One of the founders of Swedish file sharing site Pirate Bay is appealing to the European Court of Human Rights to overturn his conviction, claiming it violates freedom of speech. Fredrik Neij was convicted in 2009, along with three other colleagues who helped with the founding and operating of the website, for being an accessory to copyright violation.
“It’s just like saying the post office should be in court for delivering a letter with illegal content,” wrote Neij’s lawyer Joans Nilsson in an opinion piece published in the Dagens Nyheter (DN) newspaper.
Last year, the Svea Court of Appeal ruled that the convictions of Neij, Peter Sunde and Carl Lundström would be upheld, with each receiving a year’s jail term and a fine. A decision on the appeal of the fourth defendant, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, has not yet been made as he was absent from the hearing due to illness.
The Swedish Supreme Court denied the men the right to appeal again, prompting Neij to take his fight to Europe’s highest court.
“We want deeper scrutiny to determine whether it’s actually right to convict Fredrik Neij as the responsible party for how others have used The Pirate Bay,” Nilsson wrote in DN. “The fact that there is no clear legislation or legal precedent in an area that affects us all – the internet – constitutes a problem for the rule of law,” he added.
Meanwhile, fellow founder Peter Sunde has requested a pardon from his sentence due to health problems.
[…] Pirate Bay founder takes conviction to ECHR […]