Prenda Law's 'Copyright Trolling' Operation Blasted at the 9th Circuit

PASADENA, Calif. — A 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel today heard an appeal made by the now-defunct “copyright trolling” Prenda Law Firm, which two years ago was ordered to pay $81,000 in sanctions after a federal judge ruled that it engaged in fraud while coercing those who allegedly downloaded porn videos illegally into financial settlements.

The appeal has its roots in an order made by U.S. District Judge Otis Wright, who said in a May 2013 opinion that Prenda Law, along with attorneys John Steele, Paul Duffy and Paul Hansmeier, “outmaneuvered the legal system" in their porn piracy cases representing adult companies AF Holdings LLC and Ingenuity 13 LLC, purportedly started up by the law firm.

Wright in his May 2013 order said he found evidence of forgery in the assignee of the copyrights of the adult entertainment movies.

His lower court ruling said that Prenda Law and its attorneys should not only be sanctioned but also held accountable over possible federal racketeering violations and probed over their tax returns, among other disciplinary measures.

In today’s hour-long oral argument, Daniel Voelker, Prenda Law’s appellate attorney, said that the copyright trolling firm was denied due process with the $81,000 in punitive sanctions by Wright.

Prenda Law, with the appeal, posted a $250,000 bond that will go to defense attorney Morgan Pietz and a John Doe client if it loses. Voelker has asked the 9th Circuit to either dismiss the case involving the sanctions or remand the case back to the lower court without sanctions.

In his argument, Voelker said that Wright punished the firm and its attorneys for invoking their 5th Amendment right.

But 9th Circuit Judge Harry Pregerson said that Wright “got on it and started thinking about” Prenda Law’s “clever scheme.”

“He smelled a rat, didn’t he?” Pregerson asked Voelker about Prenda Law’s operations.

Pregerson noted that Wright went through five similar cases involving Prenda Law and “found the same operation going on” and he probably said, “'Things don’t look right' … and one thing leads to another. He’s an old Marine Corps drill instruction, and he was checking things out and hit on it.”

Pregerson early on began reading Prenda Law’s threat letters to porn downloaders that had been entered into evidence. The letters asked for a $3,400 payment in order to avoid being named in a federal lawsuit over the content.

"This was a very clever scheme they were involved in,” Pregerson said. “Buy several copyrighted [adult movies], then seed the Internet and find addresses. Then they used our court system for illegal purposes to extort money; they used our discovery system."

Voelker said that Prenda Law should prevail in the appeal and that the sanctions should be thrown out entirely because the firm wasn’t given the opportunity to defend themselves after its attorneys invoked the 5th Amendment. He said that Wright imposed criminal contempt penalties without extending criminal contempt procedural protections.

"The entire proceeding was tainted," Voelker said. "Mark Lutz, the CEO of Ingenuity 13, was not allowed to testify. As soon as they asserted their 5th Amendment rights, the judge stopped the proceeding.

"My clients want their day in court, with procedural protections. There was no due process.”

Pietz, in his arguments before the three-judge panel, said that testimony from Lutz wouldn’t have amounted to very much.

"Lutz was a paralegal for [Prenda Law]," said Pietz. "This notion that he went from a humble paralegal at Prenda to the mastermind overseeing shell companies, and overseeing 20 lawyers across the country — it doesn’t hold water."

Listen to today’s appellate hearing in Paul Hansmeier vs. John Doe here.

Related:  

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Ofcom Investigates More Sites in Wake of AV Traffic Shifts

U.K. media regulator Ofcom has launched investigations into 20 more adult sites as part of its age assurance enforcement program under the Online Safety Act.

MintStars Launches Debit Card for Creators

MintStars has launched its MintStars Creator Card, powered by Payy.

xHamster Settles Texas AV Lawsuit, Pays $120,000

Hammy Media, parent company of xHamster, has settled a lawsuit brought by the state of Texas over alleged noncompliance with the state’s age verification law, agreeing to pay a $120,000 penalty.

SCOTUS Won't Hear Appeal of NYC Adult Store Zoning Law

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear an appeal of a lower court’s decision allowing enforcement of a 2001 zoning law aimed at forcing adult retail stores out of most parts of New York City.

RevealMe Joins Pineapple Support as Partner-Level Sponsor

RevealMe has joined the ranks of over 70 adult businesses and organizations committing funds and resources to Pineapple Support.

OnlyFans Institutes Criminal Background Checks for US Creators

OnlyFans will screen creators in the United States for criminal convictions, CEO Keily Blair has announced in a post on LinkedIn.

Pineapple Support to Host 'Healthier Relationships' Support Group

Pineapple Support is hosting a free online support group on enhancing connection and personal growth.

Strike 3 Rejects Meta 'Personal Use' Defense in AI Suit

Vixen Media Group owner Strike 3 Holdings this week responded to Facebook parent company Meta’s motion to dismiss Strike 3’s suit accusing Meta of pirating VMG content to train its artificial intelligence models.

Pornhub, Stripchat: VLOP Designation Based on Flawed Data

In separate cases, attorneys for Pornhub and Stripchat this week told the EU’s General Court that the European Commission relied on unreliable data when it classified the sites as “very large online platforms” (VLOPs) under the EU’s Digital Services Act, news organization MLex reports.

New Age Verification Service 'AgeWallet' Launches

Tech company Brady Mills Agency has officially launched its subscription-based age verification solution, AgeWallet.

Show More