Tag Archives: court

Watchmen Settlement?

Can fanboys give a big sigh of relief?  The NY Times is reporting that lawyers on both sides have asked for a postponement to a scheduled hearing while they attempt a settlement in the ongoing legal battle.  A lawyer for Fox has said

continued exchanges on the subject of resolution that have been productive.

The court case stems from Fox suing Warner Bros. over distribution rights for the Watchmen move.  A judge has already ruled in Fox’s favor.

Watching a Watchmen Delay

We reported last week about the legal battle between Fox and Warner Bros. over the release of the much anticipated Watchmen movie.  A judge surprisingly ruled in favor of Fox (really him ruling at all was the suprise).

It was believed that Fox would leverage this ruling and squeeze some cash from Warner Bros.  Instead Fox has decided to act like children and take their ball and go home by seaking a court order to delay the March release of the movie (and thus incurring the wrath of fanboys everywhere).  A hearing is scheduled for January 20th.

Who Watches the Watchmen? A Judge Does.

Who watches the Watchmen?  How about, lawyers, movie studios, and judges.

Big news this past week in the court shenanigans surrounding the release of the upcoming Watchmen movie.  For those new to what’s going on, let me see if I can explain.  Fox movies had the right to distribute the movie and were supposed to be gone to first by movie producer Larry Gordon when a movie was eventually made.  He didn’t and instead went to Warner Bros.  Fox decided to sue.  Make sense?

The surprising news comes that there’s been a ruling at all.  It was expected that Warner Bros. and Fox would settle out of court before the January 20 trial date.  After initially saying the situation was too complicated, Judge Gary Allen Feess reveresed course and issued a clear and decisive ruling in favor of Fox.  Judge Fees has ruled that Gordon never properly presented Fox with the right to distribute the movie and Fox’s interest was never bought by Gordon or Warner Bros. upholding copyright law and protecting studios.

A lawsuit was brought by Fox after production was wrapped by director Zac Snyder.  Fox lawyers did contact Warner Bros.  prior to production in an attempt to resolve to situation.

Fear from fans involves Fox’s involvement in previous geek passion projects such as The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Daredevil, Elektra, The Day The Earth Stood Still, X-Men, X-Men 3, I, Robot, and Fantastic Four. All of these movies have been attacked by fanboys as being too commercial and sucking the soul out of the original properties.  Only X-Men 2 was really praised by comic fans.  The outrage by fans who having been waiting for a Watchmen movie has extended to other Fox properties such as talk of a boycott of the upcoming Wolverine movie.

The question remains whether the movie will make it’s March release date and if the rights revert back to and Fox gains control of the movie, will it be released in the current 2 hour and 30 minute form?  Or will Zac Snyder’s vision be neutered for a more commercial mass-audience friendly release?

Time will only tell as this court drama plays out and the geeks watch the courts and lawyers.

CBLDF serving as Special Consultant in Christopher Handley case

Official Press Release

The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund has signed on as a special consultant to the defense of Chistopher Handley, an Iowa collector who faces up to 20 years in prison for possession of manga. The Fund adds its First Amendment expertise to the case, managed by United Defense Group’s Eric Chase, and will also be providing monetary support towards obtaining expert witnesses.

Handley, 38, faces penalties under the PROTECT Act (18 U.S.C. Section 1466A) for allegedly possessing manga that the government claims to be obscene. The government alleges that the material includes drawings that they claim appear to be depictions of minors engaging in sexual conduct. No photographic content is at issue in Handley’s case.

“Handley’s case is deeply troubling, because the government is prosecuting a private collector for possession of art,” says CBLDF Executive Director Charles Brownstein. “In the past, CBLDF has had to defend the First Amendment rights of retailers and artists, but never before have we experienced the Federal Government attempting to strip a citizen of his freedom because he owned comic books. We will bring our best resources to bear in aiding Mr. Handley’s counsel as they defend his freedom and the First Amendment rights of every art-loving citizen in this country.”

Mr. Handley’s case began in May 2006 when he received an express mail package from Japan that contained seven Japanese comic books. That package was intercepted by the Postal Inspector, who applied for a search warrant after determining that the package contained cartoon images of objectionable content. Unaware that his materials were searched, Handley drove away from the post office and was followed by various law enforcement officers, who pulled him over and followed him to his home. Once there, agents from the Postal Inspector’s office, Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency, Special Agents from the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, and officers from the Glenwood Police Department seized Handley’s collection of over 1,200 manga books or publications; and hundreds of DVDs, VHS tapes, laser disks; seven computers, and other documents. Though Handley’s collection was comprised of hundreds of comics covering a wide spectrum of manga, the government is prosecuting images appearing in a small handful.

