Showing posts with label Wayne Hoehn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wayne Hoehn. Show all posts

Nov 2, 2011

U.S. Marshals ordered to seize Net troll's assets in win for veteran

Wayne Hoehn, Recon Company,
E 2 /12, 12th Cavalry Regiment;
Vietnam War

Highly decorated Vietnam veteran WINS VICTORY for THE INTERNET‏ and FIRST AMENDMENT - Wayne Hoehn, has just won his sought-after order from a federal court in Las Vegas commanding the U.S. Marshals Service to seize more than $63,000 in Righthaven LLC's assets to satisfy a Hoehn's judgment and costs.

What happens when deceitful fraudsters like Righthaven LLC and attorney Shawn Mangano go up against veterans, advocates, the Tea Party, the Democratic Underground and some very serious legal talent?

They lose big.

By Michael Leon

Randazza Legal Group, Hoehn’s attorneys [and this writer’s] has represented [and still is] numerous victims of Righthaven which has sued 100s of veterans and advocactes, lying in complaints in federal court that Righthaven holds copyrights.

From Steve Green:

Las Vegas copyright infringement lawsuit filer Righthaven LLC’s financial problems grew Tuesday when the federal court in Las Vegas commanded the U.S. Marshals Service to seize more than $63,000 in Righthaven assets to satisfy a creditor’s judgment and costs.

Lance Wilson, clerk of the court, signed a writ of execution requested by attorneys for Wayne Hoehn, who was sued for copyright infringement by Righthaven — but then defeated Righthaven in court when his case was dismissed this summer.

Righthaven since March 2010 has filed 275 lawsuits against websites, bloggers and message board posters claiming they infringed on material from the Las Vegas Review-Journal and the Denver Post by posting their content online without authorization.

The company’s litigation campaign stalled this summer after three suits were thrown out on fair use grounds and five judges in Nevada and Colorado ruled Righthaven lacked standing to sue because it didn’t control the newspaper copyrights it claimed to own. ...

The writ was issued after Randazza Legal Group attorneys asked the court to issue it Saturday, one day after Righthaven missed a deadline to either pay the original $34,045 or post a bond guaranteeing payment while it appealed the fee award.

"Righthaven has exhausted any benefit of the doubt that it could be afforded, and it is time for it to pay the consequences for its actions — starting with Hoehn’s lawful judgment plus the accrued costs and fees expended in the (so far) futile attempts to compel Righthaven to take this court’s orders seriously,’’ Randazza attorneys wrote in Saturday’s request

Aug 15, 2011

UW-Madison Grad and Veteran Win First Amendment Victory over Net Troll, Righthaven

Righthaven LLC [Image: Leon]

By Michael Leon

Congratulations are in order for Vietnam War veteran, Wayne Hoehn (Recon Company, E 2/12, 12th Cavalry Regiment (1969-70)), who won another major First Amendment victory over Internet troll, Righthaven LLC today.

It was announced today in the United States District Court, District of Nevada that Hoehn was awarded $34,045 in attorneys' fees and costs in a judicial order that looks to spell the doom of Righthaven LLC, a fraudulent outfit operating out of Las Vegas that pretends to own copyrights and then sues 100s of defendants, typically for $150,000.

Wayne Hoehn
Righthaven tried that scheme on Hoehn and today culminated in his final vindication against Righthaven and its attorneys, known variously as trolls and pond scum.

Congratulations are also in order for attorney and U.W. Madison Law School graduate, J. Malcolm DeVoy IV (Randazza Legal Group), and Marc J. Randazza [counsel of record and lead attorney] (Randazza Legal Group) in Righthaven LLC v. Wayne Hoehn (Case No. 2:11-cv-00050); both of whom we have noted here are made of the same cloth as Hoehn, and whose work on behalf of the First Amendment is a victory for all Americans.

Hoehn chose to hold true to his commitment to uphold and defend the Constitution seeking out DeVoy, but Righthaven refused to pay his attorneys’ costs, as ordered to by a federal judge in Nevada.

Not anymore.

Hoehn of Kentucky and other defendants (including this writer, also with the representation of DeVoy) have Righthaven LLC on the run, though Righthaven is backed by a billionaire and they believe they are beyond the reach of the order of federal judges.

Journalist Steve Green notes:
Righthaven [has] received plenty of national news coverage about the lawsuits by the likes of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, Fortune, Bloomberg News, Associated Press and Wired. This national media coverage wasn’t flattering for the Review-Journal, the Post or our city’s legal community, with Righthaven and its newspaper partners often portrayed as digital ambulance chasers using lawsuit settlement shakedowns and the court system to make a quick buck. That’s because of the no-warning nature of the lawsuits, court rulings finding some of the lawsuits were without merit, judges’ comments critical of Righthaven, a series of foul-ups in executing the suits and because the lawsuit spree was unprecedented for the newspaper industry. Ever.
Righthaven is a LLC that has filed some 275 federal copyright lawsuits claiming text from the Las Vegas Review-Journal and the Denver Post has been used without regard to copyright law by the Internet users including bloggers and message board posters.

