Charles Carreon Keeps Digging & Digging: Inman And IndieGoGo Hit Back
from the and-hit-back-hard dept
Well, they don’t call it the Carreon Effect for nothing. The lawyer who keeps on digging has decided to… keep on digging. Last week he filed an amended complaint pretty quickly after his original complaint — specifically with the goal of adding California’s Attorney General to the case. Why? Well, as we noted in our original post about his lawsuit, Carreon himself donated to Inman’s campaign, in what appears to be a ridiculously weak attempt to get “standing” to sue, but he may be realizing that said “standing” is unlikely to hold up in court — so perhaps he thinks that dragging the AG into the case will actually make the case go somewhere. Of course, it’s also worth noting that Carreon finally realized that “incitement to cybervandalism” was a dead end, and dropped that charge. Of course, as with nearly all things Carreon these days, the weakness of almost everything in the case likely dooms the entire thing (and may leave Carreon wishing he had just decided to do something else).
That’s because a few days later, Carreon filed for a temporary restraining order trying to get IndieGoGo not to give the money raised to Inman (in order to fulfill his plan of taking a photo with the money before giving it to the two charities in question), but rather demanding that IndieGoGo give the money directly to the charities. Yes, his entire argument is basically that he wants to skip the part where Inman gets to take a photo with the money, which he seems to think would mock him (even though it was always designed to mock Funnyjunk, not Carreon).
Thankfully, both IndieGoGo and Inman have hit back on the whole thing pretty hard. IndieGoGo, I’m thrilled to learn, has brought on one of my favorite law firms, Durie Tangri, to represent him, and both Ragesh Tangri and Mark Lemley appear to be helping out. When those two are involved, you know the response is going to be good, and this one does not disappoint (pdf and embedded below). Among other things, they point out that Carreon’s request for a temporary restraining order is moot, because the money has already been distributed — but also that Carreon already knew this and waited to file the TRO:
Carreon did not file his papers until June 30… By the time he filed them, he had been informed that the money already had been transferred…. At Inman’s request, his share of the money contributed to the BearLove campaign was sent by check to the American Cancer Society and the National Wildlife Fund, in equal amounts, on June 29…. As explained below, Carreon was aware at least as early as June 15 that the money was liable to be transferred at any time beginning June 26 and at all events no later than Monday July 2. He nevertheless made no effort even to file for a TRO until the close of business on June 28. And, while he notes that the ECF system was down at that time, he offers no explanation for not having sought to file his TRO application well before June 26 – which he knew to be the earliest date the money could have been transferred – so that the Court could have adjudicated it before the time period during which the money was due to be transferred began. Nor does he offer an explanation for having failed at least to bring the application to the Court’s attention by means other than ECF on Friday June 29.
The simple reason for that is that there never was an emergency here, or any serious threat to anyone or anything. Carreon’s application is gamesmanship. When Carreon filed his original complaint on June 15, he knew that funds would be disbursed within five business days of the close of the fundraising campaign, which was set for June 25. Indeed, on June 26, in conversation with Indiegogo’s counsel, he admitted that he was aware that the funds could be disbursed at any time between the time of that conversation and Monday July 2…. Yet Carreon waited nearly two weeks after filing his complaint to present the court with his TRO request at the eleventh hour. Had there been any threat of real harm, Carreon would have made this application with more than hours to spare
Furthermore, the filing rightfully points out that not only are Carreon’s claims a huge miss, but the idea that there is any sort of “irreparable harm” (required for the TRO to be issued) to him is laughable. Remember, Carreon donated a grand total of $10 here. Paying that back would solve any “harm” if there were any. That’s not irreparable. It’s the very definition of reparable. If there were harm. Which there is not. So of the “irreparable harm,” Carreon fails to show that it is irreparable (because it is not) or that there is harm (because there is not).