Putting the case into context, Burton Joseph, CBLDF’s Legal Counsel says, “In the lengthy time in which I have represented CBLDF and its clients, I have never encountered a situation where criminal prosecution was brought against a private consumer for possession of material for personal use in his own home. This prosecution has profound implications in limiting the First Amendment for art and artists, and comics in particular, that are on the cutting edge of creativity. It misunderstands the nature of avant-garde art in its historical perspective and is a perversion of anti-obscenity laws.”

Eric Chase and his team at the United Defense Group have been vigorously defending Handley, and scored a major First Amendment victory earlier this year when the judge found portions of the PROTECT Act unconstitutional in his ruling on a motion to dismiss. District Judge Gritzner of the Southern District of Iowa found that subsections 1466(a)(2) and (b)(2) of 18 U.S.C. 1466A unconstitutional. Those sections make it a crime to knowingly produce, distribute, receive, or possess with intent to distribute, “a visual depiction of any kind, including a drawing, cartoon, sculpture, or painting,” that “is, or appears to be” a minor engaged in sexual conduct. Judge Gritzner found that those sections restrict protected speech and are constitutionally infirm.

Handley now faces charges under the surviving sections of 1466A, which will require a jury to determine whether the drawings at issue are legally obscene. The material cannot be deemed obscene unless it meets all three of the criteria of the Miller test for obscenity: “(a) whether the average person, applying contemporary community standards would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.” The jury must answer all three questions in the affirmative in order to convict.

Eric Chase recognized the importance of the case, and of the CBLDF’s contribution to it, in a statement to the CBLDF: “This case represents the latest in a string of efforts by the Department of Justice to encroach on free speech. The United Defense Group is committed to fighting to maintain the protections guaranteed in the Constitution, and we appreciate the CBLDF’s support in this fight.”

About the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund

The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund was founded in 1986 as a 501 (c) 3 non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation of First Amendment rights for members of the comics community. They have defended dozens of Free Expression cases in courts across the United States, and led important education initiatives promoting comics literacy and free expression. For additional information, donations, and other inquiries call 800-99-CBLDF or visit http://www.cbldf.org or http://www.myspace.com/cbldf .

Choice Quotes

Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds #1

Brainiac 6 – You still cling to the impossible: the eradication of xenophobia.

Saturn Girl – It’s not impossible. I have peered into the minds of those that hold onto hate and I have seen the potential to change that. We can bring out the best in them, just like Superman brought out the best in us.

X-Factor: Layla Miller

Future President – Understand these steps are being taken not out of hostility…but out of love for all of you. Do not let cruel hostile words from agitators frighten you. War is peace. Hatred is acceptance.

also

Layla Miller – On April 11, 2003, when Donald Rumsfeld was asked about rioting in Iraq, he said “Think what’s happened in our cities when we’ve had riots, and problems and looting. Stuff happens!”

DMZ #34

Even before the voting opened, the trouble started. The intimidation, the irregularities, the breakdown… the fear… and the violence.

Every vote counted probably meant three chucked in the garbage. Or worse. But they voted. And cried and bled and fell and died in the streets for that vote. But every vote, every intention to put a mark next to a name, well, that fucking counted even if the paper record was disappeared. It counted.

Captain America #41

Reporter –Since Ross Perot that an Independent Candidate has been invited to be a part of any Presidential debates. And yet there’s —

Reporter 2 — Senator Wright’s popularity in the polls, the committee had little choice. And as you can see turnout is massive. Already the hall is filled to —

Final Crisis: Revelations #1

Here’s the difference between vengeance and justice. Vengeance comes from the heart, it’s driven by emotion. Justice comes from the head, it’s driven by reason. This is why the victim of a crime isn’t allowed to be part of the jury.

The Invincible Iron Man #5

Ezekiel Stane – It’s not terror if civilians don’t get killed dummy. It’s tragic and unjust and inexplicable. That’s why they call it terror. You got a lot to learn about the way the world works these days, Tony.

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