Taking on record companies
By TIMOTHY O'CONNOR
THE JOURNAL NEWS
(Original Publication: August 14, 2005)
http://www.thejournalnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050814/NEWS02/508
140316/1020/NEWS04&template=printart

WHITE PLAINS ‹ Patricia Santangelo is in many ways the embodiment of the
suburban mom.

She is the mother of five children, ranging in age from 6 to 19. She is
divorced, living in Wappingers Falls after growing up in Yorktown and Putnam
County. At 42, she works as a property manager for a real estate company and
is trying to get her own business off the ground.

What she is not, is someone expected to be at the center of the nearly
2-year-old war between record companies and online music file sharers.

But that's exactly who she has become.

Santangelo was sued by several record companies in U.S. District Court in
White Plains in February. The record companies said Santangelo's home
computer and Internet account were used to illegally trade copyrighted song
files. The record companies say people like Santangelo are destroying the
multibillion-dollar industry.

Record companies have filed about 13,300 similar federal lawsuits against
Internet users across the country since September 2003. Nearly 3,000 of
those lawsuits have been settled. The offending music traders have agreed to
pay an average of $4,000 to $5,000 and promised not to illegally download
copyrighted songs anymore.

None of the cases has gone to trial.

That may change. And it may change with a soccer mom who said she would
rather pay a lawyer's fees than give in to what she calls intimidation
tactics by the record companies to get her to settle.

"I am still nervous about the whole thing," she said. "I just got so
aggravated about how threatening they were."

The risk she is taking is that, if she loses, she may wind up paying much
more than the $7,500 the record companies initially wanted from her to
settle the case.

The offer came through the Recording Industry Association of America's
settlement center, which was designed to facilitate Internet users' paying
penalties to the record companies before they were sued. Santangelo said the
settlement center bullied her, trying to get her to accept a settlement
offer.

"I didn't do anything wrong," she said. "Why should I pay them?"

She never used the Kazaa program ‹ one of the networks that facilitates file
sharing ‹ that was downloaded onto her computer, she said. She didn't even
know what it was before she was sued, she said. The Kazaa account name in
the lawsuit belongs to a friend of her children's, not to her or anyone in
her house, she said.

Opponents of the record companies' lawsuits have said they hoped someone
would challenge the companies' tactics in court rather than settle.

"If this particular woman is willing to go to trial, that's something new,"
said Jason Schultz, a staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, a digital rights advocacy group that opposes the lawsuits. "The
threat is so great that most people don't even risk it."

The record companies say the law is clear and on their side: If you download
copyrighted songs on the Internet without compensating the songs' owners,
you're stealing.

Jonathan Lamy, a spokesman for the RIAA, an umbrella group that represents
the record companies, pointed to the U.S. Supreme Court's characterization
of illegal online song trading as "garden variety theft."

"Just as we must hold accountable the businesses that encourage theft
online, individuals who engage in illegal downloading must also know there
are consequences to their actions," he said in an e-mail. "The toll from
online theft is devastating."

He said the record companies have "ironclad evidence" Santangelo's home
computer and Internet account were used to illegally download music.

But whether that evidence is strong enough to stand up to judicial scrutiny
still is a question two years after the first suits were filed. Few of the
lawsuits have gone beyond the preliminary stages.

Santangelo's lawyer, Morlan Ty Rogers, who works in New York City and grew
up in Sleepy Hollow and Ossining, said no one has challenged the
"boilerplate" language of the lawsuits, adding that the record companies
don't have enough evidence to bring their claims to court.

"Many of these lawsuits have been brought against people who are simply the
names on the Internet account," Rogers said. He said that's not good enough
to sustain a lawsuit. The companies have sued unsuspecting mothers, fathers,
grandparents ‹ people who have only grudgingly made the switch from vinyl
albums to compact discs.

"It's really surprising" no one has attacked the record companies' basis for
the lawsuits, he said, "because the record companies' claims are actually
very weak."

Joseph Singleton, a Beverly Hills, Calif., lawyer who has defended about 15
clients in such lawsuits, said he has had clients who would have been
perfect to challenge the lawsuits. But they settled because, even though
they didn't do anything wrong, a loved one may have illegally downloaded the
music files. Most of his clients have settled. The record companies have
dropped suits against a couple of others. Still others challenged the
lawsuits but didn't survive the hurdle of summary judgment.

"You can't go in and simply say, 'So what? I did it, there's nothing wrong
with it,' " he said. "Those people will lose."

But, he said, record companies are suing people who made songs available to
others, whether or not there is any proof they ever illegally copied a song.

"You cannot have copyright infringement if you don't copy," he said.

Santangelo said she feels as if the well-heeled record companies are picking
on a single mother.

"Why are they going after people like me?" she asked.

A judge, and perhaps down the line a jury, may have to answer that question.

Santangelo's lawyer, Rogers, whom she retained several weeks ago, has filed
a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, saying it fails to properly state a claim.
The record companies have responded that the suit makes a valid claim
against Santangelo. U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon will decide the
issue.

McMahon already has had a glimpse of the case from a conference May 6,
before Santangelo had a lawyer. The judge told Santangelo she should get an
attorney. She told the record companies' lawyers that the settlement center
was no longer to be involved in the case.

"I would love to see a mom fighting one of these," the judge said.




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