First, Carreon cannot demonstrate irreparable harm to anyone, and certainly not to himself. A temporary restraining order is a drastic remedy, intended to prevent the grave and irreversible consequences of some imminent event. Here, the only imminent event was the disbursement of just over $95,000 to the National Wildlife Fund and the American Cancer Society (not $200,000 as Carreon’s application mistakenly states), fulfilling Inman’s promise to donate the money to those organizations – the very outcome that Carreon claims to desire. Indiegogo will retain roughly $8,800 as a processing fee. Carreon’s total contribution was $10. Should it later be determined that any harm flowed from these events, that harm would be readily compensable with an award of monetary damages or restitution.
Second, Carreon has not demonstrated and cannot demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits. His claims against Indiegogo are barred by section 230(c)(1) of the Communications Decency Act (“CDA”), which protects from liability a provider of an interactive computer service that merely publishes information provided by another information content provider. And his claims under the Supervision of Trustees and Fundraisers for Charitable Purposes Act, Cal. Government Code sections 12580 et seq., are likewise barred because that statute does not create a private right of action that would afford Carreon standing to sue for its violation.
There’s also the fact that IndieGoGo never touches any of the money that is paid via PayPal, meaning it couldn’t have stopped it from going to Inman in the first place. The filing points out that this is clearly stated in IndieGoGo’s terms of service — something that Carreon claims to have read and which he cited in his own filing. IndieGoGo also points out that Carreon makes a bunch of crazy statements in his TRO request, including the idea that Inman might get a huge tax writeoff from all of this. As IndieGoGo’s response points out, Carreon is “not remotely qualified” to make such an analysis, not the least of which because it’s so obviously wrong to… well… anyone with even the slightest amount of common sense. The only way that Inman would get the writeoff is if the money was counted as income to himself, and, as the IndieGoGo filing notes, the supposed “benefit” from the writeoff “would be offset by at least an equivalent increase in income, thus leaving Inman at break-even or worse.”
And then there’s Inman’s response (pdf and embedded below), also discussed by the EFF who wrote it along with (occasional Techidrt contributor) Venkat Balasubramani. It hits back equally hard (if not harder). Any filing that starts out with the following sentence is a filing you just know is going to be good:
Plaintiff Charles Carreon’s application for a temporary restraining order… is notable as much for its lack of context as its lack of merit.
The filing makes the basics clear: this is a “blatant — and baseless — attempt [by Carreon] to retaliate against a critic with whom he is engaged in a very public dispute.” It goes into lots of details, nearly all of which seem to demonstrate Carreon’s grasp of the law here is weak at best (some might argue “non-existent” at times). My favorite bit:
Likewise, the First Amendment does not permit the law to hold, as Mr. Carreon claims, that the phrase “Fuck Off” “cannot be lawfully associated with tax-exempt charitable solicitation in the State of California.”
Following that, the filing actually cites a previous court ruling on how “one man’s vulgarity is another’s lyric.”
The bigger point, is that Carreon seems to repeatedly just make stuff up. He claims that Inman misrepresented that donating to the campaign would be tax deductible, even though he did no such thing — and, in fact, IndieGoGo is pretty clear about when projects are not tax deducible. Yet, Carreon pretends that he expected “his” donation to be tax deductible. Separately, as Adam Steinbaugh points out, Carreon makes this claim (that he expected his donation to be tax-deductible) in a highly questionable way — especially since his “donation” came just hours before the lawsuit he filed — and demonstrates pretty clearly that Carreon was already intending to file the lawsuit, and that the donation was just a weak attempt to get standing. The EFF’s filing points out how courts tend to look poorly on plaintiffs who do something solely for the purpose of trying to create standing to sue — because it pretty clearly suggests they were not wronged or deceived, but willingly partook of a situation they fully understood in order to seek standing in a lawsuit.
Basically, Carreon just seems to keep digging. He’s trying to drag California’s Attorney General into the matter, because he’s at least realizing that his own standing is pretty weak, but this TRO request seems to just reinforce the idea that this whole thing is about Charles Carreon being petty and petulant in trying to mess up Inman’s attempt to make a statement about the money. Carreon, once again, would be well-served to take some time off and think about what he’s doing, rather than reacting by insisting he’s going to show the world who’s boss. Each move he makes just makes him look even worse.
