together with movie industry lawyers Monique Wasted and Peter Danowsky who represented the music industry in the Pirate Bay trial.

Nevertheless, the appeal court does not intent to replace the new judge(s). “The group Anders Eka is member of has no connection to copyright issues and the interests that are present in the case. I cannot see how this specific connection could lead to that Anders Eka isn’t suitable to try the question of bias,” Fredrik Wersäll, the president of the appeal court said.

The court will not look at the appeal case before the question of Norström’s bias is settled. The bias issue will be given priority and should be settled “in a few weeks at the maximum”, according to the appeal court president.

With all the commotion and judicial incompetence displayed after the Pirate Bay trial it seems almost unthinkable that a retrial won’t be granted. It is therefore no surprise that the entertainment industries try to get some cash off the defendants before it’s too late.

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Re: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« Reply #5 on: June 13, 2009, 09:38:05 am »
Any further news on trial??
cheers

Offline olddays1

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Re: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« Reply #6 on: June 14, 2009, 03:29:47 am »
The media is turning it into a mess....

Media Misreports on Biased Pirate Bay Judge
Written by Ernesto on June 13, 2009

http://torrentfreak.com/media-misreports-on-pirate-bay-biased-judge-090613/

Three judges are currently reviewing the judge that handled the Pirate Bay trial to discover if he was biased or not. No decision has yet been made but the New York Times and several other publications report inaccuracies and plain wrongs that claim otherwise. Time to get the facts straight.

 Pirate Bay judge Tomas Norström’s objectivity has been called into doubt by the defense lawyers because of his ties to national and international pro-copyright lobby groups. To investigate these accusations of bias, the appeal court appointed a judge, Ulrika Ihrfelt.

Her task is to decide whether or not Norström’s verdict could have been biased since this issue must be resolved before they can move on to the appeal request. If it’s determined that Norström was indeed biased, the case will be resubmitted to the district court for retrial, meaning that an appeal is not needed at this stage.

Earlier this week the District Court of Stockholm handed in their statement to the Appeal Court, arguing that they don’t believe that Norström was biased. This was not really a surprise since they appointed him and admitting that he is biased would be admitting to having made a mistake before the “bias case” is reviewed.

However, many publications mistakenly concluded from this statement that a ruling was made on the bias issue, or even worse.

“The four men convicted for operating file-sharing site the Pirate Bay suffered a further setback this week when they failed to get the case thrown out because of alleged bias by the sentencing judge,” the Hollywood reporter wrote.

This was picked up and twisted even further by none other than The New York Times who reported: “A Swedish court has denied the appeal of four men convicted of violating copyright law for their involvement in the Pirate Bay.”

Several other large and smaller publications wrote similar articles this week, concluding that the court “ruled” that the Pirate Bay judge was not biased or that an appeal was off the table. The truth is that the Appeal Court still has to decide whether or not the judge is biased. The only thing that happened this week is that the District Court handed it their statement.

Appeal Court Judge Ulrika Ihrfelt, who was taken off the bias case previously, but will be involved in an eventual appeal told a local newspaper this week: “The biggest challenge will probably be the enormous amount of media attention at the trial. I haven’t been in media’s spotlights before, so this is a new experience for me.”

The biggest challenge for the media on the other hand, is to get their facts straight instead of writing up nonsense. Props to our friend David Kravets at Wired who was one of the few who got it right.

Offline olddays1

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Re: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« Reply #7 on: June 28, 2009, 08:30:39 am »
Pirate Bay Judge Not Biased, No Retrial
Written by Ernesto on June 25, 2009
http://torrentfreak.com/pirate-bay-judge-not-biased-no-retrial-090625/

To determine if the verdict in the Pirate Bay trial was affected by bias, the connections of Judge Tomas Norström to national and international pro-copyright lobby groups have been reviewed by the Appeal Court. Their ‘no bias’ ruling can’t be appealed which means that there will not be a retrial, instead the verdict in the Pirate Bay trial will be appealed.

 A few days after the verdict in the Pirate Bay trial was made public, judge Tomas Norström was heavily criticized for his involvement with pro-copyright lobby groups. To everyone’s surprise, Norström never declared these activities before he took on the case.