Righthaven is half-owned by another LLC controlled by Las Vegas attorney and Righthaven CEO Steven Gibson, and half owned by a third LLC owned by the family of Little Rock, Arkansas investment banking billionaire Warren Stephens.

United States District Judge Phillip Pro ordered that Righthaven LLC has until September 14 to pay up.

Jul 18, 2011

I Vanquished a Notorious Internet Troll, Righthaven LLC

The Billionaire-backed ‘copyright enforcer’ became a cautionary tale not for claimed Internet-copy infringers like bloggers, but rather for law-suit mills and deceitful trolls like Righthaven LLC filing some 275 federal copyright complaints, typically for $75,000-$150,000 since March 2010


Righthaven LLC [Image - Michael Leon]
 By Michael Leon

Madison, Wisconsin—On March 6, 2011 my girlfriend and I were watching True Blood and some idiot pounded on the door so loudly my girlfriend jumped off the coach.

"Mike, don't get that. You don't who that is," she said.

"I'm going to find out," I said.

I opened the door fast onto our porch, and demanded "Who the f__k are you" to which a wormy-looking man sheepishly stepped away, replying he was "just doing his job," laying Civil Action No 2:20-CV-01672, federal copyright complaint filed in the United States District Court for the District of Nevada, at my feet and quickly leaving.

Turns out I was a victim of Righthaven LLC, as certified in the complaint by one Steven A. Gibson, CEO and founder of Righthaven and Shawn Mangano, attorney of record in the service papers.

Righthaven is a LLC that has filed some 275 federal copyright lawsuits claiming text from the Las Vegas Review-Journal and the Denver Post has been used without regard to copyright law by the Internet users including bloggers and message board posters.

Righthaven is half owned by another LLC controlled by Las Vegas attorney and Righthaven CEO Steven Gibson, and half owned by a third LLC owned by the family of Little Rock, Arkansas investment banking billionaire Warren Stephens.

My complaint alleges a copyright violation for a piece on veterans in Veterans Today in 2010 that also appeared in a paper over which Righthaven claimed it "is the owner of the copyright" several times in the complaint—a claim of ownership replicated in the some 274 other complaints and which last week was proven false, ruled to be "deceitful," and is the cause of the stern, vocal beating by Chief Justice Roger Hunt (District of Nevada) July 15, who fined Righthaven $5,000 for repeatedly misleading the Court on this representation of copyright ownership.

Steve Green of the Las Vegas Sun, reports, "[Judge] Hunt ordered ... that a transcript of today’s hearing, in which he made several negative comments about Righthaven’s conduct, be posted on Righthaven court dockets" in the District of Nevada.

Moreover, ominously, Green reports: Judge Hunt said, "In the court’s view, the arrangement between Righthaven and Stephens Media is nothing more, nor less, than a law firm — which incidentally I don’t think is licensed to practice law in this state — with a contingent fee agreement masquerading as a company."

The win

It didn't take long for me to file an answer, along with several motions, the pedestrian nature of which likely taxed the patience of United States District Court Judge Gloria Maria Navarro.

On April 14, attorneys for the Democratic Underground, a future prevailing defendant, won a motion to unseal the Strategic Alliance Agreement between Righthaven and Stephens Media that, in sum, proved Righthaven had no standing to sue due to its lack ownership of the copyright, and that Steven A. Gibson misrepresented and concealed this relationship in the some 200 federal court cases.

I had been negotiating on the phone with Righthaven’s counsel that week wondering vaguely if this attorney, Shawn Mangano, were as duplicitous and delusional as I had been informed by an intellectual property attorney whose practice is in the Midwest.

I told Mangano over the phone and in e-mails what I thought of his lawsuit mill.

So, on April 18, I secured the pro bono services of Marc Randazza and J. Malcolm DeVoy of the Randazza Legal Group.

Mangano became so upset that I was accusing him and Righthaven of lying and engaging in abuse of process that he threatened me with a defamation suit in an e-mail and publically in our April 20 hearing before U.S. District Judge Gloria Navarro.

"I’m not going to tolerate and allow someone to tarnish my professional reputation" – or make libelous claims about Righthaven and [Righthaven attorney Steve Ganim],” Mangano said.

"Mr. Mangano's reference to libel indicates a lurid conception of the term," [I] said in response after the hearing, writes Steve Green at Vegas Inc.