Filed Under: charles carreon, digging, free speech, matthew inman, oatmeal, temporary restraining order
Companies: durie tangri, eff, indiegogo
Comments on “Charles Carreon Keeps Digging & Digging: Inman And IndieGoGo Hit Back”
Crazy
Carreon has apparently heard of criminal defense lawyers winning cases by using the insanity defense. He must be trying for the insanity offense. He’s obviously crazier than a box of frogs in a washing machine on a merry-go-round.
Re: Crazy
Be careful with your statements, or you get his wife behind you, who, in my not so humble opinion, is a few sandwiches short of a picknick.
Re: Re: Crazy
Just a few? That woman’s picnic basket is empty. She might not even have a basket . . .
Re: Re: Re: Crazy
She has a basket, if fact, she has a whole case of baskets. You know, a basket case.
Re: Re: Re:2 Crazy
Now, I might not be the brightest crayon in the tool shed… but you guys pushing this a bit too far.
Re: Re: Re: Crazy
She does have the basket, and it is certainly not empty. It’s full of bath salts.
Re: Re: Re:2 Crazy
I thought it was full of bat shit.
X is to ....
Charles Carreon is to Techdirt like Trump is to The Daily Show.
Re: Y is to .... how much of WHOSE money, did Inman donate to charity ?
Rightly so. The guy is a pr disaster.
But law is not PR. (no matter how much I dislike him = not relevant to law)
also…
Inman is to me is like Fox news to the Daily Show!
(playing with peoples emotion for public opinion, ignoring facts in the process)
(wait..copying is “theft”, forgot)
He did not donate $20,000 of his own money to charity. ( which would have won me over)
The +$1000 per day earner, viral marketeer and known link scammer, donated other peoples money to charity.
(all facts, but I will receive butthurt complaints for pointing them out)
Re: Re: Y is to .... how much of WHOSE money, did Inman donate to charity ?
Source on the link scamming?
Re: Re: Re: Y is to .... how much of WHOSE money, did Inman donate to charity ?
Google it: will always get you an Inman comic. Funny that? considering Inman was co-founder of a SEO company. Same thing happens when you google how much he made from selling his “Mingle2” dating site and when you look for info on how Google obliterated the site from its search results.
I posted it before, got a lot of hate and ignorance thrown my way, was even called Carreon ffs.
sauce: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/feb/14/searchengines.blogging
Extract….
Google obliterated the site from its search results
Re: Re: Re:2 Y is to .... how much of WHOSE money, did Inman donate to charity ?
Yeah, so Inman’s got a Black-Hat-SEO background and suffered the Gpenalty. So what? People change. Sometimes people become cartoonists instead.
Har. No fauxtrollbash response here. Most interesting. If Carreon had lawyers, I imagine they’d be making big hay of this — despite its irrelevancy to the issue at hand (unless he actually had good lawyers, which would create a paradox in light of the existing lawsuit and cause the universe to collapse on itself).
Re: Re: Re:3 Y is to .... how much of WHOSE money, did Inman donate to charity ?
Its actually all on the oatmeal about page. Theres a whole blog post about it.
Re: Re: Re:4 Y is to .... how much of WHOSE money, did Inman donate to charity ?
Google will nearly always take you to his version of the story or a comic, with the actual, independently, unbiased reported story on page 3+ of google search.( sometimes page 10+)
The joys of being an SEO, you can bury negative stories about yourself.
Re: Re: Re:3 dismissal of facts... ignorance or rational ?
it’s relevant…
The “poor defenseless Cartoonist” , that people gave a fuck about, is far from what they thought they gave a fuck about.
I had a good look into him.. BEFORE I gave a fuck about him.
I have been played before, by manipulation of conscience and emotion.
NOT this time.
what i saw…
Donating other peoples money to charity, to fight a defamation case is not logical, it serves only one purpose, manipulation of emotion.
He could easily afford to donate the money himself.
Among a shitload of other stuff…
Not a fuck was given from that day forth.
about.. “Inmans Personal Army”
People are fucking crazy “white knighting” for Inman , he is moar than capable of taking care of himself.
