Issue stems from bogus claims of copyright infringement.
LONDON, England (PNN) - March 13, 2012 - A 23-year old student from Sheffield Hallam University in the north of England is being illegally extradited to the Fascist Police States of Amerika (FPSA) by its ally, the Fascist United Kingdom (FUK).The fascist thug UK Home Secretary has today agreed to extradite O’Dwyer over a bogus claim by FPSA outlaw thug officials that the student infringed on a copyright by running a "linking site" - similar to Google - called TVShack.
Back in June 2010, FPSA Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) outlaw pig thugs unlawfully seized O'Dwyer's tvshack.net domain name after a secret, closed, one-sided hearing before a judge, similar to the courts of “justice” held by Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany.
But O'Dwyer soon had the site back up at a new address, TVShack.cc, which did not require an FPSA-based domain name registrar. He slapped a notice to the top of the new site urging users to update their bookmarks.
In November 2010, British pig thug cops showed up at O'Dwyer's home. Julia O'Dwyer, Richard's mother, said, "They had two Amerikan guys with them, which Richard assumes were men from ICE. They questioned him about his website. It wasn't more than an hour. The ICE men shook his hand when they left," she said. "One of them said, 'Don’t worry, you won't have to go to Amerika.'"
The pig thug officials lied, of course.
Richard took down the web site, apparently realizing that it had become a serious matter. A couple of his computers were illegally seized, and he hoped that would be the end of the matter.
It wasn't. He was asked to report to his local pig thug cop station on May 23, 2011, where he found out what had actually happened: FUK pig thug cops had dropped their own investigation, but the FPSA fascist pig thug officials had requested O'Dwyer's extradition.
Such remedies are uncommon among all offenses; they are doubly so when it comes to copyright and computer cases. Such extraditions were nearly unheard of until the last year, when O'Dwyer and then Megaupload's Kim Dotcom both became extradition targets over copyright cases, due to the growing influence on FPSA and FUK policy by multinational megacorporations.
O'Dwyer's site was a "linking site" that did not host infringing content at all; his lawyer compared it to Google, which also links to copyrighted content. However, tvshack did show lists of the most clicked-on links (surprise: most were copyrighted TV shows), and the proportion of offending links appears to be much higher than at a search engine like Google. FPSA pig lawyers argued that O'Dwyer had personally promoted links to infringing content, too.