On April 20, I appeared by telephone from Madison with my co-defendant, a 20-year veteran nurse who reached the court from a D.C. VA medical center, Denise Nichols, who was served with a $150,000 complaint failing to mention her once.

I won. My case was dismissed, with an opportunity to seek attorneys' fees and costs. Long story short, my attorneys won as well, and Righthaven has to pay up legal fees owed by July 25th.

The case against Nichols was discharged by Righthaven which filed and ran.

An amended complaint (filed 11/24/2010) against another of my co-defendants, an organization complaint says is of "unknown orgin," Medbillz, was certified by Gibson to be rightfully litigated in the U.S. District Court of the Southern District of California as an "appropriate venue;" my venue was claimed to belong in Nevada.

Two other I/P attorneys laughed when I told them of this ruse by Righthaven and Gibson claiming two different venues simultaneously.

After the case was dismissed, Righthaven's attorney, Shawn Mangano, phoned me from Nevada and unleashed a stream of invectives at about 4:20 P.M. Central time [I log and document such items when dealing with Righthaven].

Made for an amusing conversation; but I sincerely was concerned about Mangano suffering a stroke in the Nevada heat though he phoned from some outfit entitled "Investors Realt [cut off]" on caller ID. Made some other significant, shall I say, documentation of the phone call

This month I became the first defendant to be awarded attorneys’ fees from Righthaven to J. Malcolm Devoy of the Randazza Legal Group, a First Amendment firm located in Las Vegas.

Fair Use law

The wins for the defendants piling up through the efforts of committed, public-mined attorneys like David Kerr of Santangelo Law Offices, PC, Devoy and Randazza of the Randazza Legal Group, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the law firm of Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich and Rosati, Kurt Opsahl, Chad Bowers, and Laurence Pulgram and Fenwick and West LLP, and Todd Kincannon are only part of the real story here.

The fair use policy rationale behind Copyright law may be the big winner in Righthaven's 18-month reign of legal terror.

A first year law student will report, in essence, that copyright law ought to promote the dissemination of the arts and science and protect the exclusive right of authors and inventors to benefit from their works by virtue of their authorship.

Reading of Righthaven's campaign of finding alleged infringements for the sole purpose of filing suit and terrorizing defendants into settlements clarifies there is a social purpose in copyright law in fairly using another work, if not for commercial gain or resulting in market harm, but rather advancing discussion, comment and analysis.

Righthaven sees copyrights as a business model to be used in an innovative and dishonestly conceived law suit mill.

They were very wrong to try.

As U.S. District Judge John Kane ruled on motion from Righthaven on April 11, (later staying all 58 Righthaven lawsuits filed in Colorado), “[T]he purpose of the courts is to provide a forum for the orderly, just, and timely resolution of controversies and disputes. Plaintiff’s wishes to the contrary, the courts are not merely tools for encouraging and exacting settlements from Defendants cowed by the potential costs of litigation and liability.”

My attorney Devoy writes in a motion on behalf of prevailing defendant, Vietnam War veteran, Wayne Hahn [LLC v. Wayne Hoehn; Case No. 2:11-cv-00050. Memorandum of Law and Points of Authorities, filed July 7, 2011]:

[L]ike hundreds of other Righthaven victims, Hoehn contemplated his options upon being sued. Should he cave in and write Righthaven a check, or should he risk his savings to stand up for what he knew was right?

Hoehn recalled his [military] oath, and considered the fact that so many others had been sued, and made payments, for what clearly was fair use. Hoehn knew that he could not live up to his oath if he gave up without a fight. Hoehn stood up for fair use – for free speech – and he prevailed.
And so have I, and I’ll being joining the class-action suit by South Carolina attorney, Todd Kincannon, against Righthaven LLC for its abuse of process, fraud and lies, and lodging a complaint with the Nevada Bar against Righthaven's unscrupulous attorneys.
#
- Michael Leon is a writer living in Madison, Wisconsin. His writing has appeared nationally in The Progressive, The Advocate, In These Times and CounterPunch; and locally in the Isthmus and the Capital Times. Leon works as a writer, editor, veterans' advocate, and public relations consultant. He can be reached at: malleon@live.com

May 14, 2011

Righthaven's Atty, Shawn Mangano, Is Desperate

Notorious Internet troll, Righthaven's Shawn Mangano, is turning into one Scaredy Cat.

After Righthaven saw its case dismissed by the Honorable Judge Gloria M. Navarro on April 20, Righthaven's attorney, Shawn Mangano, phoned me from Nevada and unleashed a stream of invectives at about 4:20 P.M. Central time [I log and document such items when dealing with Righthaven].