Go ahead and be his hero, like he gives a fuck about you.
Re: Re: Re:4 dismissal of facts... ignorance or rational ?
It’s unrelated to this story.
The original complaint about copyright infringement by Inman (and it was pretty blatant because the copyright tags were actively removed by funnyjunk users), dates back a year.
Only recently did FJ through the lawyer Carreon respond to The Oatmeal claiming that the year old blog post was without merit and defamatory (because FJ had removed the comics that were linked in that post), demanding 20000 USD as (extortion) fee, despite the fact that FJ’s users were still actively and blatantly infringing on the copyrights of Inman.
This led to Inman creating a comic about FunnyJunk’s CEO’s mom loving a bear, and asking The Oatmeal’s visitors to help raise the $20000 to take a photo of it, and send that photo to FunnyJunk, because the real money would go to the two charities.
But indeed, I shouldn’t give a fuck about the mangling of truths should I? I’m not white knighting here, never liked The Oatmeal, hell, I didn’t even donate to the charity, but I can’t stand injustice nor mangling of truths and conflation of completely unrelated issues.
Stick that in your pipe and smoke it.
Ladies and Gentlemen, you’ve seen the Chewbacca defense.
Now witness the Chewbacca offense in action!
Re: Re:
Let the wookie win?
Re: Re: Re:
Or in this case, maybe it should be “Let the bear(odactyl) win”.
Re: Re:
He rips your arms off if you beat him?
What I want to know is why this mother fucker thinks it’s okay to donate money that will be going to a charity THEN TRY TO TAKE IT BACK.
It takes a real low mother fucker to donate to cancer then change your mind.
What the hell was he thinking FFS! Even if it was meant to be a trap the fact still remains he tried to take it back from a charity. It does not matter if Inman was the middleman on the transaction. It’s completely irrelevant.
Charles Carreon you truly are a scumbag.. I’m not gonna tell you to go kill yourself but I will say this.
Why don’t you just be a man and admit you were wrong. I have zero respect for you but if I seen that you decided to be a man it would be a big step in the right direction.
Re: Re:
This is what he never realized from the beginning. Inman had him at check from the first moves by involving charity. Whether or not Carreon wins or loses, he looks like a guy who is willing to put his ego before charity.
Re: Re: Re:
Replace the phrase “looks like” with the word “is”. He IS a guy who is willing to put his ego before charity.
I suspect there are is actual mental illness at work here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Querulant
Many of the statements posted by this individual and his wife about conspiracies and other nonsense seem to point in this direction.
Re: Is this guy really Randy Quaid in disquise?
Maybe he’ll run for Canada before the FIHT (Film Industry Hit Team) finds him? I’d pitch in on train fare to help the poor soul out. But then who would provide such excellent subject matter for our entertainment?
I’m just going to say that I think it should be called, for example, the Carreon Maneuver. It’s not really an “effect” per se, because were talking about something he’s doing rather than the outcome of those actions.
Re: Re:
I guess unless you want to say that him doubling/quadrupling down is the “effect” of his lunacy.
Re: Re: Re:
“21!”
“Hit me.”
“But sir, you have 21.”
“I SAID HIT ME!”
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Carreon never had 21.
More like:
CC:”Hit me”
Dealer: “But, sir, you have 48”.
CC: “I SAID HIT ME!”
Judge: *benchslap*
CC: “Thank you”
Re: Carreon Maneuver
Carreon Strategy?
Re: Re:
The Carreon Gambit…
I hope tara comes along and makes a few comments, Epic work. Thankyou much kindly.
Cue taracarreon trollrantfest in 5… 4… 3… 2… 1…
Inman: And you too, Carreon. Whenever I look at you, I get a name. Smee… Smee… Smee Hee!!!
Carreon: Smeghead?
Inman: Yes! That’s it!
Carreon: He remembers me!
Re: Re:
I love me some Red Dwarf.
Double and Quadruple Down on Fun!
Get yours now!
CE (Carreon Effect) Playing Cards.
