Thursday, January 26, 2006

Revenge of the law falls on 'Star Wars' film pirates

After going over to the dark side by getting their hands on copies of "Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith" before its theatrical release, six men and one woman have pleaded guilty to federal piracy charges, U.S. prosecutors said Wednesday.

Prosecutors believe the seven defendants, all from Los Angeles County, were not part of an organized piracy ring and only used copies of the movie for their own viewing.

But after copies passed among them, the epic film ended up in the hands of an eighth person who put it on the Internet the night before its record-grossing theatrical release.

That person, Marc Hoaglin, 28, of Huntington Beach pleaded guilty in December to a felony count of uploading a pre-release copyrighted work onto the Internet. The seven other defendants - one of them a 27-year-old La Crescenta man - pleaded guilty Tuesday to misdemeanor charges.

"If they'd done it for financial gain or profit, then that could have become a felony, but ... that wasn't the case for these folks," said Brian Hoffstadt, assistant U.S. attorney.

The illegal distribution of "Sith" started during the week before its May 19 release, when Albert Valente, 28, of Lakewood took a DVD copy of the film from a post-production facility where he worked. The firm was hired by the studio for the post-production work, Hoffstadt said.

Valente lent the DVD to his friend Jessie Lumada, 28, of Long Beach, who gave it to another friend, Ramon Valdez, 30, also of Long Beach. Valdez took "Sith" to the cable company where he worked and allowed co-worker Michael Fousse, 42, of Monrovia to upload it onto the company's internal network.

Dwight Wayne Sityar, 27, of La Crescenta, who also worked at the cable company, then burned the movie onto three CDs and gave them to co-worker Stephani Gima, 25, of Los Angeles. Gima gave the movie to her brother-in-law, Joel De Sagun Dimaano, 33, of Los Angeles, who brought it to his work at MGM Studios and lent it to Hoaglin, his co-worker. Hoaglin uploaded the movie onto the Internet the night before it opened.

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