Made for an amusing conversation; though I sincerely was concerned about Mangano suffering a stroke in the Nevada heat though he phoned from some outfit entitled "Investors Realt [cut off]" on caller ID. Made some other significant, shall I say, documentation of the phone call.

Now, Righthaven Victims reports at least three legal groups are donating their work pro bono in an apparent bid to rid the profession of these vampires.

In an e-mail to my attorney at the time, J. Malcolm Deyoy of the Randazza Legal Group, Mangano complained about a number of statements made by his-then client, me, embarrassing Mangano repeatedly.

One complaint concerns Righthaven's attorney, Steven Ganim. Ganim is not licensed to practice law in Nevada.

Writing this fact, first reported by Righthaven Victims, [see also Righthaven Turnover Rate Resembles Fast Food Chain Operation, April 18, 2011] made Mangano very angry and threatening.

Writes Mangano to my attorney in a letter dated April 19, "Your client has also disseminated that Mr. Ganim is apparently not a member of the State Bar of Nevada. In doing so, your client has attempted to cast the impression that Mr. Ganim is holding himself out an attorney when he is not licensed to do so. Once again your client is wrong."

Mangano threatened to sue me for libel for telling the truth. Absurd as usual.

Righthaven Victims has a new, related update: "Another Attorney Defending a Righthaven Victim on a Pro Bono basis Seeks Attorney Fees" (May 13).

‘Casting an impression' as libel, a novel interpretation of libel law applied to stating an undisputed fact. So here:

Attorney Mangano of Wronghaven LLC,

Here's what I want from you. I want you to call Ganim and borrow Bar materials on the elements of "libel" and study very hard. You can help Ganim pass the Nevada Bar and kill two birds at once.

Then I want you to study Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 11, (b) Representations to the Court and likewise study very hard.

The same for Summary Judgement.

No apologies necessary. Just bone up on the law.

Do not waste the Court's time. Bad form, fella.

Oh, and quit screwing over decorated veterans like Wayne Hoehn. I like that guy.

Apr 24, 2011

Veterans Come Together to Oppose Righthaven

By Denise Nichols

On April 20, I listened from the D.C. Veterans hospital complex by phone to a legal hearing in front of the Honorable Judge Gloria M. Navarro, United States District Court for the District of Nevada.

The hearing pertained to my case, Righthaven v. Michael Leon, Denise Nichols and others.

Judge Navarro made it clear in the hearing almost immediately that this hearing would dismiss the cases against my co-defendant, Mike Leon--a proud veterans’ advocate--and me.

The only question, the Judge said, was whether she would dismiss the cases with or, without prejudice.

So, now with Judge Navarro’s decision, and because of the efforts of my friends, my fellow veterans and my attorneys (Mike Kimbrell and John Arsenaul) Righthaven will be gone from my life, though some personal health matters just diagnosed in D.C. may persist.

Wayne Hoehn

My purpose in part in writing this is to say ‘ thank you’ to all, and single out another defendant, another veteran who is a victim of Righthaven, Wayne Hoehn, who out of a sense of duty that Righthaven will never comprehend contacted from out of the blue and supported me in my defense.

Wayne Hoehn: A Vietnam veteran with a Silver Star, Bronze Star Medals (2) bronze oak leaf clusters with V for valor devices, Purple Heart Medal, Air Medal with numeral 2, Army Medal with numeral 2, National Defense Service Medal,Vietnam Service Medal with 2 Bronze Service Stars, Combat Service Medal, Vietnam Campaign Service Ribbon with Device 1960 and the Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm Unit
In Wayne’s case, Righthaven LLC v. Hoehn, Righthaven attacks another veteran, a highly decorated Vietnam veteran.

What is it about veterans—Larry Scott, POW Network, Veterans Today, Wayne Hoehn and who knows who else that Righthaven hates so much?

I have served 20 years as a nurse, active duty and reserve, and I know that surviving is about staying together.

Maybe that's it.

Staying together

Righthaven lawsuits against veterans, retirees and disabled persons that are particularly unable to fight this situation inflicted upon them, aims for people who are isolated and unable to fight back.

Is there someway to protect veterans, active duty, national guard, reserves, retirees, their family members or the disabled from being suing by Righthaven? There should be. 

The big guns right now that will silence this despicable anti-veteran, anti-people lawsuit mill are focusing on subject matter jurisdiction and legal positions that may be read as purporting fraud on the part of Righthaven and its attorneys. Randazza Legal Group, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), Fenwick and West, David Kerr and several others are doing a tremendous public service.

Righthaven may find out in the coming months that veterans may be the one class of people that right at this time possess a particular ability to come together.

Below are veterans [that's me on the left] getting together to discuss Gulf War syndrome in the Women at war trailer.