OK, somehow I’m kinda imagining a sort-of contrast between Phoenix Wright and Carreon (after reading an above comment). Here are the differences:
Wright: has the ability to pull off turnabouts that are capable of helping him win each cases with little to no evidence, point out contradictions and is capable of finding the real murderer after taking several beatings (figuratively and literally) in and out of the courtroom
Carreon: goes about citing that he has been victimized by a cartoonist’s drawing of his client’s “mother,” go to major news stations and websites and talks about about being hacked by the man you’re trying to sue, filed a lawsuit against Inman, IndieGoGo, the American Cancer Society AND the National Wildlife Federation, also filing a restraining order too late, and his wife goes on a trolling rampage on a tech news site, complaining about random conspiracies, pasting odd poetry, and linking to a site I can’t access. (due to it being block, and thank God for that!)
Add on to the symbolism to their names (Wright being a metaphorical phoenix due to his nature of coming back from the brink of defeat, and Carreon sounding like an animal carcass), you got the two sides of the defense attorney’s coin in how to be a good attorney (if you’re not a butt monkey) and a bad lawyer.
Prepare the ovens, we got ourselves a roast coming on!
Love this part
So I was reading the Opposition to Carreon’s TRO and I came across this part: “First, to the extent the claim is intelligible, it appears to be based solely on Indiegogo?s
publication of content generated and provided by Inman.” I love this because the attorney is basically telling the judge… hey look this guy Carreon is a whack job as I’m sure you can tell when trying to read his pages of non-sense. Attorneys normally don’t make that kind of dig against another attorney and save those comments for crazy Pro Se folks who submit like 50 pages of non-sense about why they don’t have to pay taxes and why they think the court isn’t valid because of the type of fringes on the flag.
Show me the money.
Just curious … quoted in the article is this from Ragesh Tangri and Mark Lemley:
Here, the only imminent event was the disbursement of just over $95,000 to the National Wildlife Fund and the American Cancer …
But, if you look here the total amount raised is $220K.
So, where’s the other $125K? Just wondering.
Re: Show me the money.
It was $95,000 to each charity which is $190,000 total. Minus processing fees of $8,800 but you’re right that it still leaves a unexplained gap. Not $125K gap mind you but a gap none the less.
Re: Show me the money.
The amount of $95,000 is for each charity. Both the National Wildlife Fund and the American Cancer Society are each getting $95,000. The rest of course is the take for the fundraising site and other fees etc. It could have been worded a little better though.
Re: Show me the money.
You’re misreading it. It’s $95000 to NWF and $95000 for cancer, and then there’s IndieGoGo’s fees.
Re: Show me the money.
IndieGoGo only ever held about half of the money (all those donated via credit card). The amount donated via PayPal goes directly from PayPal to Matt Inman, and IndieGoGo never deals with it.
Re: Re: Show me the money.
Noah is correct. Thanks for pointing that fact out as well.
Re: Re: Re: Show me the money.
Thanks guys. Yes, I did misread it – I thought it was $95K cumulatively, not $95K to each. Cheers
Inman's anthem
Keep on digging, keep on crying
one find day I’m gonna be the one
to make you understand
oh yea I’m gonna be your bane
(With apologies to the Spencer Davis Group)
the stupid comments from Carreon’s wife are really helping things along as well. he would do well to tell her to shut up!
Oh! I hope his crazy ass wife shows up on here again.
Tara please comment, your great 😀
Fuck.
This is still going on? I ran out of popcorn a week ago. Now what am I supposed to do?
Re: Fuck.
^ this
Re: Fuck.
This is still going on? I ran out of popcorn a week ago. Now what am I supposed to do?
I can’t say for certain, but I think perhaps suing Orville Redenbacher is step 1…
One question:
As Carreon is digging so much and so hard has he come up under the floor of the Three Gorges Dam yet?
If I understood the article correctly, not all money went through indiegogo. The PayPal money would go directly to Inman.
He should hire Paul Christoforo and Jack Thompson and it would be perfect.
I wonder what his next move will be?
Maybe he’ll try suing the bears.
You know, with all this digging, Carreon would sure make a good undertaker.
