Posted By CotoBlogzz
Conspirators
guilty of a scheme to distribute more than four million pirated copies of
copyrighted Android apps with a total retail value of more than $17 million.
Posted
By CotoBlogzz
Rancho
Santa Margarita, CA - Aaron Blake Buckley, 22, of Moss Point, Mississippi,
pleaded guilty today to one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright
infringement and to one count of criminal copyright infringement before U.S.
District Judge Timothy C. Batten Sr. of the Northern District of Georgia.
Gary Edwin Sharp II, 29, of Uxbridge, Massachusetts, a co-conspirator, pleaded
guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement on
Jan. 13, according to announcement by Assistant Attorney General Leslie R.
Caldwell of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney John A.
Horn of the Northern District of Georgia and Special Agent in Charge J. Britt
Johnson of the FBI’s Atlanta Field Offic.
The conspirators identified themselves as members
of the Applanet Group. From May 2010 through August 2012, they conspired
to reproduce and distribute more than four million copies of copyrighted
Android apps through the Applanet alternative online market without permission
from the victim copyright owners, who would otherwise sell copies of the apps
on legitimate online markets for a fee. On Aug. 21, 2012, the FBI seized
the Applanet website, which marked the first seizure of the domain name for a
website involving a mobile device app marketplace.
Sharp
also pleaded guilty for his role in conspiring to commit criminal copyright
infringement as the leader of another online piracy group, the SnappzMarket Group.
Sharp admitted that he and two other members of the SnappzMarket Group
conspired to distribute more than one million pirated copies of copyrighted
Android apps with a total retail value of more than $1.7 million through the
group’s website, which was also seized on Aug. 21, 2012.
The FBI
investigated the case. Assistant Deputy Chief John H. Zacharia of the
Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS)
and Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Bly of the Northern District of Georgia
are prosecuting the case. The CCIPS Cybercrime Lab and the Criminal
Division’s Office of International Affairs provided significant
assistance.
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