Until recently, only two of the three The Pirate Bay co-founders were in police custody: Peter Sunde in Sweden this past May, while Gottfrid Svartholm was just sentenced to 3.5 years. And yesterday, a third co-founder, Fredrik Neij, was arrested while trying to cross the border into Thailand.
As Tech in Asia reports, Neij fled Sweden after a court convicted him of contributing to copyright infringement in 2009. The AP reports that Neij has been living in Laos since 2012. That same year, the Swedish Embassy in Bangkok revoked his passport; however, he’s allegedly travelled to Thailand around thirty times since then. The AP adds that Neij has a bank account in Thailand with 5 million baht ($US153,000).
According to Torrent Freak, the Thai media is reporting that “U.S. movie companies” had hired an attorney to locate Neij. The AP says he was arrested under an Interpol warrant.
“It might have been a coincidence, but he was wearing the same grey T-shirt that was in the photo. The immigration police officer who spotted him in the car recognised him, so he pulled his car over,” the regional Thai police commissioner told The AP.
As you can see in this photo (via Torrent Freak), the Thai police then brought Neij out in front of the cameras in a somewhat surreal photo op. Neij had been the last of the Pirate Bay co-founders to avoid police custody.
Pirate Bay co-founder arrested at Thai-Lao border [AP]
Game over: last Pirate Bay founder caught by Thai police [Tech in Asia]
UPDATED: PIRATE BAY FOUNDER FREDRIK NEIJ ARRESTED IN ASIA [Torrent Freak]
Comments
12 responses to “Pirate Bay Co-Founder Arrested In Thailand”
Finally I can sleep easy knowing this monster is off the streets. The nightmare is over.
Agreed. For a moment there I feared that all the manpower and resources necessaries to catch this international terrorist would be diverted to other lesser targets such as mass-murderers and bombers.
Christ, the amount of money and hours that went into this “manhunt”.
Now they’re arrested all piracy will stop right?
While I think the resources dedicated to this is grossly disproportionate to the damage done, it doesn’t particularly grind my gears.
They’re pretty obviously doing something morally objectionable, and by all reports are making millions a year in banner ads from the world’s most popular torrent site. A couple years in jail in exchange for tens of millions of dollars and never having to work again? I’d probably take that deal if it was on offer.
No real surprises, no real winners or heroes. Life goes on.
Hmm what country would they serve their sentence, I wouldn’t wanna do a month in a New Zealand prison.
I don’t disagree, it’s not like the overkill took away resources that would have solved all crime forever and the site is built for piracy so it can only really be defended on technicalities, I just find it a bit hard not to roll my eyes at the whole thing. I can’t help but feel like nobody involved would give the slightest crap about it if they weren’t being paid to.
This reminds me to get some pirate bay merch and wear it around with pride.
And children this is the story of the 3 little piggies and the big bad wolf…
Only all 3 houses were made of sticks and the wolf being large corporations hungry for their undeserved money…
yeah fuck those guys. they worked for something so its our right to steal it! *sarcasm*
But did they, did they really work for it? THAT is the question.
And I only say undeserved because they are absolutely rolling in money as it is and then they hunt down these guys for more profits because who can stop them and all they are doing is distributing SOMEONE ELSES successful product and capitalizing on the gains – Very much the same as what the Pirate Bay guys are doing except its exceptionally difficult for anyone else can do it legally because the business model is old and closed out for any competition especially if you live in any country other then America.
Yet all the platform of the pirate bay does is allow users to share files its not actually their fault what content is there now. In saying that its way easier to pin these guys down then the thousands of computers scattered around the world that seed illegal torrents.