Together with several of the lawyers who represented the movie and music industries, the judge was a member of the Swedish Association of copyright (SFU) and the Swedish Association for Protection of Industrial Property (SFIR). These engagements automatically make him a member of two major international pro-copyright organizations, ALAI and AIPPI.

Because of these connections the lawyers of the Pirate Bay defendants called for a retrial, arguing that the judge was not as objective as he should’ve been. One of the defendants, The Pirate Bay’s Peter Sunde told TorrentFreak at the time: “In the best interest of the Swedish people’s trust in the system a retrial should be not only granted, but pushed for.”

Today, the Appeal Court ruled that Tomas Norström was not biased. Although he was indeed a member of organizations that preserve the interests of copyright holders, this has not influenced his judgment, the court ruled.

The Appeal Court argues that the judge’s membership in the copyright associations show an engagement in issues “that to a certain extent is in the interest of the rights holders”. The Appeal Court added that it must be taken into account that the rights of rights holders are recognized by Swedish law. “That a judge agrees with the principles that are fundamental to this law cannot in itself be a reason for bias,” the court said.

Nevertheless, the court criticized the judge for not being open about his engagement in the associations before the trial. If he had done so, the question of bias then could have been tried earlier, they said.

Jonas Nilsson, the lawyer of Pirate Bay co-founder Fredrik Neij, is not happy with the decision and he said in a response: “The judge has an obligation to inform the parties about circumstances that could be seen as bias. Since he didn’t do that, it’s a mishandled trial. I’m very critical about the appeal court’s reasoning.”

The Pirate Party’s EU parliamentarian Christian Engström is also surprised and angry with the decision: “It is all part of a pattern. It shows that the Swedish judicial system cannot be trusted in copyright cases anymore. The laws may be wrong as well, but in addition to them the courts can’t even use the laws in a correct way. I have been a lay judge for seven years and I have never seen such a bad case as the Pirate Bay case. And still the court sentenced to unbelievable punishments.”

Engström believes the appeal court’s verdict is positive for the Pirate Party. “This shows that the only way to win the fight is through politics. It’s a political issue and it will be settled in the national elections 2010,” he said.

The verdict in the Pirate Bay trial where the four defendants were sentenced to one year in prison and a combined fine of $3,620,000 will now be appealed through the normal route.

Offline olddays1

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Re: The Judge in the Pirate Bay Trial is Accused of Being Bias
« Reply #8 on: June 28, 2009, 08:35:34 am »
The Pirate Bay to Sue Sweden for Human Rights Violations
Written by Ernesto on June 25, 2009
http://torrentfreak.com/the-pirate-bay-to-sue-sweden-for-human-rights-violations-090625/

Today the Swedish Appeal Court decided that the judge who handled the Pirate Bay trial was not biased, despite his membership of several pro-copyright organizations. In true Pirate Bay style spokesman Peter Sunde responded full force, and says they are ready to sue Sweden for human rights violations.

There will be no retrial for The Pirate Bay, the Appeal Court decided today. According to the Court the judge was not biased based on the requirements of the European Convention, a decision that can’t be appealed.

However, Pirate Bay’s spokesman Peter Sunde says that they will not give up that easily. On his blog he writes, “When people think you’re down and out, that you’ve lost and have no way to win… that’s the perfect time to hit them harder than ever before.”

On Twitter Peter announces that their next step is to “file charges against Sweden for violation for Human Rights.”

In order to do so they will have take the case to the European Court of Human Rights, who will then conduct a review to see if the Swedish legal system did indeed violate the rights of the defendants in the Pirate Bay trial.

Peter also points out that Anders Eka, the judge responsible for reviewing the bias case, was biased himself. He is referring to his connection to The Stockholm Center for Commercial law, together with movie industry lawyers Monique Wasted and Peter Danowsky who represented the music industry in the Pirate Bay trial.

The appeal court was well aware of this connection, but said before that there was no reason to take Eka off the case.

“The group Anders Eka is a member of has no connection to copyright issues and the interests that are present in the case. I cannot see how this specific connection could lead to that Anders Eka isn’t suitable to try the question of bias,” Fredrik Wersäll, the president of the appeal court has said.

The exact nature of the charges against Sweden remain unclear. Peter Sunde was not available to comment but we guess it wont take long before we find out. Stay tuned for updates.