New Lowering the Bar write up
Carreon v. The Oatmeal: Plaintiff Continues to Dig
I decided to Google “Lowering the Bar Oatmeal” to see if he’s weighed in yet, & Google shows it was posted 48 min. prior to this post.
Is this for real? I can’t believe a lawyer could be that stupid…
Re: Is this for real? []
I have my doubts. But the downside risk ought to be enormous.
Anyone care to bet on rule 11 sanctions?
Popehat: Oatmeal v. FunnyJunk, Part VIII
Just posted on Popehat:
Oatmeal v. FunnyJunk, Part VIII: Charles Carreon Gets Sued, Paul Alan Levy of Public Citizen Joins The Fray
Re: Popehat: Oatmeal v. FunnyJunk, Part VIII
Just finished reading the new Doe v Carreon complaint.
More at Paul Alan Levy’s blog post: ?Charles Carreon Digs Himself Even Deeper?and Register.com Betrays a Customer?
Re: Popehat: Oatmeal v. FunnyJunk, Part VIII
from that link:
Wait… what ?!? ROFL! Just WAYYYYY too funny!
But the best part of all about his latest filings has been omitted.
Carreon has told the court that coming to court would be a huge financial burden upon him and wants to conduct some business telephonically…
I find this amazing because he picked the court himself, and somehow it never occurred to him that he would be required to show up in court at least a few times.
The Carreon Effect: The act of doubling down, then quadrupling down, and finally going all in on an untenable position.
Re: Re:
Actually, it wasn’t ommitted. At least not by me. Not my fault if Mike left it out.
I first posted it in AnderwF’s Favorites.
& I’m pretty sure I mentioned it when I submitted the story to Techdirt…
& I’ll post how I described his filing the TRO: Charles is trying to shoot off his other foot, while it’s in his mouth.
Re: Re: Re:
“Charles is trying to shoot off his other foot, while it’s in his mouth.”
Awesome quote.
UPDATE: Judge Chen's ORDER
From Popehat:
Text of Judge Chen’s ORDER:
(Emphasis in original.)
Sorry, Simon. Even with all your spiral energy, Charles Carreon just might be a better digger than you could ever be.
more awesome
popehat just put up part 8:
Oatmeal v. FunnyJunk, Part VIII: Charles Carreon Gets Sued, Paul Alan Levy of Public Citizen Joins The Fray
read it at:
http://www.popehat.com/2012/07/02/oatmeal-v-funnyjunk-part-viii-charles-carreon-gets-sued/
Re: more awesome
What was wrong with Lurker Keith’s comment (Jul 2nd, 2012 @ 3:50pm) ?
Re: Re: more awesome
nothing, I just simply missed it; working in one browser window, while, reading the news in two others….
Re: Re: Re: more awesome
Well, that happens sometimes… I’ve done that myself?more than once.
( But, really, you’re not able to pinpoint a reason why you didn’t see it? I’m honestly curious. Most of the time, when I write something, I look back at it later, and say to myself, ?You know, I could’ve written that better.? )
Re: Re: more awesome
And thanks for your link to Levy’s blog post.
Stumbled upon something weird...
Adam Steinbaugh, who scooped Ken on Part VII, posted something out right weird. I debated not posting this, since I can’t tell if it’s real, but it appears Techdirt if familiar w/ the person in question…
The Oatmeal case gets even more bizarre. Enter ?Gino Romano?, aka Jonathan Lee Riches
There are 2 filings reprinted in full.
Looks like we can’t call Charles the most insane on in this thing anymore…
Re: Stumbled upon something weird...
Saw the same filings via RECAP.
In comments at another site, someone who alleges they have PACER access (aka “some guy on teh intarwebz”) claims they’re for real. I don’t know. I really have my doubts over whether any of this is real.
If this isn’t just an advertising stunt, then I’d hope that the motion for rule 11 sanctions requests that the judge order a mental-health examination (and tox screen) for Mr Carreon.
Heck, if it is an advertising stunt, then the rule 11 motion for sanctions should ask the judge to order a mental-health examination (and tox screen) for all the attorneys.
Some people just don’t know what end is up.