One federal judge calls it a modern-day "shakedown.''
A Minnesota attorney says it's merely an effort to hunt down Internet pirates illegally downloading pornography.
The issue is "copyright trolling'' — a practice in which lawyers threaten lawsuits to wring millions of dollars in settlements from people suspected of pirating videos online.
Now, defense attorneys have questioned whether a group of men with ties to Minnesota who are behind hundreds of such suits nationwide have used straw men as copyright holders when they asked judges to help them obtain the identities of Internet users.
A federal judge in Los Angeles, concerned about what he called a "possible fraud on the court," intends to get to the bottom of the dispute at a hearing Monday afternoon. Attorney John L. Steele is among eight key figures ordered to appear before U.S. District Judge Otis D. Wright II to explain themselves or face sanctions that could include fines or jail.
Steele denies any wrongdoing. "If people sit back and let a fact-finder ... hear evidence, these conspiracies always dissipate like fog," he said in a recent interview.
But late Friday, his attorneys filed a motion challenging the judge's authority to compel Steele and his associates from Minnesota and Illinois to appear in the California cases, which were handled by an associate in that state.
How the lawsuits arise
The cases arise from one of the latest forms of Internet piracy, in which people use file-sharing programs such as BitTorrent to download copyrighted movies. The computers or wireless routers involved can be identified by their "Internet protocol," a numerical address, but the identities of the users are not clear.