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Originally published January 2 2006

MPAA pushes bill to make bootlegging a criminal misdemeanor

by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor

Bootleggers (people caught videotaping inside a movie theater) under current state law face a maximum fine of $250. The bill backed by the MPAA would change the maximum punishment to a $1,000 fine and a year in jail.



Every evening rush hour, hustlers lugging bags full of bootlegged movies walk the subway train aisles, calling "two for five dollars!" as brazenly as if they were selling hot dogs at Yankee Stadium. At those prices, the DVDs, often of current Hollywood blockbusters, sell well, despite laughable sound and picture quality. Few customers seem to care the copies were made illegally. Under state law, people caught videotaping inside a movie theater face a maximum fine of $250. As part of its worldwide campaign against piracy, the film industry is pushing for tougher penalties for smuggling a camcorder into a cinema in New York, which has the country's worst bootlegging problem and some of the weakest penalties. * What Ever Happened to the 'Paperless Office'? A bill pushed by the Motion Picture Association of America would make operating recording equipment inside a theater a criminal misdemeanor, raising the maximum punishment to a $1,000 fine and a year in jail. Making the crime a misdemeanor also would empower police to arrest violators on the spot, rather than simply issuing a summons. People caught a second time would be charged with a felony. Legislators, film industry representatives and lawyers met Wednesday in Manhattan to discuss the new proposal, which would make New York one of several states to adopt tougher rules on movie piracy in recent years. But Pace Law School professor David N. Cassuto likened the use of tough criminal penalties to attack the lowest-level offenders in pirating operations to "using a howitzer to solve a roach problem." The proposed penalties would also apply to an obnoxious 16-year-old who holds up a camera phone during the coming attractions to snap a photograph of the screen, warned defense attorney Marvin Schecter.


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