As Feds Drop Bogus Domain Seizure Cases, Another Site Admin Held Without Bail And About To Be Deported
from the the-importance-of-good-legal-help dept
While the cases of Dajaz1 and Rojadirecta have shown that the US government wants nothing to do with lawsuits around domain seizures when those sites lawyer up with strong legal teams, it has continued to railroad those with less-than-stellar legal support. We saw it with NinjaVideo where it was clear that the defendants did not have particularly strong legal advice, and because of that were pretty much forced into plea bargains. And, now, the same basic thing appears to have happened with a guy named Yonjo Quiroa, who had nine different sites that ICE seized in January of this year. They arrested Quiroa in February, and he's not only been held without bail since then, but he's now done a plea bargain in which he's pleading guilty to a misdemeanor charge, expecting to get 6 to 12 months in jail (remember, he's already been there for 7 months) and will then be "removed from the United States."
From the letter his lawyers sent on his behalf to the court, it's clear that Quiroa was given a public defender. There certainly could be differences between his case and others, but the differences between the cases where sites had well-known, widely respected litigators, and those where they did not, is pretty stark. Of course, the feds understand this and use it to their advantage in pushing those they've gone after into plea bargain deals. Now, don't be surprised when ICE's John Morton starts using the case of Quiroa as an "example" of all the great successes they've had in seizing websites...
From the letter his lawyers sent on his behalf to the court, it's clear that Quiroa was given a public defender. There certainly could be differences between his case and others, but the differences between the cases where sites had well-known, widely respected litigators, and those where they did not, is pretty stark. Of course, the feds understand this and use it to their advantage in pushing those they've gone after into plea bargain deals. Now, don't be surprised when ICE's John Morton starts using the case of Quiroa as an "example" of all the great successes they've had in seizing websites...





