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Reviews & Articles :: U.S. Man Gets Two Years for Copyright Violations
Issue: August 2007 > Games > Article "U.S. Man Gets Two Years for Copyright Violations"

U.S. Man Gets Two Years for Copyright Violations (U.S. Man Gets Two Years for Copyright Violations)  U.S. Man Gets Two Years for Copyright Violations

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An Illinois man was sentenced to two years in prison for selling pirated games online.

An Illinois man was sentenced to two years in prison for violating copyright law through the unauthorized sale of video games on his Web site, the U.S. Department of Justice announced late Thursday.

Judge Leonie Brinkema of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia also sentenced Timothy W. Hall, 35, of Mount Vernon, Illinois, to pay a US$1,200 fine.

Hall pleaded guilty May 8 to one count of criminal copyright infringement for his unlawful distribution of hundreds of thousands of copyright works on his Web site, Morbidbackups.net. Hall advertised the sale of hundreds of video games, for Xbox, GameCube, PlayStation 2 and other platforms, on recordable CDs. Hall also offered DVDs containing movies and television programs, the DOJ said.

From about 2001 to late 2006, Hall was paid more than $266,000 for the unlawful reproduction and distribution of the games and movies, the he acknowledged during his guilty plea.

On May 10, 2006, an undercover agent of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation placed an order on Hall's Web site for copies of 70 Xbox games and 48 episodes of the television series "24" on DVD. The agent received his order at a location in Virginia on Aug. 7, 2006, and the package contained 83 unlabeled DVDs with the games and movies that the agent had ordered.

Hall sold more than 100 pirated works to customers in the Eastern District of Virginia, receiving more than $3,000 for the sales, the DOJ said.

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August 3, 2007
Author: Grant Gross
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